FBI to assist probe into police shooting of Black couple in Illinois
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[October 24, 2020]
(Reuters) - The U.S. Department of
Justice has agreed to assist an Illinois state investigation into a
police shooting that killed an unarmed Black man and wounded his
girlfriend and triggered protests in the city of Waukegan, an official
said on Friday.
Lake County State's Attorney Michael Nerheim said he asked the
Department of Justice for help reviewing the Oct. 20 shooting, which
left 19-year-old Marcellis Stinnette dead and has been under
investigation by state police.
"I have been advised that they have agreed to do so," Nerheim said of
the Justice Department, which oversees the FBI. "I am confident in the
work being done by the Illinois State Police and welcome the assistance
of the FBI."
More than a hundred people marched in Waukegan on Thursday and some 200
to 300 were expected for a second demonstration on Saturday, according
to Clyde McLemore, a local organizer. Waukegan is about an hour's drive
north of Chicago.
That will be followed with a prayer vigil on Sunday near where Stinnette
and his girlfriend, Tafarra Williams, were shot during a traffic stop
late on Tuesday, McLemore said.
McLemore, founder of the Lake County chapter of Black Lives Matter, said
he had been calling for the DOJ to take over the probe to make it more
objective. He said he had spoken with Waukegan Mayor Sam Cunningham
about that demand.
The Waukegan Police Department has said a Hispanic male officer shot
into the couple's car because it went into reverse when he approached it
and he feared for his safety. No firearm was found in the vehicle, the
police said.
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A view outside the Lake County Courthouse is seen following the
Kenosha, Wisconsin shooting of protesters, in Waukegan, Illinois,
U.S. August 26, 2020. REUTERS/Stephen Maturen
Satrese Stallworth, a relative of Stinnette and a spokesperson for
the family, said Williams was driving and suffered gunshot wounds to
the abdomen and wrist.
Stallworth said Stinnette had been in a bad car accident in August
in which he broke his leg and wrist, requiring him to use a walker
which he had with him in the vehicle.
"He was an unarmed passenger in the car," Stallworth said. "He posed
no threat. So why is he no longer with us?"
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Wilton, Connecticut; Editing by Daniel
Wallis)
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