CLAYTON, Missouri — St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert McCulloch presented preliminary evidence Wednesday to a grand jury in the investigation into the shooting death of Michael Brown, kicking off a process that could help ease tensions in this still uneasy community. But as U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder arrives, the calls for McCulloch to step aside aren’t dying down.
At a morning rally outside McCulloch’s office in Clayton, a St. Louis suburb, protesters demanded that McCulloch recuse himself from the investigation in favor of the federal government.
“We need the Justice Department to come in and take over,” one protest leader shouted.
A Wilson supporter who held a small counter-protest was escorted away by local police after media and protesters crowded around her.
Ed Magee, a spokesman for McCulloch, said Tuesday that investigators have interviewed Darren Wilson, the Ferguson police officer who shot Brown on Aug. 9. Magee said the regular grand jury expires in early September, at which point a special grand jury, featuring the same 12 jurors, will be impaneled. He said it likely will take weeks or months to present the evidence to the grand jury, given the amount of material collected — a timeline that could only intensify frustrations among those demanding that Wilson be charged quickly.
Holder is expected to meet with Brown’s family and community leaders Wednesday in Ferguson. Already, FBI investigators have been on the ground in Ferguson, collecting information as part of a federal probe.









