White officer who shot and paralyzed Black man in Kenosha, Wisconsin,
returned to duty
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[April 14, 2021]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) - A white policeman cleared of
criminal wrongdoing after shooting an African-American man in the back
last August in Kenosha, Wisconsin, igniting deadly protests that helped
stoke a summer of U.S. racial tensions, has been returned to duty.
Kenosha Police Chief Daniel Miskinis said in a statement posted on
Tuesday that officer Rusten Sheskey was back from administrative leave
as of March 31, after an internal review found him to "have been acting
within policy," and would face no discipline.
In January, Wisconsin prosecutors cleared Sheskey of any criminal
charges in the Aug. 23, 2020, shooting that left Jacob Blake paralyzed
and became a major flashpoint in nationwide protests for racial justice
following the George Floyd killing months earlier in Minneapolis.
The Kenosha County district attorney concluded Sheskey acted in
self-defense while responding to a domestic dispute and shooting Blake
seven times at close range from behind.
Investigators found that Blake was armed with a knife and had resisted
arrest, withstanding multiple Taser shots before he was gunned down.
The shooting unfolded in the presence of Blake's young children.
Blake sued Sheskey in federal court in Wisconsin last month, seeking
unspecified damages for his injuries and a "substantial sum" in punitive
damages.
Two other officers who were likewise cleared of criminal wrongdoing for
their role in the arrest and shooting were returned to full duty last
July, after their actions were found to be reasonable and justified,
police said then.
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People paint a mural following the police shooting of Jacob Blake,
a Black man, in Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S., August 28, 2020.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
"Although this incident has been reviewed at multiple levels, I know
that some will not be pleased with the outcome," Chief Miskinis
said. "However, given the facts, the only lawful and appropriate
decision was made."
It was not immediately clear whether Sheskey was placed back on
patrol duty.
Protests broke out last summer in response to viral cellphone video
that showed Blake walking around the front of his car with Sheskey
following him and opening fire after Blake opened the door to the
vehicle.
But investigators have said the video was incomplete, failing to
reveal that Blake was armed with a knife and that he had resisted
arrest when police tried to detain him on a felony arrest warrant.
The shooting of Blake attracted a mix of civil rights demonstrators,
anarchists and right-wing militias last summer to Kenosha, a city of
100,000 people between Milwaukee and Chicago.
At the height of those protests, teenager Kyle Rittenhouse opened
fire with a rifle, killing two men and wounding another. Rittenhouse
was charged with first-degree reckless homicide and five other
criminal counts.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Michael Perry)
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