Posted on 11/22/2014 12:01:04 PM PST by Kaslin
In a move that appears to be calculated to pacify rioters who have promised violence if Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson is not indicted for his role in the shooting death of Michael Brown, the Ferguson Grand Jury has announced that they have been unable to come to an agreement on the indictment
The grand jury left the justice center in St. Louis, Missouri, late Friday without having reached a decision on whether to indict Wilson who reportedly shot a robbery suspect, Michael Brown, when Brown attacked the officer.
Since the shooting, the St. Louis suburb has endured mass riots and looting. Many groups, including the Black Panthers, have promised violence if Wilson is not indicted for having shot the black teenager in August.
Autopsy reports support Wilsons account and Ferguson has been bracing for mass violence in recent days as the grand jury has been expected to hand down a refusal to indict. However, with the near-constant threat of mass violence looming, it may be that the grand jury has bowed to the threats of violence and property damage that would devastate their community and have been unable to come to an agreement.
President Obama spoke on Friday about the escalating situation in Ferguson:
This is a country that allows everybody to express their views, allows them to peacefully assemble, to protest actions that they think are unjust, Obama told ABC News. But using any event as an excuse for violence is contrary to rule of law and contrary to who we are.
Obama was apparently unaware of the irony of his lecturing on the value of the rule of law on the same day that he signed an executive order granting amnesty to millions of illegal immigrants without Congressional approval.
Okay. There’s another good reason. One lady on the forum mentioned that the schools don’t want to be responsible for all the kids should some trouble break out. That made a lot of sense to me.
Since when can a grand jury hang?
In Missouri, nine of twelve are required to indict. Fewer than nine, no bill. No third choice.
Ask that evil bitch from Florida, Angela Corey.
Yes, but businesses will be open and people will have to go to work. If they wait two more days, can deny them a lot of potential victims for the next few days, and make them compete with holiday events for TV time and expose.
Delayed justice has serious effects on ham sandwiches.
Split as many hairs as you care to. Still, we do not know what the GJ has or has not decided, and that article was bad reporting with a misleading headline.
The End
However, at least 27 states use some kind of grand jury as a matter of state law. Missouri is among them.
The number of grand jurors in state (or local, within that state) grand jury who must vote for an indictment is a matter of that state's law. An indictment generally involves a supermajority vote of the jurors under those laws.
In Missouri, there are twelve jurors on a grand jury. Nine of the grand jurors must vote for an indictment; otherwise, it's a 'no-bill.'
From The Court Process, an official state publication by the Missouri Attorney General, page 4:
"GRAND JURYA grand jury replaces the preliminary hearing in certain cases as a method by which criminal charges can be filed. A grand jury is a panel of private citizens, chosen in a manner similar to the way in which trial juries are chosen, whose job is to look into allegations of criminal activity. The prosecutor presents evidence to the 12 grand jurors, nine of whom must agree on whether a crime was committed and whether there is probable cause to believe the defendant committed it. As with a preliminary hearing, the case is either bound over to the circuit court or the defendant is freed. Grand jury proceedings are closed to the public. Defendants do not attend unless they are testifying as witnesses."
See also: Missouri Rev. Stat. 540.250 True bill--concurrence by nine grand jurors.
As an aside, there's no such thing as double jeopardy with respect to a grand jury, because jeopardy never attaches - in simplistic terms, no proceeding has commenced that could result in a defending being found guilty.
As a result, in the case of a no-bill and as long as the statute(s) of limitations for the possible crime(s) has/have not yet run, a prosecutor may present evidence against the same person again regarding the same (or different, or both) charges before another grand jury or juries. There may some limitations on that, and I wouldn't be surprised if there were, but I don't know of any.
If you want to know more about Missouri Grand Juries, it's addressed in Missouri Rev. Stat. Ch. 540 - Grand Juries and Their Proceedings.
Thanks for the reply and useful information. The problem here was really the sloppy reporting and misleading headline. The headline containing the word "fail(s)" gave a totally wrong impression since the meaning of "fails" has a sense of finality.
Apparently all that happened is the GJ went home for the weekend having announced no decision, and they will reconvene tomorrow (Monday). GJs don't "fail", they either indict or not.
Nice post. Thanks.
“Thanksgiving Eve at 11pm.”
Is that because the looters will already be in line for the “Black (racist) Friday Sales”?
You’re quite welcome.
The guy with his mouth open...all he needs is a better helmet
Helmets fo da po'....new battle cry
Wah be comin...
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