JEWISH KING JESUS IS COMING AT THE RAPTURE FOR US IN THE CLOUDS-DON'T MISS IT FOR THE WORLD.THE BIBLE TAKEN LITERALLY- WHEN THE PLAIN SENSE MAKES GOOD SENSE-SEEK NO OTHER SENSE-LEST YOU END UP IN NONSENSE.GET SAVED NOW- CALL ON JESUS TODAY.THE ONLY SAVIOR OF THE WHOLE EARTH - NO OTHER
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-1:50PM
ALRIGHT TO THE FERGUSON DECISION COMES DOWN FOR SURE LATER TODAY. THE GRAND JURY HAS MADE A DECISION.BUT THERE NOT RELEASING IT TILL LATER TODAY.AS THE POLICE HAVE TO GET READY FOR THE RIOTERS-LOOTERS-BURNERS DISQUISED AS PEACEFUL PROTESTERS.THE 3 BLACK - 9 WHITE JURY HAS A DECISION.
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-4:40PM
THE 3 BLACK - 9 WHITE JURY HAS A DECISION.5-2 BLACK WOMAN - 7-1 BLACK MEN.THE BROWN FAMILY WERE NOTIFIED BY THE POLICE ABOUT THE DECISION. THE POLICE AT 3:30PM GAVE THE OFFICIAL NOTICE TO THE MEDIA.THAT A DECISION HAS BEEN MADE.AND THE WORLD WILL BE TOLD LATER ON.ITS GETTING DARK.WHY WOULD THEY NOT TELL US THE DECSION BEFORE IT GETS DARK.AFTER DARK.THE RIOTERS CAN NOT BE SEEN AS EASY.THEY SHOULD HAVE ANNOUNCED THE DECISION IN DAYLIGHT.BUT THE POLICE AND GUARDS AND ALL ARE ON ALERT FOR THE RIOTERS AND LOOTERS.THEY SAY THIS TIME THEY WILL STOP THE LOOTING.I HOPE SO.BUT IF OFFICER WILSON GETS OFF.WE KNOW THE BLACKS WILL BE VIOLENT.AND ALL THE BLACKS INTERVIEWED SO FAR. CONCENTRATE ON THE KILLING.AND JUST CONVIENTLY LEAVE OUT THAT BROWN STOLE A BOX OF CIGARS.THATS A CRIME.AND ALSO ASSAULTED OFFICER DARREN WILSON IN HIS CAR. BEFORE BROWN WAS SHOT.IT IS REDICULAS THAT THE BLACKS JUST CONVIENTLY LEAVE OUT MIKE BROWNS CRIMINAL ACTIVITY.
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-8:00PM
THE GRAND JURY ANNOUNCEMENT WILL BE COMING AT 9 OR 10PM TONIGHT.AT LEAST 8 AND A HALF HOURS AFTER WE FOUND OUT THAT THE GRAND JURY MADE ITS DECISION. OFFICER DARREN WILSON GOT MARRIED TO ANOTHER OFFICER AT THE END OF LAST MONTH.I LIKE ERIN BURNETTE OF CNN.BUT SHE SAID THE MOST REDICULAS THING I HAVE EVER HEARD.SHE SAID IF YOU SAY THAT THERE WILL BE VIOLENCE TONIGHT AFTER THE DECISION IS GIVIN.YOU ARE A RACIST. WHAT ERIN BEAUTY DOES RACISM HAVE TO DO WITH SAYING THERE WILL BE VIOLENCE AFTER THE DECISION IS MADE.I THOUGHT ONLY THAT SUNNI MUSLIM OBAMA AND HIS MORONS AT THE WHITEHOUSE CALLS YOU A RACIST IF YOU DON'T AGREE WITH HIS DECISIONS.BUT I FORGOT-CNN OR THE COMMUNIST NEWS NETWORK IS OBAMAS PUPPET.SO I KNOW ERIN YOU WERE FORCED BY THE SUNNI MUSLIM OBAMA AND HIS CO-HORTS TO SAY YOUR A RACIST IF YOU THINK THERE WILL BE VIOLENCE AT TONIGHTS DECISION IN AN HOUR OR TWO.THE CITIZENS ARE PILING ON THE STREETS ALREADY IN DIFFERENT SPOTS ALL OVER FERGUSON ALREADY.AND I SEEN THREE OF THE SO CALLED PEACEFUL PROTESTERS ALREADY GIVING THE FINGER TO POLICE OFFICERS WHO ARE PEACEFULLY LINED UP ON THE STREET.THIS WILL BE GETTING UGLY WHEN OFFICER DARREN WILSON WILL BE INNOCENT OF THE CRIME.HE KILLED A CRIMINAL THAT WAS A THIEF AT A STORE AND THEN ASSAUKTED OFFICER WILSON IN THE POLICE CAR.
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-8:27PM
THE NYT IS REPORTING THAT OFFICER DARREN WILSON IS NOT REQUIRED TO TURN HIMSELF IN.THIS TELLS ME-MY PREDICTION WILL BE CORRECT.AND OFFICER WILSON WAS DEFENDING HIMSELF THE GRAND JURY DECIDED.I THINK WE HAVE GOT THE TIP THAT SAYS WILSON IS INNOCENT OF THE MURDER CHARGES.
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-9:17PM
ITS 8:45PM-ITS CONFIRMED FROM A CLOSE FRIEND OF OFFICER WILSON THAT HE WAS NOT ASKED TO TURN HIMSELF IN WITH ONLY 15 MINUTES LEFT TILL THE DECISION COMES OUT.AND WE GOT A COUPLE OF CNN MINYONS VAN THE RACE BAITOR JONES AND SUNNY THE RACE BAITER HOSTIN BOTH ARE INSISTING THAT THE GUY THAT WILL GIVE US THE DECISION SHORTLY.GAVE THE GRAND JURY TO MUCH INFORMATION ABOUT THE CASE WITH OUT TELLING THEM THAT OFFICER WILSON SHOULD BE INDITED.THIS IS JUST REDICULAS TALK AS JEFF TOUBIN THE LAWYER SAID ON CNN.THE MORE INFORMATION THE GRAND JURY HAS.THE BETTER THEY CAN FIGURE OUT A CONCLUSIVE DECISION. HOSTIN AND JONES ARE OUT TO LUNCH WITH A DEBATE LIKE THAT.
ITS NOW 9:17PM AND THE DECISION HAS COME IN.OFFICER DARREN WILSON IS AQUITED OF MURDER.SAYS ROBERT MCCULOCH HE CAN RELAX NOW AND CARRY ON WITH HIS LIFE AGAIN.NOT AS A POLICE OFFICE.THERES TO MANY BLACKS AROUND THE AREA THAT WANT HIM KILLED.BUT IF HE AND HIS OFFICER WIFE MOVE TO A DIFFERENT AREA.THEY CAN START THEIR LIFE AS HUSBAND AND WIFE.THERES THOUSANDS AROUND FERGUSON NOW.IT COULD GET UGLY. WE WILL SEE WHAT HAPPENS OVER THE NEXT HOURS.THE BIGGEST CROWD IT LOOKS LIKE IS AT THE POLICE STATION.THE OBSENITIES ARE FLYING THE CNN HOST JASON CARROL SAYS.AT HIM THE MEDIA FOR TELLING LIES THE SWEARERS ARE SAYING.MCCULOCH SAYS THE MEDIA WAS ON A FRENZY HUNGRY WOLF TRYING TO GOBBLE UP ANY SHEEP INFORMATION ABOUT THIS FERGUSON BROWN-WILSON CASE.THE GRAND JURY HAD THE CASE FROM AUG 20 TO TODAY NOV 24,14.THE GRAND JURY SAID WILSONS USED OF DEADLY FORCE WAS TO DEFEND HIMSELF AGAINST A CRIMINAL.OFFICER WILSON IS INNOCENT THE GRAND JURY SAYS.
THE POSSIBLE CHARGES WILSON COULD HAVE HAD AGAINST HIM.
FIRST DEGREE MURDER
SECOND DEGREE MURDER
VOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER
INVOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER
AQUITED (NO CHARGES-HE ACTED IN SELF DEFENCE)(REASONABLE FORCE)*
OFFICER WILSONS RESULT*
OTHER IMPORTANT NEWS INSTEAD
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/liberal-loonies-want-to-force-carbon.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/hell-is-real-you-choose-were-you-want.html
OTHER BROWN-WILSON STORIES
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/world-waits-fergeson-grand-jury.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/fergeson-grand-jury-should-be-decided.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/the-grand-jury-decision-in-mike-brown.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/09/ferguson-announces-changes-to-policing.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/09/us-to-investigate-ferguson-police-report.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/isis-beheads-american-aid-worker-peter.html
Grand jury doesn't charge Ferguson officer Darren Wilson in shooting death of Michael Brown
No indictment: Grand jury decides Ferguson Officer Darren Wilson will not face criminal charges in Michael Brown shooting death-Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon made plea for 'respect' and 'restraint' ahead of announcement-Jason Sickles, Yahoo-NOV 24,14-YAHOONEWS
FERGUSON, Mo. — Police Officer Darren Wilson — the suburban St. Louis patrolman who killed unarmed teenager Michael Brown in early August - will not face criminal charges in the controversial shooting death, a grand jury has decided.Wilson, who is white, became a national figure after he shot the black 18-year-old multiple times in broad daylight on a residential street. The grand jury deliberated for months and Ferguson was rocked by violent protests in the immediate aftermath of the shooting.The decision was announced by prosecuting attorney Robert McCulloch, who discussed the lengthy deliberation period of the grand jury citing consideration of differing witness reports as a one reason for the unusually long session.Ahead of Monday's announcement, Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon made a plea for peace."Our shared hope and expectation is that regardless of the decision, people on all sides show tolerance, mutual respect and restraint," he said.Meanwhile, officials in Clayton stepped up security measures erecting barricades around the courthouse to prepare for possible protests. A Yahoo News reporter spotted members of the National Guard arriving in military vehicles. Several Ferguson-area schools have announced they will be closed Tuesday.“The men and women of the National Guard also will be in the area to provide security at critical facilities like firehouses, police stations and utility substations, and offer logistical and transportation support as needed. This will free up law enforcement officers to do their jobs effectively," Nixon said.Demonstrators gathered ahead of the announcement holding signs, chanting and honking car horns.The 12-member St. Louis County grand jury — which included one black man, two black women, six white men and three white women — has been hearing testimony since Aug. 20 to determine whether there was probable cause that Wilson had committed a crime.Police experts have said officers generally have leeway to use lethal force if they reasonably fear they are in imminent danger.The Aug. 9 shooting sparked protests and riots in the mostly black St. Louis suburb and fueled a nationwide debate on race, policing and justice.
“Regardless of the grand jury's decision, the Brown family and our legal team ask again for peace and calm, even though we understand people may have feelings of anger or disappointment,” Benjamin Crump, the family’s attorney, said in a statement prior to the announcement. “We encourage people to take their frustrations to the ballot box, not the streets.”Brown, who graduated from high school in May, and his friend Dorian Johnson were walking down the middle of a two-lane street around noon, when Wilson encountered them in his marked police SUV.Wilson, a Ferguson officer for three years, either asked or ordered the pair to get on the sidewalk. From there, accounts differ as to who instigated a scuffle between Wilson and Brown at the driver’s side door.Johnson, 22, told investigators and reporters that Wilson was antagonistic toward them, abruptly backing up his SUV and throwing open the door, which bounced off Brown.“He just reached his arm out the window and grabbed my friend around his neck, and he was trying to choke my friend,” Johnson told reporters after the shooting. “He was trying to get away, and the officer then reached out and grabbed his arm to pull him inside the car.”Wilson, who has been on paid leave since the shooting, has not spoken publicly about what happened. However, he reportedly met with investigators on several occasions and testified before the grand jury for four hours — a move that surprised some legal experts, since he was not bound by law to go before the panel.Ferguson police and the St. Louis County Police Department, the lead investigating agency, released sparse police reports about the shooting and have refused to provide details of their findings.St. Louis County’s official autopsy on Brown’s body has not been made public, but the St. Louis Post-Dispatch obtained a copy from an anonymous source and published it on Oct. 22. The autopsy included a summary from Detective Patrick J. Hokamp’s preliminary investigation of the shooting.“The deceased became belligerent towards Officer Wilson,” the document states. “As Officer Wilson attempted to exit out of his patrol vehicle the deceased pushed his door shut and began to struggle with Officer Wilson, during the struggle the Officers weapon was un-holstered. The weapon discharged during the struggle.“The deceased then ran down the roadway. Officer Wilson then began to chase the deceased. As he was giving chase to the deceased, the deceased turned around and ran towards Officer Wilson. Officer Wilson had his service weapon drawn, as the deceased began to run towards him, he discharged his service weapon several times.”The county autopsy and a private exam commissioned by the teen’s family both concluded Brown was struck by six of Wilson’s shots, including a fatal hit to the top of the head. Other exit wounds and grazes were found on the teen’s head, upper body, arm and hand.The injury to his right hand may have been of particular interest to the grand jury, since the county autopsy discovered it was inflicted at close range, possibly supporting Wilson’s account that there was a struggle for the gun in the police cruiser. Sources told the Post-Dispatch that Brown’s blood had been found on the officer’s gun.
Crump, the attorney for the Brown family, immediately downplayed the newspaper’s account.“We are not surprised by the information leaked last night by the St. Louis Medical Examiner's office,” Crump said in a written statement. “Several independent witnesses indicated there was a brief altercation between Michael Brown and Officer Wilson at the patrol car. What we want to know is why Officer Wilson shot Michael Brown multiple times and killed him even though he was more than 20 feet away from his patrol car; this is the crux of the matter!”The shooting scene unfolded on a neighborhood street amid a cluster of apartment buildings. A resident who lives in one of the apartments later turned over a purported audio recording of the shots being fired. Authorities have not disclosed how many times Wilson discharged his weapon, but veteran forensic audio expert Paul Ginsberg told Yahoo News that he heard 10 shots on the recording — “six shots, followed by very close to three seconds of pause, followed by four more shots.”A shot that struck the back of the teen’s upper arm could support the statements of witnesses, including Johnson, who said Brown was hit from behind as he ran from the officer. Some of those witnesses reported that Brown then turned around and raised his hands in surrender when Wilson fired the fatal shots.A federal investigation into whether Wilson violated Brown’s civil rights continues. The Department of Justice is also looking at how the entire Ferguson Police Department operates. The sweeping review is focusing on how officers use force and how they search and arrest suspects.
Ferguson protests small but growing amid din of car horns, drum-Reuters-By Ellen Wulfhorst and Daniel Wallis-NOV 24,14-YAHOONEWS
FERGUSON, Mo. (Reuters) - Tensions mounted among hundreds of protesters waiting for Monday night's grand jury decision on whether to indict a white police officer in the fatal shooting of an unarmed black teen in Ferguson, Missouri, as National Guard and police moved into position for possible mass arrests.Not far from the stretch of Ferguson that saw the worst of the rioting after the shooting death of Michael Brown in August, dozens of police and military vehicles parked in a strip-mall parking lot that officials set up as a command center for responding to protests.Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the Ferguson Police Department, growing increasingly boisterous as the minutes ticked down to a highly anticipated 8 p.m. CST (0200 GMT Tuesday) news conference about the grand jury deciding whether to indict a white officer in Brown's death.Trying to maintain the peace were a handful of Amnesty International volunteers in bright vests and crowds were being held back by barricades surrounding the precinct.But a couple of protesters with bandanas hiding their faces rushed across the street and started dismantling the barricades, prompting police to emerge from the building and the crowd to begin taunting them.Officials urged tolerance and assured residents that the National Guard would provide security at critical facilities like fire houses, police stations and utility substations."I do not want people in this community to think they have to barricade their doors and take up arms," said St. Louis County Executive Director Charlie Dooley.Earlier in the evening, outside the police department, the slain teen's father, Mike Brown Sr., slowed down in a car to chat with demonstrators after hearing that the panel had reached a decision on whether to indict Officer Darren Wilson in the Aug. 9 shooting.Protester Byron Conley, father of a teen son, said he spoke with Brown about the pain of losing a child and "spending a holiday like Thanksgiving without your son. I could tell what he's going through."
'WE WILL NOT LET THIS SLEEP!'
Tensions have been mounting over the decision, which officials fear could touch off a repeat of last summer's violence and property destruction in the predominantly black St. Louis suburb of 21,000 people.At a makeshift memorial on the street where Brown was killed, a handful of people gathered on Monday night, some wearing masks in the cold evening where temperatures were predicted to dip to 26 degrees F (minus 3 C)."We are ready for war. We are ready for war. We will not let this sleep!" said a man wearing a "I Am Michael Brown" hoodie sweatshirt, who identified himself only as D. White, aged 30, and said he lived nearby.Protests, largely non-violent, have been held regularly in the community, with some evidence of self-policing. In recent days, when a protester threw a water bottle or otherwise acted aggressively, the rest of the crowd screamed: "Agitator! Agitator!" and pointed the person out to police."I hope we can do this in a peaceful way. I just don't want no one to look at our little town thinking we're a bunch of wild animals. We're really good people here," said Conley, 51, a black resident who works for a medical supply company."I'm not on Mike Brown's side and I'm not on Darren Wilson's side. I'm here for the residents and we just want our town back," said Conley.A small but growing group of 20 protesters, mostly young men bundled against the chill in winter clothing, their faces covered by bandanas reminiscent of the ones worn last summer to shield against tear gas, banged a large metal wash bucket outside police headquarters. They broke sporadically to toss around a football near a parked car covered with painted exhortations including "Honk 4 Mike."(Additional reporting by Adrees Latif in Ferguson, Sascha Brodsky in New York, Scott Malone in Boston; Writing by Barbara Goldberg, Eric Walsh and Peter Cooney)
Missouri governor urges calm ahead of grand jury decision on shooting-Reuters-By Daniel Wallis and Ellen Wulfhorst-NOV 24,14-YAHOONEWS
CLAYTON, Mo./FERGUSON, Mo. (Reuters) - Missouri Governor Jay Nixon urged people in the St. Louis area to show respect and restraint following a grand jury's decision on whether to criminally charge a white police officer in the August fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager.Prosecutors are set to announce the grand jury's decision at 8 p.m. local time (0200 GMT) on Monday. Authorities have stepped up security in and around Ferguson, Missouri, to guard against the kind of rioting that flared in the weeks after incident.The death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, a resident of a predominantly black city with a white-dominated power structure, sparked weeks of sometimes violent protests in the St. Louis suburb and has become a flashpoint for strained U.S. race relations."While none of us knows what that (decision) will be, our shared hope and expectation is that, regardless of the decision, people on all sides show tolerance, mutual respect and restraint," Nixon told reporters."This is not the time to turn on each other," St. Louis County Executive Charlie Dooley said at the same news conference.Dooley said he did not want residents to feel they need to barricade themselves in their homes. "I do not want people to accidentally shoot or harm someone out of fear," Dooley said.Nixon has called up the National Guard and local officials have been planning a massive police presence to quell any potential violence, particularly if officer Darren Wilson is not indicted in the Aug. 9 shooting.St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch's office plans to announce the finding in Clayton, Missouri, where the grand jury met, spokesman Ed Magee said.The grand jury, with nine white and three black members, has been meeting since late August, and has heard evidence including witnesses called by the prosecution as well as a private pathologist hired by the Brown family to review the shooting. Nine jurors need to agree to bring charges.The victim's father, Michael Brown Sr., told a group of protesters outside the Ferguson Police Department that he had been told the grand jury had reached its decision but said he did not know what it was."He's calling for peace and he wants people to be not violent," said Byron Conley, 51, who briefly spoke with Brown. "I hope we can do this in a peaceful way. I just don't want no one to look at our little town thinking we're a bunch of wild animals. We're really good people here."White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters at the White House that President Barack Obama has "delivered a pretty forceful message" that any protests following the grand jury's decision should be peaceful. Brown's parents, ministers and community leaders also have urged sympathizers to remain peaceful, whatever the outcome.In St. Louis, officials may allow protesters to occupy public spaces and slow traffic so long as they remain peaceful, Mayor Francis Slay said."My message to protesters: We will protect your right to peacefully assemble and speak your mind," Slay told reporters. "But turning violent and damaging property will not be tolerated."
ON EDGE
Ferguson, a city of 21,000 people, has been on edge for weeks as residents await the grand jury's decision. Shop owners in the city, which faced weeks of sometimes violent protests following Brown's death, have boarded up their windows.The local school district and some neighboring districts canceled classes on Tuesday due to expected protests.Protesters have said they plan to demonstrate at the Ferguson Police Department and at the county courthouse in Clayton, about 8 miles (13 km) to the south, following the grand jury's decision. Many have said they will take to the streets regardless of whether Wilson is indicted, saying the case illustrates long-simmering tensions between black Americans and police.Dozens of protesters assembled outside the Ferguson Police Department on Monday evening. One man pounded on a metal bin, using it as a drum to rally the group.Police in Clayton placed large barricades around the courthouse and put locks on mailboxes to prevent them from being opened ahead of the announcement.Lawyers for Brown's family say the teen was trying to surrender when he was shot, while Wilson's supporters say he feared for his life and opened fire in self-defense. Brown was shot at least six times.Brown is suspected of having stolen cigars from a nearby convenience store shortly before the incident. Brown and a friend had been walking down the middle of the street when Wilson approached them.The grand jury could indict Wilson on charges of manslaughter or murder, or simply conclude that it did not have enough evidence to charge him, said Jens David Ohlin, a professor at Cornell Law School who specializes in criminal law.Its decision will likely focus on what happened in the final seconds before the shooting, Ohlin said."They would have to say, look, there is no specific one piece of evidence that contradicts the police officer's claim that he was acting in self defense," to bring criminal charges, Ohlin said. "If there isn't any one piece of evidence from those last few seconds that contradicts him, they may determine that they have no 'true bill,' that there are no charges."(Additional reporting by David Bailey in Minneapolis, Carey Gillam in Kansas City, Fiona Ortiz in Chicago, Adrees Latif in Ferguson and Will Dunham in Washington; Writing by Scott Malone; Editing by Jim Loney and Will Dunham)
Missouri prosecutor to speak on fatal shooting of black teen: CNN-Reuters-By Daniel Wallis and Ellen Wulfhorst-NOV 24,14-YAHOONEWS
FERGUSON, Mo. (Reuters) - A prosecutor in Missouri will announce on Monday whether a grand jury has decided to indict a white police officer in the fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, a killing that sparked angry protests in the St. Louis suburb, according to media reports.St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch's office was due to make an announcement on the grand jury, CNN reported, citing an unidentified law enforcement source.A spokesman for McCulloch did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Activist groups have pledged fresh street protests if officer Darren Wilson is not indicted in the Aug. 9 shooting death of Michael Brown, 18, while the state has been planning a massive police presence to quell violence.Awaiting the grand jury's decision, shop owners have boarded up store fronts, and students in one area school district began an extended early Thanksgiving break on Monday. Lawyers for Brown's family say the teen was trying to surrender when he was shot, while Wilson's supporters say he feared for his life and opened fire in self-defense.Missouri Governor Jay Nixon has declared a state of emergency in anticipation of the ruling and called in the National Guard.Brown's parents, ministers and community leaders have urged sympathizers to remain peaceful, whatever the outcome.(Additional reporting by David Bailey in Minneapolis; Writing by Scott Malone; Editing by Doina Chiacu)
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-1:50PM
ALRIGHT TO THE FERGUSON DECISION COMES DOWN FOR SURE LATER TODAY. THE GRAND JURY HAS MADE A DECISION.BUT THERE NOT RELEASING IT TILL LATER TODAY.AS THE POLICE HAVE TO GET READY FOR THE RIOTERS-LOOTERS-BURNERS DISQUISED AS PEACEFUL PROTESTERS.THE 3 BLACK - 9 WHITE JURY HAS A DECISION.
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-4:40PM
THE 3 BLACK - 9 WHITE JURY HAS A DECISION.5-2 BLACK WOMAN - 7-1 BLACK MEN.THE BROWN FAMILY WERE NOTIFIED BY THE POLICE ABOUT THE DECISION. THE POLICE AT 3:30PM GAVE THE OFFICIAL NOTICE TO THE MEDIA.THAT A DECISION HAS BEEN MADE.AND THE WORLD WILL BE TOLD LATER ON.ITS GETTING DARK.WHY WOULD THEY NOT TELL US THE DECSION BEFORE IT GETS DARK.AFTER DARK.THE RIOTERS CAN NOT BE SEEN AS EASY.THEY SHOULD HAVE ANNOUNCED THE DECISION IN DAYLIGHT.BUT THE POLICE AND GUARDS AND ALL ARE ON ALERT FOR THE RIOTERS AND LOOTERS.THEY SAY THIS TIME THEY WILL STOP THE LOOTING.I HOPE SO.BUT IF OFFICER WILSON GETS OFF.WE KNOW THE BLACKS WILL BE VIOLENT.AND ALL THE BLACKS INTERVIEWED SO FAR. CONCENTRATE ON THE KILLING.AND JUST CONVIENTLY LEAVE OUT THAT BROWN STOLE A BOX OF CIGARS.THATS A CRIME.AND ALSO ASSAULTED OFFICER DARREN WILSON IN HIS CAR. BEFORE BROWN WAS SHOT.IT IS REDICULAS THAT THE BLACKS JUST CONVIENTLY LEAVE OUT MIKE BROWNS CRIMINAL ACTIVITY.
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-8:00PM
THE GRAND JURY ANNOUNCEMENT WILL BE COMING AT 9 OR 10PM TONIGHT.AT LEAST 8 AND A HALF HOURS AFTER WE FOUND OUT THAT THE GRAND JURY MADE ITS DECISION. OFFICER DARREN WILSON GOT MARRIED TO ANOTHER OFFICER AT THE END OF LAST MONTH.I LIKE ERIN BURNETTE OF CNN.BUT SHE SAID THE MOST REDICULAS THING I HAVE EVER HEARD.SHE SAID IF YOU SAY THAT THERE WILL BE VIOLENCE TONIGHT AFTER THE DECISION IS GIVIN.YOU ARE A RACIST. WHAT ERIN BEAUTY DOES RACISM HAVE TO DO WITH SAYING THERE WILL BE VIOLENCE AFTER THE DECISION IS MADE.I THOUGHT ONLY THAT SUNNI MUSLIM OBAMA AND HIS MORONS AT THE WHITEHOUSE CALLS YOU A RACIST IF YOU DON'T AGREE WITH HIS DECISIONS.BUT I FORGOT-CNN OR THE COMMUNIST NEWS NETWORK IS OBAMAS PUPPET.SO I KNOW ERIN YOU WERE FORCED BY THE SUNNI MUSLIM OBAMA AND HIS CO-HORTS TO SAY YOUR A RACIST IF YOU THINK THERE WILL BE VIOLENCE AT TONIGHTS DECISION IN AN HOUR OR TWO.THE CITIZENS ARE PILING ON THE STREETS ALREADY IN DIFFERENT SPOTS ALL OVER FERGUSON ALREADY.AND I SEEN THREE OF THE SO CALLED PEACEFUL PROTESTERS ALREADY GIVING THE FINGER TO POLICE OFFICERS WHO ARE PEACEFULLY LINED UP ON THE STREET.THIS WILL BE GETTING UGLY WHEN OFFICER DARREN WILSON WILL BE INNOCENT OF THE CRIME.HE KILLED A CRIMINAL THAT WAS A THIEF AT A STORE AND THEN ASSAUKTED OFFICER WILSON IN THE POLICE CAR.
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-8:27PM
THE NYT IS REPORTING THAT OFFICER DARREN WILSON IS NOT REQUIRED TO TURN HIMSELF IN.THIS TELLS ME-MY PREDICTION WILL BE CORRECT.AND OFFICER WILSON WAS DEFENDING HIMSELF THE GRAND JURY DECIDED.I THINK WE HAVE GOT THE TIP THAT SAYS WILSON IS INNOCENT OF THE MURDER CHARGES.
UPDATE-NOV 24,14-9:17PM
ITS 8:45PM-ITS CONFIRMED FROM A CLOSE FRIEND OF OFFICER WILSON THAT HE WAS NOT ASKED TO TURN HIMSELF IN WITH ONLY 15 MINUTES LEFT TILL THE DECISION COMES OUT.AND WE GOT A COUPLE OF CNN MINYONS VAN THE RACE BAITOR JONES AND SUNNY THE RACE BAITER HOSTIN BOTH ARE INSISTING THAT THE GUY THAT WILL GIVE US THE DECISION SHORTLY.GAVE THE GRAND JURY TO MUCH INFORMATION ABOUT THE CASE WITH OUT TELLING THEM THAT OFFICER WILSON SHOULD BE INDITED.THIS IS JUST REDICULAS TALK AS JEFF TOUBIN THE LAWYER SAID ON CNN.THE MORE INFORMATION THE GRAND JURY HAS.THE BETTER THEY CAN FIGURE OUT A CONCLUSIVE DECISION. HOSTIN AND JONES ARE OUT TO LUNCH WITH A DEBATE LIKE THAT.
ITS NOW 9:17PM AND THE DECISION HAS COME IN.OFFICER DARREN WILSON IS AQUITED OF MURDER.SAYS ROBERT MCCULOCH HE CAN RELAX NOW AND CARRY ON WITH HIS LIFE AGAIN.NOT AS A POLICE OFFICE.THERES TO MANY BLACKS AROUND THE AREA THAT WANT HIM KILLED.BUT IF HE AND HIS OFFICER WIFE MOVE TO A DIFFERENT AREA.THEY CAN START THEIR LIFE AS HUSBAND AND WIFE.THERES THOUSANDS AROUND FERGUSON NOW.IT COULD GET UGLY. WE WILL SEE WHAT HAPPENS OVER THE NEXT HOURS.THE BIGGEST CROWD IT LOOKS LIKE IS AT THE POLICE STATION.THE OBSENITIES ARE FLYING THE CNN HOST JASON CARROL SAYS.AT HIM THE MEDIA FOR TELLING LIES THE SWEARERS ARE SAYING.MCCULOCH SAYS THE MEDIA WAS ON A FRENZY HUNGRY WOLF TRYING TO GOBBLE UP ANY SHEEP INFORMATION ABOUT THIS FERGUSON BROWN-WILSON CASE.THE GRAND JURY HAD THE CASE FROM AUG 20 TO TODAY NOV 24,14.THE GRAND JURY SAID WILSONS USED OF DEADLY FORCE WAS TO DEFEND HIMSELF AGAINST A CRIMINAL.OFFICER WILSON IS INNOCENT THE GRAND JURY SAYS.
THE POSSIBLE CHARGES WILSON COULD HAVE HAD AGAINST HIM.
FIRST DEGREE MURDER
SECOND DEGREE MURDER
VOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER
INVOLUNTARY MANSLAUGHTER
AQUITED (NO CHARGES-HE ACTED IN SELF DEFENCE)(REASONABLE FORCE)*
OFFICER WILSONS RESULT*
OTHER IMPORTANT NEWS INSTEAD
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/liberal-loonies-want-to-force-carbon.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/hell-is-real-you-choose-were-you-want.html
OTHER BROWN-WILSON STORIES
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/world-waits-fergeson-grand-jury.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/fergeson-grand-jury-should-be-decided.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/the-grand-jury-decision-in-mike-brown.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/09/ferguson-announces-changes-to-policing.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/09/us-to-investigate-ferguson-police-report.html
http://israndjer.blogspot.ca/2014/11/isis-beheads-american-aid-worker-peter.html
Grand jury doesn't charge Ferguson officer Darren Wilson in shooting death of Michael Brown
No indictment: Grand jury decides Ferguson Officer Darren Wilson will not face criminal charges in Michael Brown shooting death-Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon made plea for 'respect' and 'restraint' ahead of announcement-Jason Sickles, Yahoo-NOV 24,14-YAHOONEWS
FERGUSON, Mo. — Police Officer Darren Wilson — the suburban St. Louis patrolman who killed unarmed teenager Michael Brown in early August - will not face criminal charges in the controversial shooting death, a grand jury has decided.Wilson, who is white, became a national figure after he shot the black 18-year-old multiple times in broad daylight on a residential street. The grand jury deliberated for months and Ferguson was rocked by violent protests in the immediate aftermath of the shooting.The decision was announced by prosecuting attorney Robert McCulloch, who discussed the lengthy deliberation period of the grand jury citing consideration of differing witness reports as a one reason for the unusually long session.Ahead of Monday's announcement, Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon made a plea for peace."Our shared hope and expectation is that regardless of the decision, people on all sides show tolerance, mutual respect and restraint," he said.Meanwhile, officials in Clayton stepped up security measures erecting barricades around the courthouse to prepare for possible protests. A Yahoo News reporter spotted members of the National Guard arriving in military vehicles. Several Ferguson-area schools have announced they will be closed Tuesday.“The men and women of the National Guard also will be in the area to provide security at critical facilities like firehouses, police stations and utility substations, and offer logistical and transportation support as needed. This will free up law enforcement officers to do their jobs effectively," Nixon said.Demonstrators gathered ahead of the announcement holding signs, chanting and honking car horns.The 12-member St. Louis County grand jury — which included one black man, two black women, six white men and three white women — has been hearing testimony since Aug. 20 to determine whether there was probable cause that Wilson had committed a crime.Police experts have said officers generally have leeway to use lethal force if they reasonably fear they are in imminent danger.The Aug. 9 shooting sparked protests and riots in the mostly black St. Louis suburb and fueled a nationwide debate on race, policing and justice.
“Regardless of the grand jury's decision, the Brown family and our legal team ask again for peace and calm, even though we understand people may have feelings of anger or disappointment,” Benjamin Crump, the family’s attorney, said in a statement prior to the announcement. “We encourage people to take their frustrations to the ballot box, not the streets.”Brown, who graduated from high school in May, and his friend Dorian Johnson were walking down the middle of a two-lane street around noon, when Wilson encountered them in his marked police SUV.Wilson, a Ferguson officer for three years, either asked or ordered the pair to get on the sidewalk. From there, accounts differ as to who instigated a scuffle between Wilson and Brown at the driver’s side door.Johnson, 22, told investigators and reporters that Wilson was antagonistic toward them, abruptly backing up his SUV and throwing open the door, which bounced off Brown.“He just reached his arm out the window and grabbed my friend around his neck, and he was trying to choke my friend,” Johnson told reporters after the shooting. “He was trying to get away, and the officer then reached out and grabbed his arm to pull him inside the car.”Wilson, who has been on paid leave since the shooting, has not spoken publicly about what happened. However, he reportedly met with investigators on several occasions and testified before the grand jury for four hours — a move that surprised some legal experts, since he was not bound by law to go before the panel.Ferguson police and the St. Louis County Police Department, the lead investigating agency, released sparse police reports about the shooting and have refused to provide details of their findings.St. Louis County’s official autopsy on Brown’s body has not been made public, but the St. Louis Post-Dispatch obtained a copy from an anonymous source and published it on Oct. 22. The autopsy included a summary from Detective Patrick J. Hokamp’s preliminary investigation of the shooting.“The deceased became belligerent towards Officer Wilson,” the document states. “As Officer Wilson attempted to exit out of his patrol vehicle the deceased pushed his door shut and began to struggle with Officer Wilson, during the struggle the Officers weapon was un-holstered. The weapon discharged during the struggle.“The deceased then ran down the roadway. Officer Wilson then began to chase the deceased. As he was giving chase to the deceased, the deceased turned around and ran towards Officer Wilson. Officer Wilson had his service weapon drawn, as the deceased began to run towards him, he discharged his service weapon several times.”The county autopsy and a private exam commissioned by the teen’s family both concluded Brown was struck by six of Wilson’s shots, including a fatal hit to the top of the head. Other exit wounds and grazes were found on the teen’s head, upper body, arm and hand.The injury to his right hand may have been of particular interest to the grand jury, since the county autopsy discovered it was inflicted at close range, possibly supporting Wilson’s account that there was a struggle for the gun in the police cruiser. Sources told the Post-Dispatch that Brown’s blood had been found on the officer’s gun.
Crump, the attorney for the Brown family, immediately downplayed the newspaper’s account.“We are not surprised by the information leaked last night by the St. Louis Medical Examiner's office,” Crump said in a written statement. “Several independent witnesses indicated there was a brief altercation between Michael Brown and Officer Wilson at the patrol car. What we want to know is why Officer Wilson shot Michael Brown multiple times and killed him even though he was more than 20 feet away from his patrol car; this is the crux of the matter!”The shooting scene unfolded on a neighborhood street amid a cluster of apartment buildings. A resident who lives in one of the apartments later turned over a purported audio recording of the shots being fired. Authorities have not disclosed how many times Wilson discharged his weapon, but veteran forensic audio expert Paul Ginsberg told Yahoo News that he heard 10 shots on the recording — “six shots, followed by very close to three seconds of pause, followed by four more shots.”A shot that struck the back of the teen’s upper arm could support the statements of witnesses, including Johnson, who said Brown was hit from behind as he ran from the officer. Some of those witnesses reported that Brown then turned around and raised his hands in surrender when Wilson fired the fatal shots.A federal investigation into whether Wilson violated Brown’s civil rights continues. The Department of Justice is also looking at how the entire Ferguson Police Department operates. The sweeping review is focusing on how officers use force and how they search and arrest suspects.
Ferguson protests small but growing amid din of car horns, drum-Reuters-By Ellen Wulfhorst and Daniel Wallis-NOV 24,14-YAHOONEWS
FERGUSON, Mo. (Reuters) - Tensions mounted among hundreds of protesters waiting for Monday night's grand jury decision on whether to indict a white police officer in the fatal shooting of an unarmed black teen in Ferguson, Missouri, as National Guard and police moved into position for possible mass arrests.Not far from the stretch of Ferguson that saw the worst of the rioting after the shooting death of Michael Brown in August, dozens of police and military vehicles parked in a strip-mall parking lot that officials set up as a command center for responding to protests.Hundreds of protesters gathered outside the Ferguson Police Department, growing increasingly boisterous as the minutes ticked down to a highly anticipated 8 p.m. CST (0200 GMT Tuesday) news conference about the grand jury deciding whether to indict a white officer in Brown's death.Trying to maintain the peace were a handful of Amnesty International volunteers in bright vests and crowds were being held back by barricades surrounding the precinct.But a couple of protesters with bandanas hiding their faces rushed across the street and started dismantling the barricades, prompting police to emerge from the building and the crowd to begin taunting them.Officials urged tolerance and assured residents that the National Guard would provide security at critical facilities like fire houses, police stations and utility substations."I do not want people in this community to think they have to barricade their doors and take up arms," said St. Louis County Executive Director Charlie Dooley.Earlier in the evening, outside the police department, the slain teen's father, Mike Brown Sr., slowed down in a car to chat with demonstrators after hearing that the panel had reached a decision on whether to indict Officer Darren Wilson in the Aug. 9 shooting.Protester Byron Conley, father of a teen son, said he spoke with Brown about the pain of losing a child and "spending a holiday like Thanksgiving without your son. I could tell what he's going through."
'WE WILL NOT LET THIS SLEEP!'
Tensions have been mounting over the decision, which officials fear could touch off a repeat of last summer's violence and property destruction in the predominantly black St. Louis suburb of 21,000 people.At a makeshift memorial on the street where Brown was killed, a handful of people gathered on Monday night, some wearing masks in the cold evening where temperatures were predicted to dip to 26 degrees F (minus 3 C)."We are ready for war. We are ready for war. We will not let this sleep!" said a man wearing a "I Am Michael Brown" hoodie sweatshirt, who identified himself only as D. White, aged 30, and said he lived nearby.Protests, largely non-violent, have been held regularly in the community, with some evidence of self-policing. In recent days, when a protester threw a water bottle or otherwise acted aggressively, the rest of the crowd screamed: "Agitator! Agitator!" and pointed the person out to police."I hope we can do this in a peaceful way. I just don't want no one to look at our little town thinking we're a bunch of wild animals. We're really good people here," said Conley, 51, a black resident who works for a medical supply company."I'm not on Mike Brown's side and I'm not on Darren Wilson's side. I'm here for the residents and we just want our town back," said Conley.A small but growing group of 20 protesters, mostly young men bundled against the chill in winter clothing, their faces covered by bandanas reminiscent of the ones worn last summer to shield against tear gas, banged a large metal wash bucket outside police headquarters. They broke sporadically to toss around a football near a parked car covered with painted exhortations including "Honk 4 Mike."(Additional reporting by Adrees Latif in Ferguson, Sascha Brodsky in New York, Scott Malone in Boston; Writing by Barbara Goldberg, Eric Walsh and Peter Cooney)
Missouri governor urges calm ahead of grand jury decision on shooting-Reuters-By Daniel Wallis and Ellen Wulfhorst-NOV 24,14-YAHOONEWS
CLAYTON, Mo./FERGUSON, Mo. (Reuters) - Missouri Governor Jay Nixon urged people in the St. Louis area to show respect and restraint following a grand jury's decision on whether to criminally charge a white police officer in the August fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager.Prosecutors are set to announce the grand jury's decision at 8 p.m. local time (0200 GMT) on Monday. Authorities have stepped up security in and around Ferguson, Missouri, to guard against the kind of rioting that flared in the weeks after incident.The death of 18-year-old Michael Brown, a resident of a predominantly black city with a white-dominated power structure, sparked weeks of sometimes violent protests in the St. Louis suburb and has become a flashpoint for strained U.S. race relations."While none of us knows what that (decision) will be, our shared hope and expectation is that, regardless of the decision, people on all sides show tolerance, mutual respect and restraint," Nixon told reporters."This is not the time to turn on each other," St. Louis County Executive Charlie Dooley said at the same news conference.Dooley said he did not want residents to feel they need to barricade themselves in their homes. "I do not want people to accidentally shoot or harm someone out of fear," Dooley said.Nixon has called up the National Guard and local officials have been planning a massive police presence to quell any potential violence, particularly if officer Darren Wilson is not indicted in the Aug. 9 shooting.St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch's office plans to announce the finding in Clayton, Missouri, where the grand jury met, spokesman Ed Magee said.The grand jury, with nine white and three black members, has been meeting since late August, and has heard evidence including witnesses called by the prosecution as well as a private pathologist hired by the Brown family to review the shooting. Nine jurors need to agree to bring charges.The victim's father, Michael Brown Sr., told a group of protesters outside the Ferguson Police Department that he had been told the grand jury had reached its decision but said he did not know what it was."He's calling for peace and he wants people to be not violent," said Byron Conley, 51, who briefly spoke with Brown. "I hope we can do this in a peaceful way. I just don't want no one to look at our little town thinking we're a bunch of wild animals. We're really good people here."White House spokesman Josh Earnest told reporters at the White House that President Barack Obama has "delivered a pretty forceful message" that any protests following the grand jury's decision should be peaceful. Brown's parents, ministers and community leaders also have urged sympathizers to remain peaceful, whatever the outcome.In St. Louis, officials may allow protesters to occupy public spaces and slow traffic so long as they remain peaceful, Mayor Francis Slay said."My message to protesters: We will protect your right to peacefully assemble and speak your mind," Slay told reporters. "But turning violent and damaging property will not be tolerated."
ON EDGE
Ferguson, a city of 21,000 people, has been on edge for weeks as residents await the grand jury's decision. Shop owners in the city, which faced weeks of sometimes violent protests following Brown's death, have boarded up their windows.The local school district and some neighboring districts canceled classes on Tuesday due to expected protests.Protesters have said they plan to demonstrate at the Ferguson Police Department and at the county courthouse in Clayton, about 8 miles (13 km) to the south, following the grand jury's decision. Many have said they will take to the streets regardless of whether Wilson is indicted, saying the case illustrates long-simmering tensions between black Americans and police.Dozens of protesters assembled outside the Ferguson Police Department on Monday evening. One man pounded on a metal bin, using it as a drum to rally the group.Police in Clayton placed large barricades around the courthouse and put locks on mailboxes to prevent them from being opened ahead of the announcement.Lawyers for Brown's family say the teen was trying to surrender when he was shot, while Wilson's supporters say he feared for his life and opened fire in self-defense. Brown was shot at least six times.Brown is suspected of having stolen cigars from a nearby convenience store shortly before the incident. Brown and a friend had been walking down the middle of the street when Wilson approached them.The grand jury could indict Wilson on charges of manslaughter or murder, or simply conclude that it did not have enough evidence to charge him, said Jens David Ohlin, a professor at Cornell Law School who specializes in criminal law.Its decision will likely focus on what happened in the final seconds before the shooting, Ohlin said."They would have to say, look, there is no specific one piece of evidence that contradicts the police officer's claim that he was acting in self defense," to bring criminal charges, Ohlin said. "If there isn't any one piece of evidence from those last few seconds that contradicts him, they may determine that they have no 'true bill,' that there are no charges."(Additional reporting by David Bailey in Minneapolis, Carey Gillam in Kansas City, Fiona Ortiz in Chicago, Adrees Latif in Ferguson and Will Dunham in Washington; Writing by Scott Malone; Editing by Jim Loney and Will Dunham)
Missouri prosecutor to speak on fatal shooting of black teen: CNN-Reuters-By Daniel Wallis and Ellen Wulfhorst-NOV 24,14-YAHOONEWS
FERGUSON, Mo. (Reuters) - A prosecutor in Missouri will announce on Monday whether a grand jury has decided to indict a white police officer in the fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, a killing that sparked angry protests in the St. Louis suburb, according to media reports.St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch's office was due to make an announcement on the grand jury, CNN reported, citing an unidentified law enforcement source.A spokesman for McCulloch did not immediately respond to a request for comment.Activist groups have pledged fresh street protests if officer Darren Wilson is not indicted in the Aug. 9 shooting death of Michael Brown, 18, while the state has been planning a massive police presence to quell violence.Awaiting the grand jury's decision, shop owners have boarded up store fronts, and students in one area school district began an extended early Thanksgiving break on Monday. Lawyers for Brown's family say the teen was trying to surrender when he was shot, while Wilson's supporters say he feared for his life and opened fire in self-defense.Missouri Governor Jay Nixon has declared a state of emergency in anticipation of the ruling and called in the National Guard.Brown's parents, ministers and community leaders have urged sympathizers to remain peaceful, whatever the outcome.(Additional reporting by David Bailey in Minneapolis; Writing by Scott Malone; Editing by Doina Chiacu)