Winstonm, on 2014-September-06, 15:28, said:
A witness hereto unknown to the press has come forward to tell his story to the St. Louis Dispatch
here
A fuller quote from the story:
Quote
His account largely matches those who reported that Wilson chased Brown on foot away from the car after the initial gunshot and fired at least one more shot in the direction of Brown as he was fleeing; that Brown stopped, turned around and put his hands up; and that the officer killed Brown in a barrage of gunfire.
But his account does little to clarify perhaps the most critical moment of the confrontation, on which members of the grand jury in St. Louis County may focus to determine whether the officer was justified in using lethal force: whether Brown moved toward Wilson just before the fatal shots, and if he did, how aggressively.
At least one witness has said Brown was not moving. Others didn’t mention him moving, while still others have said he was heading toward Wilson.
The truth matters, and getting at it is, as it usually is, tough. In this age when a robin can't chirp without someone posting the event on Youtube, it's amazing that no pictures have surfaced. I gather that they don't exist, since I imagine a person could make more than a few bucks by selling them to the media. So we will need to depend on eyewitnesses, and that is always iffy.
If we think in the large, about many confrontations of the public with the police, surelly most would conced that at times it will be police misconduct, at time it will be ont misconduct but bad judgment, at times it will be simply that things got out of hand with no one really to blame, at times it will be that the police officer was fully justified, meaning that almost everyone can understand why the use of a weapon was reasonable. Sorting out which is which is not going to be easy. No one thinks a cop gets to shoot someone simply because the somebody pissed the cop off. Aggravating someone who has a gun is stupid, really stupid, but it doesn't justify the use of the gun.
Overall, my experience with the police is fine. Not always smooth, but still fine. If I don't act like an idiot, all goes well. But yes, I'm white. And now I am now no longer a youngster. And I am not all that excitable. So my experience is of limited value in discussing a place such as Ferguson. in the stories about the cop, Wilson, some see a guy who comes from a troubled background and perhaps lacks the restraint to be a good cop. I see a guy who overcame a bad background and was trying his best. One way or the other, he is the sort of guy that a town such as Ferguson is likely to have as a cop. Who are they going to hire? They want a college educated highly trained person with great social skills, social commitment and empathy to work for 45 K a year keeping the peace in a dying town with racial problems and poverty? Good luck.
I hope that they can determine the truth, and I hope that they can do it in such a way that most people who look fairly at the evidence will see that it is the truth. Until they are done with the investigation and with the presentation to the grand jury, and then perhaps to a jury, I will resist drawing a conclusion one way or the other as to what happened there.