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Autopsy reveals St. Louis cops shot teen in the back
Published time: 21 Aug, 2015 21:11
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James Cody (L) and his cousin Dennis Ball-Bey attend a candlelight vigil for Mansur Ball-Bey in St. Louis, Missouri, United States, August 20, 2015 © Lawrence Bryant / Reuters
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Jermaine Wooten, an attorney who represents Ball-Bey's family, says family members and numerous witnesses told him the 18-yard-old had been shot from behind, and that he did not have a gun at all.
"I told them, 'If you want me to represent you, don't lie to me. Did he have a gun?' And they all said, 'No,'” the Post-Dispatch quoted Wooten.
Police chief Sam Dotson said the wound's location neither proves nor disproves the contention of officers at the scene that Ball-Bey refused to drop a gun and pointed it at them before being shot.
"Just because he was shot in the back doesn't mean he was running away," Dotson said. "It could be, and I'm not saying that it doesn't mean that. I just don't know yet.”
Dotson said the full account of all the facts in Ball-Bey’s death will be presented to St. Louis Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce, who will press charges if she decides that a criminal violation took place. A copy of the police department’s final report will also be sent to Richard Callahan, the US attorney for eastern Missouri.
“I understand people's skepticism,” Dotson said Thursday, according to CBS News. “But don't let social media and innuendo drive what you believe to be true. You have to let the facts speak.”
Tensions have run high in the area since last August’s death of 18-year-old Michael Brown in nearby Ferguson. While the official investigation into Brown’s shooting upheld the officer’s account, a Department of Justice probe accused the city’s authorities and police of creating a “toxic environment” through institutional racism.
In October last year, an off-duty St. Louis police officer shot and killed 18-year-old Vonderrit Myers. The autopsy in that case showed that six of the eight shots that hit Myers had come from behind. Wooten, who represented Myers’ family in that case, argued that Myers never shot at the officer, or even had a gun. After the police produced a forensics report showing gunpowder residue on Myers’ hands, and three recovered bullets fired from a Smith & Wesson handgun found in his possession, the circuit attorney decided not to press charges against the officer.
“The police were in this neighborhood doing their job,” he said at a meeting with a coalition of black ministers in Fountain Park.
The troubled neighborhood has a reputation for crime, drugs and violence. A 93-year-old man was robbed on Monday when he stopped in Fountain Park to ask for directions. He had fought in WW2 as one of the Tuskegee Airmen, a famous African-American fighter squadron.
Published time: 21 Aug, 2015 21:11
Get short URL
James Cody (L) and his cousin Dennis Ball-Bey attend a candlelight vigil for Mansur Ball-Bey in St. Louis, Missouri, United States, August 20, 2015 © Lawrence Bryant / Reuters
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
Jermaine Wooten, an attorney who represents Ball-Bey's family, says family members and numerous witnesses told him the 18-yard-old had been shot from behind, and that he did not have a gun at all.
"I told them, 'If you want me to represent you, don't lie to me. Did he have a gun?' And they all said, 'No,'” the Post-Dispatch quoted Wooten.
Police chief Sam Dotson said the wound's location neither proves nor disproves the contention of officers at the scene that Ball-Bey refused to drop a gun and pointed it at them before being shot.
"Just because he was shot in the back doesn't mean he was running away," Dotson said. "It could be, and I'm not saying that it doesn't mean that. I just don't know yet.”
Dotson said the full account of all the facts in Ball-Bey’s death will be presented to St. Louis Circuit Attorney Jennifer Joyce, who will press charges if she decides that a criminal violation took place. A copy of the police department’s final report will also be sent to Richard Callahan, the US attorney for eastern Missouri.
“I understand people's skepticism,” Dotson said Thursday, according to CBS News. “But don't let social media and innuendo drive what you believe to be true. You have to let the facts speak.”
Tensions have run high in the area since last August’s death of 18-year-old Michael Brown in nearby Ferguson. While the official investigation into Brown’s shooting upheld the officer’s account, a Department of Justice probe accused the city’s authorities and police of creating a “toxic environment” through institutional racism.
In October last year, an off-duty St. Louis police officer shot and killed 18-year-old Vonderrit Myers. The autopsy in that case showed that six of the eight shots that hit Myers had come from behind. Wooten, who represented Myers’ family in that case, argued that Myers never shot at the officer, or even had a gun. After the police produced a forensics report showing gunpowder residue on Myers’ hands, and three recovered bullets fired from a Smith & Wesson handgun found in his possession, the circuit attorney decided not to press charges against the officer.
“The police were in this neighborhood doing their job,” he said at a meeting with a coalition of black ministers in Fountain Park.
The troubled neighborhood has a reputation for crime, drugs and violence. A 93-year-old man was robbed on Monday when he stopped in Fountain Park to ask for directions. He had fought in WW2 as one of the Tuskegee Airmen, a famous African-American fighter squadron.