#1 Gun went off in the patrol car.
#2 Gunpowder residue on Brown's hands, indicates close proximity at firearm discharge .
#3 Gunpowder residue on Officer Wilson's hands ( expected).
#4 Gunpowder residue inside Officer Wilson's patrol car, along with bullet fragments.
#5 End of discussion.
What some are trying to say, is that the residue could have come from the fatal discharges of the weapon at close range.
It’s simply undeniable that he went for the officer’s weapon. The officer reported the scuffle in his statement. The witnesses confirm the scuffle. The gun went off.
What’s left to discuss, once that is known?
The talk of him getting the residue when fatally shot, is mute, the prior facts already being established.
We’re in agreement. I’m just explaining the alternative view, which I think is preposterous.