LOL No, I'm not saying that at all. But thanks for clearing up my wonder. Clearly you think a grand jury proceeding is similar to that of a trial by jury, where evidence from both sides are presented and a verdict is reached. That's not even remotely close to what it is. (It's what this circus of a grand jury turned out to be, though. More on that below.)Are you saying that the testimony of the single "defendant" was so overwhelming that all the other witnesses and physical evidence that went before the grand jury were rendered insignificant?
Imagine the DA and a few prosecuting attorneys meeting in a room and asking themselves whether or not they have enough evidence, or probable cause, to bring charges (an indictment) against a potential criminal defendant. They don't discuss whether they have enough evidence to win, just whether they have enough evidence to justify a trial. At this meeting there in no defense attorney, no judge. A grand jury proceeding is exactly the same thing, it merely formalizes the process. There are usually no attorneys there except the prosecutor, there is no judge in the room. Witnesses are not even allowed to have legal council in the room. Evidence that isn't even admissible in court, like hearsay, rumor and innuendo, no matter how prejudicial, can be presented to the grand jury. The grand jury is strictly a tool of the prosecution. If the grand jury votes to not indict, the prosecution can still bring charges, anyway, if they think they have a case they can win. The grand jury is often a valuable test run for prosecutors in making the decision in bringing the case to trial. It not only lets them see how strong their case is likely to be, but also how certain jurors are likely to react to different evidence, and how those jurors are likely to vote at trial, not to mention which types of jurors should be accepted and excused from a trial jury.
Because a grand jury is a tool of the prosecution, and the deck is so heavily stacked for the prosecution (the defense doesn't even get to play), that's why it's so easy for the prosecution to get an indictment out of a grand jury. If they want one. If the prosecution doesn't get an indictment, it's because they didn't want one. In this case, they didn't want one, but the prosecutor didn't want to go on record saying he wasn't going to bring the case, as he's already got a reputation of being really soft on prosecuting cops. So, he punted the blame to the grand jury, a tool which he controls and operates.
Yep. Unprecedented excruciating detail, because he needed to CYA in unprecedented fashion.It was spelled out in excruciating detail that the prosecutor couldn't prove a case against Officer Wilson.
Like I've said before, the response to this isn't about Brown, Wilson or Ferguson, nor is it about the mantra of "white policeman shoots unarmed teenager." It's about the mantra of "Yet another African-American dead at the hands of a white cop. And nothing will be done about it. Just watch."It's amazing to me that so many people buy into this mantra of "white policeman shoots unarmed teenager"; that's total horsecr*p!
Yes, he was big, and black, therefore scary, scary enough to justify killing him. And that's why people think nothing will be done about it, because nothing ever is. Many people, closet racists in particular, have a great need to zoom in on these incidents and keep them self-contained in a fishbowl, saying things like blacks merely commit more crimes and it's a culture thing. They ignore or refuse to accept that outside the fishbowl there is a systemic disparity in how blacks are treated by law enforcement in this country. They ignore the fact that, while not specifically enumerated in the Constitution, the Constitution screams the right to be left alone, that the Bill of Rights are a tailored to that purpose, and that blacks are not generally afforded that right.Brown was a 6'4" 282 lbs fleeing felon that verbally threatened and then physically attacked a police officer. Have you ever stood next to someone that size - the size of an average NFL defensive lineman??? This guy was a violent criminal whose judgement was likely impaired by the influence of drugs and an attitude that nobody would mess with him because he was big and black. Turns out that he was just young and stupid - and now dead because of his indoctrination into a culture that glorifies aggressive criminal behavior and promotes racism towards white people. All Brown had to do was say "OK officer", move to the sidewalk and none of this would have happened.
I do wonder if we'll ever get the breakdown of the grand jury vote, as to the vote total, and which way the 9 white and 3 black jurors voted, where a vote of 9 is required to indict. If i had to guess, I'd guess no way. Or at least not any time soon.