Saturday, November 22, 2014

It's Not The Riot That Scares Me

Those marching in the streets and demanding the indictment of Darren Wilson are doing no less than taking chisels to the foundation of our judicial system. More accurately, they are swinging sledgehammers at it.

I recognize that is pretty strong statement, but please stay with me. I don't come to that conclusion lightly, nor do I wish to offend. However, that is exactly what I mean to say...so I'll just go ahead and say it.

One may be aware of the all the evidence available to the public.  One may also understand the legal system, the role of the Grand Jury, and the constitutional rights of our citizens (including Darren Wilson.)   But nobody who satisfies both of those conditions could possibly, in good faith, still call for the indictment of Darren Wilson.**

Should indictment come back from the Grand Jury (for the record, I think it won't,) it could only mean that the citizens on that Grand Jury chose to acquiesce to the demand of those threatening to turn North St. Louis County into the Gaza Strip rather than fulfill their obligation to justice.  

As a 7th grader, I was taught by Jay Buck of Crestview Junior High School that our constitution protects us from prosecutors charging citizens with crimes without meeting a standard of proof.  They need to either convince a grand jury of citizens, or a judge, that there is probable cause of a crime having been committed by the citizen he or she wishes to bring to trial. 

Just as our constitution protects our freedom of speech and peaceful assembly, it protects our freedom from being unmeritoriously charged with crimes.  Like all of our rights, and especially in this time, it is paramount for us to defend this gift from our founders with vigor and fortitude.  

We must not cast our rights overboard to appease a mindless mob of angry voices...no matter how terrifying the threats. None of us know who the mob will turn on next, nor do we know what demands it may make in the future if empowered by the indictment Darren Wilson.  

Riots we can live through.  But we must not give an uninformed and angry mob a voice in our judicial system.  The Innocence or guilt of a man is never to be tried in the court of public opinion, but instead in a courtroom and only when merited by probable cause.

Be prayerful that the grand jury understands what is at stake here.




** I obviously left a highly contentious point completely undefended.  I did so to enable a more expeditious unwrapping of the crux of this biscuit.  For those interested in the point's defense, I submit a separate essay below....



There is zero credible evidence (available to the general public) upon which to indict Darren Wilson for a crime in the death of Michael Brown.

I realize that to some, this is quite an incendiary statement. Yet I ask everyone to take a deep breath and hear me out.  I reach this conclusion neither mindlessly nor uninformed.  

The initial story is quite harrowing.  Michael Brown is walking down the street when Officer Wilson (motivated by racial hate) pulls him into the police SUV and initiates an altercation.  Michael Brown breaks away and flees, only to be shot from behind by Officer Wilson.  After absorbing the blow, Brown then turned and surrendered on his knees, with his hands up. Un-accepting of the surrender, Wilson unloaded his gun into the helpless Brown....his last round being execution style to the top of Brown's head. A citizen had been executed in cold blood.

This story immediately hit the Twitter/Facebook feeds of the world. Unaccountable, bomb-throwing bloggers amplified it loud and far. Before the body was cold, this narrative had sparked outrage throughout the community and would later birth a full scale riot lasting for days.

The problem is that the story has proven to be utter bullshit.  No evidence corroborates this story.  None.  The science of the case and other evidence collected, absolutely and without equivocation, refute that version of events.

Brown was not shot in the back.  Brown was not shot while kneeling on the Ground. Brown's hands were not up when he was shot, nor were his palms facing out.  The story of an execution is completely false...either the result of lying or the inherent unreliability of eyewitnesses...but absolutely proven false nonetheless.

Furthermore, Darren Wilson was not capable of pulling Brown into the police SUV with one hand.  I don't think Andre the Giant could have done that.  Brown was 6'4", 300lbs., and had the mechanical advantage of being on both feet.  He would not have been moved by the single hand of a seated man.  This doesn't pass the laugh-ability test.  How a sentient being could possibly believe it is beyond me.  It is certain that Brown attacked Wilson in Wilson's police SUV and had is hand upon the officer's gun when the first round of shots were fired.  

So we know for certain that it didn't start how the initial eyewitnesses said it started, and we know it didn't end how the initial eyewitnesses said it did.  The whole encounter took like 40 seconds. There isn't much more than a beginning and an end.

There is also a giant hole in the story making it unbelievable on its face. Wilson has no record of assaulting random citizens...yet we are to believe it was he, rather than Brown, who initiated the fight...despite Brown having just strong-arm-robbed a convenience store. It is infinitely more believable that Brown attacked Wilson than the other way around.  In fact, it is absurd to believe otherwise. (Sorry...that's just reality.)

With initial incendiary reports from the scene having been thoroughly and convincingly proven not-credible, one must ask "what credible evidence remains?" The answer: none that I'm aware of.

There are many other questions being asked, but none of them are germane to the decision whether to indict Wilson. 

Further, I could lay out point by point how the evidence and logical reasoning all adds up to Wilson's version of the events being true.  But I'm not going to because it doesn't matter.

We are all innocent until proven guilty in a court of law and to a jury of our peers.  The onus lies upon the state to prove a citizen committed a crime. It does not place the onus of proof on the accused. 

So again....

What credible evidence is there that Wilson committed murder?


The answer: none that I'm aware of.  







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