Header Ads

Breaking News
recent

Judge blocks immediate public release of bodycam video in Andrew Brown Jr. shooting, allows family access

 


A judge has ruled to allow full body camera footage to be disclosed to the family of Andrew Brown Jr.; a Black man who was fatally shot by North Carolina sheriff’s deputies last week as they attempted to serve drug-related search and arrest warrants at his home.


However, the judge denied a petition by a media coalition to immediately release the video publicly.


Judge Jeffery Foster ordered the Pasquotank County Sheriff’s office to disclose the full video to Brown’s family and an attorney within 10 days; but said any further public release of the video will be delayed for 30-45 days.


The judge said he will further evaluate the public release of the videos after an investigation is complete.


All facial and identifying features of the officers would be redacted in the video, the judge ruled.

The move comes after a prosecutor said in court that Brown’s car made contact with deputies before they fired shots.


Brown’s family was in attendance during the hearing Wednesday at the Pasquotank County Courthouse in Elizabeth City.


The family has seen a short, redacted clip of the body camera video, but it has not previously been released to the public.


Under North Carolina law, body camera videos are not public record and they require a court order before they are released.


The shooting led to days of protests and calls for transparency from the community, the media and Brown’s family.


Mike Tadych, a lawyer representing a coalition of media outlets, said at the hearing Wednesday the national media interest in the case highlights; that there’s a compelling public interest in releasing the video.

“The eyes of Elizabeth City, Pasquotank County, North Carolina, our nation and perhaps the world are on us today,” Tadych said.


“The [media] petitioners are not here to indict or vindicate law enforcement, and they’re not here to indict or vindicate Mr. Brown.


They are here in the interests of advancing transparency; in the hopes of aiding the national conversation we find ourselves in about citizens’ interactions with police.”


After seeing the video on Monday, the family described the killing as an execution and said Brown had been trying to get away.


One of the Brown family lawyers, Chantel Cherry-Lassiter, said the car was stationary when the shooting started.


District Attorney Andrew Womble, who will review law enforcement findings in the case; called the statement “patently false” and gave a different picture of events in court.


He said Brown’s car was “in a stationary position” when deputies approached the car and began shouting commands.


Womble said the car was still stationary when a law enforcement officer grabbed the door handle of the car, and then was forced to release it when the car went in a reverse position.


The car then stopped and again reversed, and “as it backs up it makes contact” with law enforcement, Womble said.


The car was again stationary with deputies positioned around the car when it began moving forward; “in the direction of law enforcement and makes contact with law enforcement,” Womble said.


That’s when shots were fired, he said.


Tadych said Womble’s version of events “stands in stark contrast” to the family’s account of what happened; which further points to the importance of the video release.


“In order to hold public officials accountable, one has to see what’s going on,” Tadych said.


Tadych pointed to the original press release sent out by the Minneapolis Police Department in May 2020; saying George Floyd had died of a medical emergency.


The video in that case, he said, was crucial in determining the facts of the case that led to ex-officer Derek Chauvin’s conviction on murder charges this month.

No comments:

© 2017 muchtalks.blogspot.com. Theme images by duncan1890. Powered by Blogger.