U.S. will not pursue charges against police officer over Jacob Blake
shooting
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[October 09, 2021]
By Sarah N. Lynch and Kanishka Singh
(Reuters) -The U.S. Justice Department said
on Friday it will not pursue federal criminal civil rights charges
against a Kenosha, Wisconsin, police officer for his involvement in the
August 2020 shooting of Jacob Blake.
Blake, who is Black, was shot by police several times in the back in
front of his young children and was left paralyzed from the waist down.
The incident sparked days of deadly protests against police brutality
and racism in his hometown and across the United States.
The department's decision comes ten months after Wisconsin prosecutors
cleared Rusten Sheskey, the white police officer who shot Blake.
In declining to bring criminal charges, Kenosha County District Attorney
Michael Graveley found that Sheskey was acting in self-defense because
Blake was armed with a knife and he had resisted arrest despite multiple
Taser shots.
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Blake's father, Jacob Blake Sr, told ABC News that he was disappointed
by the decision.
"I was expecting more from the administration than this. I was expecting
much more than this," he was quoted as saying. "I believe that we're in
a systematic racist system, and that this system was not set up for us."
Two other police officers on the scene that day - Vincent Arenas and
Brittany Meronek - returned to duty in January after previously
being placed on paid administrative leave.
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Law enforcement officers guard during a protest following the police
shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man, in Kenosha, Wisconsin, U.S.
August 25, 2020. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
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The Justice Department did not explicitly name the
officer who will be spared of criminal civil rights charges in its
announcement on Friday.
It said Blake's family had already been told of the decision to
decline to prosecute, which it made based on a lack of evidence to
prove the officer willfully used excessive force.
"After a careful and thorough review, a team of experienced federal
prosecutors determined that insufficient evidence exists to prove
beyond a reasonable doubt that the ... officer willfully violated
the federal criminal civil rights statutes," it said.
"Seven times in the back is excessive," Jacob's father told ABC News
on Friday. "Seven times in the back, that's not excessive?"
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch in Washington and Kanishka Singh in
Bengaluru; Editing by Tim Ahmann, Sonya Hepinstall and Rosalba
O'Brien)
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