National NAACP demands special prosecutor in Michael Brown case, NAACP President Cornell Brooks tells Cleveland Urban News.Com that St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert McCullouch is pro Ferguson police and insensitive to the Black community, case is now before a county grand jury for possible criminal charges against Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson, who is White and who killed Brown
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Cleveland NAACP Executive Director Cornell William Brooks |
Ferguson, Missouri police officer Darren Wilson |
BALTIMORE, Maryland- The national NAACP is outraged at the decision by Missouri Gov Jay Nixon not to appoint a special prosecutor in place of St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert
CLICK HERE TO TWEET YOUR SUPPORT OF THE STANCE BY THE NAACP FOR A SPECIAL PROSECUTOR IN THE MICHAEL BROWN CASE
"We cannot let this decision stand ," NAACP President and CEO Cornell William Brooks told Cleveland Urban News.Com, Ohio's leader in Black digital news. "Tweet Missouri Governor Jay Nixon and Attorney General Chris Koster and asked them why they won't support transparency and justice right away."
Slain Missouri teen Michael Brown |
Wilson says that Brown allegedly assaulted him.
The incident has unleashed riots in the majority Black city of some 21,000 people, and protests in over 50 cities across the country including in New York, Washington D.C. and Cleveland, Ohio, a largely Black major American city also dealing with the deadly shooting of two unarmed Blacks by 13-non-Black police officers slinging 137 bullets.
Wilson is currently on administrative-leave with pay. Protesters
want him arrested and prosecuted. Ferguson police, and Wilson's supporters, who have donated nearly a quarter-of million dollars to
a legal defense fund, say the officer acted in self defense.
NAACP officials say that Brown's death by police is symbolic of a climate across America of flagrant police brutality and excessive force against the Black community, and is indicative of an atmosphere of gross impropriety and unjust actions in largely White police departments nationwide, including in majority Black cities like Cleveland and New York.
Brooks said that McCullouch is a county prosecutor who is pro-police even when police officers exhibit wrongdoing, and that he "has personal, family and professional ties to a local police department [Ferguson] that has repeatedly failed its community."
Only four of Ferguson's 58 police officers are Black, and it shows.
President Obama has called for calm, the National Guard is trying to keep the peace after days of violent protests and clashes with protesters and police in Ferguson, and U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, who is conducting his own independent investigation, visited the city on Wednesday. (www.clevelandurbannews.com) / (www.kathywraycolemanonlinenewsblog.com)
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