Monday, January 12, 2015

"Let Peace Begin Here"


Here is my latest art project for the Woodfin Elementary school in a small township outside of Asheville, NC in western Carolina. 

My sign is placed in the Peace Garden at the school where the children are enjoying making handmade ornaments. Their ornaments are including pine cones covered in peanut butter then rolled in bird seed for our outdoor feathered friends!

This sign became more than just a project. It became a 'labor of love' and inner 'peace'; the hand print is Justin's from age three. I thought it fitting to stencil his print and paint it in every color of every ethnicity, 

The stars contain words that he and I discussed many times as he grew up: love, kindness, understanding, compassion, acceptance, and tolerance.

and...wouldn't it be wondrous to experience World Peace in our lifetime? 

There is always Hope!

I remain Justin's [optimistic] momma 

Placed in the Woodfin Elementary 'Peace Garden'

Merry Heavenly Christmas Justrin

Merry Christmas My Son, Justin, From momma


There will never be a morning I will not wake without your name upon my lips.
 

There will never be a day that I will not pine for your presence.
 

There will never be a day my heart will not ache to hear your laughter.
 

There will never be a day I will not have an aching soul when the phone does not ring so I may hear your wonderful voice.
 

Nor will there ever be a night when I lay my head upon my pillow that your name is not the last words that I speak before I cry myself to sleep my beautiful son.


"Night, night sweet dreams Honey. I love you Baby, I'll see you in the morning!" These are the words I wrote upon the note I placed in your jacket pocket my sweet bunny boy; before they placed you where I could no longer see your beautiful face honey..


 Justin's Christmas 2015 Grave Blanket made in the colors of his Alma Mater ~the University of Maryland College Park, MD

Sunday, January 11, 2015

Justin DeSha-Overcash's 2011 MURDER/Facts Never Shared With the Media

Four years later the facts of the murder of UMd graduate Justin DeSha-Overcash remain unknown.

“Justice will never be served until the unaffected become as outraged as the affected.” ~Benjamin Franklin


     January 11, 2011 a cloudy day would begin with snow flurries that would turn into a snow storm. This would be the last day of Justin DeSha-Overcash’s life. The day the Prince George’s county pPpolice press release department would begin to circulate many fabricated stories, pursuant to Justin’s life and senseless demise, to the media.

     As ‘Justin’s momma’, Karen DeSha, I am finally writing to set forth the true facts of the most bizarre and incredulous nightmare I was forced to participate in involving unconscionable lies about my beautiful son, Justin, after his violent murder by a PG county career criminal.

FACT: Justin resided in a single family dwelling [a home] at 8809 38th Avenue College Park, MD while attending UMd. This home consisted of six bedrooms which were leased to different individual UMd students at any given time. When they rent these rooms these students do not know one another. My weary heart is growing more of the opinion that if a college student feels their life to be in danger, by a room mate, they should be allowed to cancel their lease immediately, their deposit be returned, with no questions asked. As for the reckless rental method of college landlords, which appears is beginning to endanger the lives of students, I can state with great conviction, landlords should be held accountable if they choose to continue to rent rooms “helter skelter” to Lessees who murder or harm other Lessees. “Money” truly has become the root of all evil.

In the current climate in America of young children, teenagers, and millennia’s taking the lives of others ‘in the blink of an eye’ something is very wrong and I am reminded of Justin’s 1993 elementary school mission statement “Home Is Where the Start Is.” Parents wake up communicate with your children give them guidance, consistency, and above all love!

FACT: Justin had confided in his mentor at UMd he did not like the “things” that were going on at 8809 38th Avenue. His concerned mentor immediately suggested he move and he responded, “I will move in May when I graduate and my [lease] is up.” My son never made it to May!
FACT: Justin DeSha-Overcash bravely forfeited his life and saved TWO fellow UMd alumni on January 11, 2011 from the masked gunman who later would be captured and identified as PG County career criminal Deandre Ricardo Williams. Why did the Prince George’s county police press release department [never] report Justin’s selfless and heroic act? This is the Justin we all know and love: compassionate, accountable, loving, a true ‘brother’, and genuinely protective human being! Yet never [never] was Justin’s life saving act of heroism released to the media.

FACT: Justin did not die in his rental home. Justin was transported, unconscious, via ambulance to the hospital and he fought for one hour and three minutes to LIVE! However, my brave, beautiful, strong, intelligent son’s colon had been nicked by one of the two, or a piece of, one of the two horrid bullets Mr. Williams cold bloodily pumped into my precious son’s body; my gift from God. Justin’s healthy body went toxic and there was nothing, absolutely nothing, the doctors in the emergency room could do to change my best friend, my joy, my constant, my
son’s fate. Justin was pronounced at 12:30 PM on January 11, 2011.

FACT: Mr. Williams had received a Felony II Handgun Charge on December 18, 2010 in the District of Columbia and was jailed in DC. He pleaded with a judge to release him she replied,
“No, you are High Intensity”. He went before a male judge a day later pleading again to be released, his reply, “No you are High Intensity.” On the third attempt Mr. Williams appeared before a female judge to plead for his release. She released him on December 20, 2010 with an ankle monitor that only registered that Mr. Williams was in by curfew, 10 PM until 6 AM, and Mr. Willams was [free to do as he pleased] from 6AM until 10 PM everyday.

FACT: Twenty two days later [22 days] this “High Intensity” criminal fatally shot my son for no reason. In the District of Columbia it is against the law to release a prisoner being held on a Felony II Handgun Charge. I researched and found this Felony II Handgun Charge against Mr. Williams and notified the
DC Attorney General’s Office. Upon notifying the authorities in DC that Mr. Williams had committed the First Degree Murder of my son, Justin, while he was wearing an ankle monitor the Assistant AG was most willing to work with me to bring Mr. Williams to justice. My son, Justin DeSha-Overcash, and I were made Victim/Survivors of this crime.

FACT: On the day Mr. Williams murdered my son in cold blood he was on a Parole Violation for a 2009 charge he committed in Prince George’s county where he murdered Justin DeSha-Overcash; however, his defense attorney quickly hid this offense.

FACT: With the assistance of Chief David Mitchell, of the University of Maryland, he secured a conference with the Prince George’s county authorities in Upper Marlboro, MD on *March 25. 2011. When I met with Chief Mitchell, who was the former Chief of PG County for twenty six years, in February 2011 he found it unbelievably incredulous that the acting Chief had not even contacted me since Justin’s murder. I had placed numerous calls to the Acting Chief and none of my calls were returned. Many of you reading this may not know Victims and Survivors have “no rights”. We are patronized, treated with disdain, threatened, or utterly and completely ignored. They [authorities] hope Victims and Survivors of violent crimes will grow weary and just “go away”; this treatment is not prevalent to Prince George’s county this is the customary treatment of Victims and Survivors in every state and city America. Vote HR# 40 Victims Rights Bill

*March 25, 2011 Conference-in attendance Mr. Erico [representing the newly appointed police commissioner], Acting Chief McGaw, Major Stronge-Homicide, Major Moore-Victim Assistance, Lead Detective Harris, MCVRC Attorney Mrs. Pauline Mandel, Esq., myself, and my witnesses UMd Grad students Jodie Gaeman and Jesse Wimert. I learned from the beginning of this nightmare never to meet with Prince George’s county without witnesses.

     I spoke of how they [PG county authorities] had violated Justin’s Constitutional Rights as a Victim and “murdered him twice” by fabricating stories of his lifestyle and feeding information to the media that was untrue and I made it quite clear I was not leaving this meeting until they told me why! I could share many things that were said on this day in the two and one half hours spent in this room; however, I am going straight to a few statements made by then Acting Chief McGaw. His short, unconscionable, and ludicrous exchange horrified me and therein I immediately knew Prince George’s County’s agenda which lead to all the lies and fabrications in their attempt to harm my son, Justin’s good name and 22 year honorable life.

     McGaw looked across the table at me and said. “You have to understand. We had all these things going on in our precinct.” In my mind I thought, [I don’t have to understand anything, my son is dead!] McGaw continued, with more emphasis in his voice, “Then all these murders began happening!” [I felt sick to my stomach. In a split second I realized the truth and before McGaw could utter another word I looked him directly in the eye and said], “Oh my God, you “threw Justin under the bus” to take the media’s eye off your money laundering precinct!” Everyone in attendance looked down at the table no one would look at me. They kept looking at the table as I let out a gasp of horror, disbelief, and grief. I guessed their ‘agenda’! My Caucasian, middle class, college educated son had been literally and figuratively ‘drug through the mud’ because they never expected I would stand up for my child that I know my son and who he is that I am a full-time momma who communicates with her child and would not back down until I got to the bottom of this barrel of lies. They ‘used’ Justin never anticipating I would stand at the gates of Hell for my son if this is what it would take to regain Justin’s honor.

    m Did none of you wonder why the other thirty four murder Victims garnered no more than two or three Paragraphs? I certainly did! The PG County prosecutor and I had many conversations which ended in my saying, “The only racial issues in Prince George’s county are caused by the judicial system!” This is the same prosecutor who screamed in my face saying, "it's a business" he was of course referring to the judicial system!

     In February 2011 I secured a copy of the evidence sheet from Justin’s room. I questioned why all the bags of marijuana they “allegedly claimed” were in his room were not listed? I asked if they ‘lied’ or they ‘took them’. Many people wrote unkind comments saying I was [white and clueless]; that just because Justin
was white and in college he was still a drug dealer and I needed to stop being stupid and realize this. Well they were wrong and no I posses a lot of common sense. Thank you for reminding me of my ethnicity; however, I was raised not seeing color and in turn Justin was raised not seeing color. A [man] murdered my son; plain and simple.

     I will turn 59 in January I am a child of the 70’s and unlike some parents I refused to lie to my son or be a hypocrite. I was always very open and honest with Justin I told him this was the only constant in life, other than my love, I could offer him. Here is the advice I gave him about marijuana; “never keep
more than a misdemeanor amount on you, in your vehicle, or in your room at anytime.” My son listened to his momma there was a misdemeanor amount of marijuana in his room on January 11, 2011. [OMG! Marijuana on a college campus; by the way I am not ashamed of Justin never was never will be.
I must also mention I am a proponent for legalization of marijuana.] Keep in mind as you read this Justin Vance DeSha-Overcash is my child and I raised my son my way with honesty, integrity, ethics, morals, honor, and accountability.

      By the way the police took three hundred and fourteen dollars ($314.00) off of Justin’s dresser labeling this ‘drug money’. I took Justin’s pay stubs and his bank statements and did simple bookkeeping and the three hundred and fourteen dollars ($314.00) were refunded to me with an apology letter. The state of Maryland paid the full burial benefit of five thousand dollars ($5,000.00) these funds are only paid [if] the Victim is not involved in the cause/crime of their death. Seven hundred and eighty dollars ($780.00) were paid for forty eight (48) grief counseling sessions for me; three years later I am still seeing a psychologist and will more than likely be seeing one for the remainder of my life without Justin.

     Now I ask you, as an intelligent person, after reading this additional information one would have to ask many new questions about the validity of the fodder delved out to the media from the PG county police press release department in 2011 and 2012.

     Crime Stoppers paid out the twenty five thousand ($25,000.00) reward posted for Justin’s murderer.

     Justin, a double major Physics and Astronomy minor Geophysics, possessed 176 college credits and received his diploma posthumously. His beloved Alma mater, the glorious, University of Maryland at College Park has a scholarship in his name “The Justin DeSha-Overcash Summer Research Award”. If you feel so inclined please donate to allow UMd students the ability to enjoy learning as much as Justin.

     We lost a great research scientist, an amazing human being, a community asset, many lost a close
loving friend, I lost a loving and devoted son, future grandchildren, future great-grandchildren, and the
will to live.

     If you were not present in the court room at the sentencing hearing then you are not aware I forgave Mr. Williams. I told him Justin forgave him by the time he looked into the Lord’s eyes. I continued,“Mr. Williams I do not hate you we do not use this word in our home. However, I must tell you; you have enough hate within you for everyone within this court room today. My hope is you seek and find God for I know He is your only hope.” The sooner the people of this world come together the better I believe [my hope is] this world will be.

     I really do want my son back and I wish you too could have met Justin; what I have written is the absolute truth so help me God.

I am and remain Justin’s loving, loyal, proud, and grieving momma

Justin DeSha-Overcash's Memorial Video 2015






No I did not sleep well last night. I kept waking up thinking, "Justin was still alive at this time four years ago!"
Every time I have looked at the clock, since I finally got up at 7:11 AM, mind mind keeps repeating, "Justin was still alive at this time four years ago!"

My stomach is in complete turmoil, my mind is racing and yes I am experiencing anxiety attacks; as if this there is something I could do to change my beautiful Justin's fate of four years ago!

I am sure these feelings will continue to grow as 12:30 PM looms closer; the time my son, my constant, my beloved child was pronounced dead. I cannot 'wrap my mind around Justin's death' even four years later.

I want my son back and I will never feel this is too much to ask! I seriously would have taken Justin's place without hesitation or question. Had I been asked I would have gladly offered Justin what grace has given me to protect him.

'A'-type personalities cannot grasp the concept that they cannot fix, repair, nor find a solution~I am so angry at myself for I can do nothing...absolutely nothing. Justin and I are connected and this cannot be broken even in death. Thus I sit here and grieve while begging God not to leave me here without Justin for decades.

I must now take the star balloons to the cemetery with the messages I have written upon them. Four~ one for every year Justin has not been by my side. Then later this evening I will release them to float up to the Heavens.

I remain Justin's momma now and throughout eternity I love and miss you so greatly honey

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Poem~ Grieving Mother

Grieving Mother

I am a grieving mother
And this is what I do
I think about my child
Just like you

My child is not here
Things are not the same
I talk out loud to myself
Just to say his name

I am a grieving mother
And I get up everyday
I wish my child was alive
In the worst possible way

~Unknown~ 



My son and I Fall 2005, mom Senior Night, Titan #49 my heartbeat, my constant, my joy.

Justin DeSha-Overcash
2:41 AM May 1, 1988
12:00 PM January 11, 2011
I love you Honey "times infinity plus ONE" my beautiful gift from God.

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

The TRUTH~Michael Brown WAS MURDERED

FINALLY THE TRUTH!  Michael Brown WAS MURDERED

I did not have to be a 'rocket scientist' to know that the officer murdered Michael Brown~all I had to do was draw on my knowledge of what the Prince George's County press release department [ATTEMPTED] to do to my beautiful son, Justin, before I began kicking their ASSES!  The police do lie, they are a brotherhood, they protect one another, sadly, some of the timefor all of the wrong reasons.  No PG county police did not shot and kill Justin DeSha-Overcash they murdered my wonderful son a second time in the media~they know this statement all too well~I said it to their faces over and over and over....Victims have NO rights in America and are Victimized unless YOU stand up and SAY SOMETHING!

In looking into the background of hiring in the Ferguson Police department many of this officers had been released from other departments for misconduct.  In my opinion the Ferguson's department is composed of "the worst, of the worst, of the worst."

No I did not like that people were vandalizing, no I did not like that there were residents and strangers openly viciously rioting, this is not the way to CHANGE THE LAWS and to receive JUSTICE for the Silent Victim.

Kudos to the American Citizens whom chose rather to peacefully stand up for Michael Brown and to speak for him, his family and Liberty for all!  God bless Michael Brown and his family in this horrid, horrid tragedy.  The consistent and unconscionable mistreatment of the Black Americans by law enforcement MUST END NOW this is the 21st Century.
__________________________________________________________________

Darren Wilson killed Michael Brown. Here’s why he probably won’t go to jail.

Updated by Amanda Taub on August 27, 2014, 7:10 a.m. ET @amandataub

Demonstrators protest the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri. Scott Olson
Don't miss stories. Follow Vox!

Will Ferguson, Missouri, police officer Darren Wilson ever be prosecuted for shooting Michael Brown?

Since August 9, when Wilson shot and killed Brown, an unarmed teenager, protesters have taken to the streets of the St. Louis suburb and cities around the United States to insist that Wilson be charged in Brown's death. Their demand, emblazoned on T-shirts, inked onto handmade signs, and voiced in chants of "no justice, no peace," speaks to a widely held fear that the courts and police will be more interested in protecting the rights of a white police officer with no disciplinary record than the rights of a black 18-year-old.

Local and federal investigations into the shooting are underway, and a St. Louis County grand jury has already begun to hear evidence about the case.  That does not mean that a conviction, or even a trial, is guaranteed. The justice system is still a system: there are rules that must be followed, steps that must be taken, and criteria that must be fulfilled. Here's what you need to know.
Wilson could be prosecuted in federal court, state court, or possibly both

Wilson could theoretically be prosecuted in state court, in federal court, or both, because state and federal authorities have concurrent jurisdiction over the shooting. At the moment, both state and federal investigations appear to be moving forward.

A state prosecution would, in some ways, be simpler. If the evidence supports a criminal case, state authorities could prosecute Wilson for murder or manslaughter, or just assault, which may be easier to prove than a federal civil rights offense, said Kevin Curran,  president of the Missouri Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers. "The state just has to show that he pulled the trigger, and he intended to pull the trigger, and there weren't any defenses." A federal prosecution, by contrast, would have to prove an additional element: that Wilson willfully deprived Brown of his civil rights.

Still, some aspects of a state prosecution might be difficult. State and local prosecutors work closely with the police, on whom they regularly rely for testimony in their cases. Aggressive prosecution of police misconduct can risk jeopardizing that relationship, which may make prosecutors reluctant to move forward cases involving police misconduct. In addition, the state prosecutors may face evidentiary problems if the St. Louis County investigation was insufficient. (That problem could possibly be solved by access to the results of the FBI investigation, however.)

Simple murder is not a federal offense, but it is a federal crime for a police officer to deprive someone of his rights under the Constitution. If a victim dies, the perpetrator can be sentenced to life in prison or even the death penalty. That means the DOJ could prosecute Wilson under federal law for violating Brown's civil rights, if the evidence supports that charge.

Because of a doctrine called "separate sovereignty," successive state and criminal prosecutions do not violate the double-jeopardy clause of the Constitution, which usually prohibits trying someone more than once for the same crime. That is why, for instance, the Los Angeles Police Department officers who assaulted Rodney King could be tried and convicted in federal court after they were initially acquitted in the Los Angeles Superior Court.

Federal civil rights prosecutions are rare, though, and convictions are even rarer. A study from Syracuse University's TRAC program found that between 1986 and 2003, fewer than 2 percent of civil rights matters referred to the DOJ were ever prosecuted. Out of 43,331 referrals, 690 were actually prosecuted — and of those, 423 resulted in a conviction.
The St. Louis County prosecutor has already sent the case to a grand jury, but his strategy is controversial

The St. Louis County attorney's office began presenting evidence about the shooting to a grand jury on August 20. That means that the state case probably won't move forward unless the grand jury votes to indict, which won't happen for a while — if it happens at all.

St. Louis County Attorney Robert McCulloch has said that "absolutely everything will be presented to the grand jury. Every scrap of paper that we have. Every photograph that was taken." As a result, he expects the grand jury investigation to last at least until October.

Grand jury investigations are secret. Not only are they closed to the public, grand jurors are not permitted to reveal the evidence that they heard. In a grand jury proceeding, the prosecutor presents evidence about the case, including witness testimony, and asks the grand jury to determine whether an indictment is warranted.

The prosecutor has almost complete discretion as to what evidence the grand jury hears. There is no obligation to present defenses or alternative theories of the case, and because the grand jury is not an adversarial proceeding, there is no cross-examination of witnesses. In Missouri, a grand jury vote in favor of an indictment does not have to be unanimous. If nine out of twelve grand jurors vote to indict, then that is considered a "true bill."

As a result, it is generally considered to be easy for a prosecutor to get a grand jury to indict. The joke within the legal profession is that a decent prosecutor could get a grand jury to indict "a ham sandwich."

That doesn't mean that will be the case this time. McCulloch's involvement in the case has already been highly controversial, with many observers doubting his dedication to prosecuting it. More than 100,000 people have signed an online petition demanding McCulloch's removal. Petitioners say his decision not to bring charges in a previous shooting, in which police officers killed two unarmed black men, as evidence that his continued involvement in the Brown case "will only sow further distrust and discord." On August 15, St. Louis County Executive Charlie Dooley announced that he would lead an effort to remove McCulloch from the case. But a few days later, Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon (D) announced that he would not ask McCulloch to step down from the case, citing a need to limit "legal uncertainty."

McCulloch's grand jury strategy has also provoked criticism.  Alex Little, a former federal prosecutor with experience working on FBI investigations, said that the prosecutor's decision to present all of the evidence, and to take such a long period of time, suggests that he could be using the grand jury as a "delaying tactic."
Courts tend to be sympathetic to police, which makes police brutality convictions difficult to obtain

If the grand jury returns an indictment, a conviction may be unlikely — juries are notoriously reluctant to convict police officers in use-of-force cases.

The precise reasons for that phenomenon are difficult to know because jury deliberations take place in private, which makes them hard to study. (A group of University of Chicago researchers secretly recorded several civil jury deliberations in the 1950s, but their work provoked such outrage that Congress passed a law making such eavesdropping illegal.)

But many experts have noted that police brutality cases turn the usual logic of a criminal trial on its head, by making the police officer the alleged "criminal" and the "criminal" the alleged victim (regardless of whether the victim is an actual criminal). Judge Guido Calabresi, in a discussion of civil suits in police brutality cases, wrote that "jurors are considerably more reluctant to identify with a criminal defendant who brings a tort action against the police for violation of his rights," because "in these cases, the plaintiff is a criminal and the jurors do not see themselves in that way." Jury sympathies are most likely even stronger in criminal cases, where the standard of proof is "beyond a reasonable doubt," not just the preponderance of the evidence that's generally required in civil cases.

Curran said that Missouri courts tend to be sympathetic to police, even in cases involving officers' questionable use of force. There is a sense among prosecutors, police, and juries alike, Curran said, that "cops have to be free to do their job, and it's a dangerous job, and they're under threat, so they have to have the freedom to be able to respond to perceived threats." Juries tend to look favorably on officers' claims that their use of force was necessary, because they "lean towards the officer's right to be safe." As a result, Curran said, local courts are "all basically pro-police."
Whether Wilson gets prosecuted or convicted will probably depend on whether his claims to self-defense are credible

Police officers are subject to different rules about the use of deadly force than ordinary citizens. As my colleague Dara Lind explained at length, a police officer is allowed to use deadly force in two circumstances, both of which require the officer to determine that the target poses a threat to others. The first is when the officer believes that the target is directly threatening him or another person. The second is when the officer has probable cause to believe that the person is a suspect fleeing the scene of a violent felony.

That rule comes from a Supreme Court case called Tennessee v. Garner, in which the majority opinion explained:

    "The use of deadly force to prevent the escape of all felony suspects, whatever the circumstances, is constitutionally unreasonable. It is not better that all felony suspects die than that they escape. Where the suspect poses no immediate threat to the officer and no threat to others, the harm resulting from failing to apprehend him does not justify the use of deadly force to do so. It is no doubt unfortunate when a suspect who is in sight escapes, but the fact that the police arrive a little late or are a little slower afoot does not always justify killing the suspect. A police officer may not seize an unarmed, nondangerous suspect by shooting him dead."

That means that for Wilson's shooting to have been legally justified, he will need to credibly argue that he believed either (1) Brown was threatening his life or someone else's life, or (2) that Brown was fleeing from the commission of a violent felony.

The latter argument seems less likely to be successful than the first one. Although Brown apparently was a suspect in a robbery of a local convenience store, it is not clear whether Wilson was even aware of that at the time he shot Brown. And, although the Ferguson police chief has described the alleged crime as a "strong-arm robbery," it involved no weapons, and the only physical contact was when the man who appears to be Brown shoved a clerk on his way out of the store.

For Wilson to take advantage of the "violent felon" exception, he would need to show that he knew about the robbery, that he believed Brown had committed it, and that he believed it had been a violent crime that made Brown a threat to the community. That means that Wilson would probably need to present evidence of police radio calls that described Brown as the suspect and the crime as a violent one.

Initial police statements suggest that Wilson is more likely to pursue a self-defense strategy. According to the Washington Post, Wilson told investigators that he shot Brown out of fear for his life when the teen "charged at him." St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said during a news briefing that Brown and Wilson had a physical altercation, during which Brown tried to grab Wilson's gun before running away.
Every bit of evidence matters

In the days since the shooting, tremendous federal law enforcement resources have been devoted to investigating Brown's death. The FBI sent a team of more than 40 agents to Ferguson, and they have been canvassing the neighborhood where the shooting took place. Little, the former federal prosecutor, told me that this is "a massive number of agents for a case like this." In a standard investigation into a police officer's use of force, Little said, you would have just two or three agents, which means that "40 is just exponentially larger than you would expect."

That's good, Little noted, because witness testimony and physical evidence are particularly important for prosecutions of this nature. Brown cannot testify about what happened, because he is no longer alive. So the testimony of eyewitnesses, and physical evidence from the scene, will be vital to determining what actually happened.

In this case, initial police statements suggest that Darren Wilson's defense will be that he shot Michael Brown in self-defense, after the teenager attempted to grab Wilson's gun during a physical struggle. Since Wilson's gun was fired at least once from inside his car and Brown was more than 30 feet away from the officer when he died, physical evidence will be able to provide some insight into how the shooting occurred and from what range various shots were fired. Already, preliminary autopsy results show that Brown was shot at least six times, and that he was facing Wilson when the shots were fired.

But only eyewitness testimony will be able to answer other questions, such as whether anyone saw Brown grab Wilson's gun, and whether Brown surrendered before Wilson fired the shots that killed him. That means that it's vital for those witness statements to be collected as part of the investigation.
Journalists may have filled a gap in the investigation

Although the FBI is now gathering evidence, the case is also being investigated by the St. Louis County Police, who took it on at the request of Ferguson Police Chief Tom Jackson. (Although the county prosecutor has already begun to present evidence to the grand jury, that does not necessarily mean that the county investigation is complete.)

It appears that the county investigators were slow to begin gathering evidence. They did not interview a key eyewitness in the case, Brown's friend Dorian Johnson, until Wednesday, August 13, according to Johnson's attorney. But it's really best to interview witnesses immediately, because eyewitness testimony tends to decline in quality over time. "What you want," said Little, is for "people to give statements that are memorialized very soon after the shooting."

The best way to do that is for witnesses to be interviewed by police. But some of the witnesses gave detailed interviews to the press shortly after the shooting. These interviews, Little said, could be the next best thing to actual police statements, because they recorded the witnesses' testimony soon after the shooting. If the witness sticks to what they said on TV in the trial, it will "help their credibility," he said.

Media interviews can also be risky. If witnesses change their stories over time, then the statements they gave to the press can be used to "impeach" their testimony — to call attention to the inconsistencies between the witnesses' testimony and the way they told their stories previously. If that happens, it will undermine their credibility.
Other members of the Ferguson Police Department could be prosecuted for conspiracy to deprive Brown of his civil rights

Although the federal investigation will likely focus primarily on Wilson's conduct as an individual, there is also a federal conspiracy statute that would allow the DOJ to prosecute other Ferguson police officers — or the Ferguson Police Department as a whole — if the investigation determines that they conspired to deprive Brown of his civil rights.

In order to support a conspiracy prosecution, the federal investigation would need to uncover evidence of intentional wrongdoing, not just incompetence. For instance, if there is evidence that the other officers who responded to the scene after the shooting prevented Brown from being resuscitated so that he would not be able to testify, or destroyed evidence in order to protect Wilson, then they could be prosecuted on conspiracy charges.

However, at this stage, a conspiracy prosecution appears to be unlikely. Although there was apparently no attempt to resuscitate Brown, the New York Times reports that paramedics did respond to the scene and examine him, where they found that he had suffered "injuries incompatible with life." And although some of the department's actions following the shooting seem questionable — such as leaving Brown's body in the street, at times uncovered, for four hours — that could just be the result of mistakes or disorganization, rather than intentional wrongdoing.
________________________________________________________________
Americans will no longer stand by idly like [sheep] WE WANT THE TRUTH!  Propaganda will no longer be tolerated; we're no idiots!  I am Justin's momma

Tuesday, August 26, 2014

ALS ice bucket challenge IRREPONSIBLE Leads to Teens Death

https://www.yahoo.com/tech/scottish-teen-dies-in-ice-bucket-challenge-tragedy-95761970734.html#comments

I want everyone who reads this article to take a good long look at Cameron's photographs. He is a beautiful young man, a compassionate young man, a young man who touched many lives and a young man destined for a great future.

Now as the mother of a murdered 22 year old son, who saved two of his college alumnus, I am going to tell the world what I thought of the ALS ice bucket challenge [even before Cameron's tragic death].

In my opinion the ice bucket challenge is the most moronic, ridiculous, stupid, [I DON'T GET IT], frat house days, you people need to grow up, why didn't you just do 'BEER PONG'; hoping you are proud of the end result of such unconscionable acts.

NO teenagers do not fully understand the consequences that is why ADULTS are supposed to be their [mentors]. During this ALS ice bucket challenge the actions of many adults hardly showed good sense, responsibility, and definitely showed poor judgement.

Whomever thought up the ALS ice bucket challenge did not think through the consequences; therefore, you FAILED! I do not care how much money you raised a young man is dead making the money inconsequential. Cameron Lancaster's death is all I will ever associate with the ALS ice bucket challenge.

My heartfelt condolences go out to Cameron's parent's, family and friends. It is difficult to put into words; no parent should have to bury their child and the days afterward are the longest and the darkest. Fly Cameron you now have a place among the Heavens and the stars; please say hello to my son. God hold the Lancaster's in Your loving and comforting arms, may You offer them some small solace through this tragedy that no parent can understand nor comprehend. God please guide them through this horrific tragedy with your hands of love upon their shoulders. In Jesus name I pray. Amen.

Justin's [what happened to responsible adults?] momma