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Saturday, November 1, 2014

Ferguson officer is unlikely to face civil rights charges

Ferguson officer is unlikely to face civil rights charges

View Photo Gallery: ‘Weekend of resistance’ staged in St. Louis: More than 100 protesters staged a sit-in at a gas station in St. Louis near the site of a police-involved shooting last week, prompting riot police to deploy tear gas and make arrests.

SARI HORWITZ, KIMBERLY KINDY 
OCTOBER 31, 2014

Justice Department investigators have all but concluded they do not have a strong enough case to bring civil rights charges against Darren Wilson, the white police officer who shot and killed an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Mo., law enforcement officials said.

When racial tension boiled over in Ferguson after the Aug. 9 shooting, Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr. traveled to the St. Louis suburb to meet with city leaders and protest organizers in an effort to bring calm. He assured them that the federal government would open a civil rights investigation into the fatal shooting of Michael Brown. But that investigation now seems unlikely to result in any charges.

“The evidence at this point does not support civil rights charges against Officer Wilson,” said one person briefed on the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the case. 

VIDEO
View Video: Ferguson Police Chief Thomas Jackson and Missouri State Highway Patrol Capt. Ronald Johnson held news conferences Friday to discuss the release of robbery surveillance video, reveal the identity of the officer who shot Michael Brown and more. (Nicki DeMarco / The Washington Post)

Justice Department officials are loath to acknowledge publicly that their case cannot now meet the high legal threshold for a successful civil rights prosecution. The timing is sensitive: Tensions are high in greater St. Louis as people await the results of a grand jury’s review of the case. 

Many supporters of Brown say they are already convinced there will be no state-level indictment of the officer. Federal officials have wanted to show that they are conducting a full and fair review of the case. 

Justice spokesman Brian Fallon said the case remains open and any discussion of its results is premature. “This is an irresponsible report by The Washington Post that is based on idle speculation,” Fallon said in a statement.

Other law enforcement officials interviewed by The Post said it was not too soon to say how the investigation would end. “The evidence we have makes federal civil rights charges unlikely,” one said. 

A lawyer for Brown’s family, Benjamin L. Crump, said he would not comment “on something that is not official.” 

James P. Towey Jr., Wilson’s attorney, did not return calls or e-mails seeking comment.

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