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		Feds won't charge ex-Chicago police officer in 2014 shooting of Black 
		teen
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		 [April 19, 2022] 
		By Dan Whitcomb 
 (Reuters) - Federal prosecutors said on 
		Monday they would not bring charges against the former Chicago police 
		officer convicted in state court of killing Black teenager Laquan 
		McDonald in 2014, a videotaped shooting that touched off protests in the 
		city.
 
 The decision to stand down on a federal prosecution of Jason Van Dyke 
		was made in consultation with McDonald's family and weighed the greater 
		difficulty in securing another conviction, U.S. Attorney John Lausch 
		said.
 
 "The federal law presents a very high bar – more stringent than the 
		state charges on which Mr. Van Dyke was convicted,"
 
 Lausch said in a written statement.
 
 Van Dyke's criminal defense attorney, Daniel Herbert, could not be 
		reached for comment by Reuters on Monday.
 
		
		 
		The former police officer was found guilty of second-degree murder and 
		aggravated battery in 2018, marking the first time an on-duty Chicago 
		police officer was convicted for the killing of a Black person. 
		Van Dyke was sentenced to seven years in state prison but released 
		earlier this year. 
		Police confronted McDonald shortly before 10 p.m. on Oct. 20, 2014 after 
		responding to reports the 17-year-old was carrying a knife and breaking 
		into vehicles. 
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			Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke is lead away after his guilty 
			verdict in his murder trial in the shooting death of Laquan 
			McDonald, in Chicago, Illinois, U.S., October 5, 2018. Antonio 
			Perez/Chicago Tribune/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo 
            
			 McDonald had refused to drop the 
			knife and was walking away from officers when Van Dyke fired a total 
			of 16 shots at him. The incident was captured by cameras on police 
			squad cars at the scene and by a surveillance camera from a nearby 
			Burger King.
 McDonald's death touched off a string of protests in Chicago and 
			elsewhere by activists who saw it as the latest example of police 
			violence against young Black men.
 
 The city of Chicago paid a $5 million settlement to McDonald's 
			family the following year.
 
 (Reporting by Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Lincoln Feast.)
 
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