Darren Wilson, the Ferguson, Missouri police officer who shot and killed unarmed teenager Michael Brown, has resigned from the police force effective immediately, an attorney for the officer confirmed to NBC News.
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Wilson has been on administrative leave from the Ferguson Police Department since the shooting on Aug. 9. The killing led to massive demonstrations and confrontations with police in the St. Louis suburb and other cities. A grand jury hearing evidence in the case decided on Monday not to indict Wilson with a crime. That decision sparked a fresh round of protests in Ferguson, which saw dozens of arrests and a number of businesses burned and looted.
Wilson maintains he was acting in self-defense when he shot Brown multiple times outside the housing complex where the 18-year-old lived. The officer testified to grand jurors that he feared for his life and did what he had to do to defend himself. “He threw the first [punch], and it hit me in the left side of my face,” Wilson told ABC News in an interview this week. “I didn’t know if I’d be able to withstand another hit like that.”
Wilson said he was quitting because he feared his presence on the force could endanger other Ferguson police officers. “I’m resigning of my own free will,” he told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.








