No charges for St. Louis officer in
shooting death of black teen
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[May 19, 2015]
(Reuters) - The white off-duty St.
Louis police officer who fatally shot a black teenager last October in a
firefight will not face charges in the killing, the local prosecutor's
office said on Monday.
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The shooting of 18-year-old VonDerrit Myers in a St. Louis
neighborhood renewed intensity of demonstrations in the area after
unarmed black teenager Michael Brown was shot dead in August by a
white police officer in the suburb of Ferguson.
Jennifer Joyce, the City of St. Louis Circuit Attorney, declined to
bring criminal charges against the officer saying her office's
independent investigation largely tracked with the police account
that Myers was armed and fired on the officer before he returned
fire in self-defense.
"This is a tragic situation for our entire community, and my
thoughts and prayers remain with the Myers family. I know their loss
is heartbreaking," Circuit Attorney Joyce said in a statement.
Joyce said prosecutors reviewed an array of evidence, including
physical and forensic evidence and witness statements, but were
unable to independently interview the officer or three people who
were with Myers the night of the Oct. 8 shooting.
Joyce did not name the officer as he had not been charged with a
crime, but St. Louis Metropolitan Police Chief Sam Dotson identified
him as Jason Flanery in a statement to the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
A private autopsy conducted for the teen's family said Myers was
shot six times in the back of the legs - four of which struck him in
the back of the legs consistent with him running up a hill - and
once in the side of the head.
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Jerryl Christmas, an attorney for the Myers family, told the
Post-Dispatch that he intended to file a wrongful death suit over
the case.
"I don't believe for a minute that VonDerrit had a weapon,"
Christmas told the newspaper. "Flanery threw that gun down on him
just like they threw that stun gun down on Walter Scott in South
Carolina."
Police use of force, particularly against black people and other
minority groups, has been under increased scrutiny across the
country following the police killings of unarmed black men in cities
like Ferguson, New York City, North Charleston, South Carolina and
elsewhere over the past year.
(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco)
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