Organizers behind the months of emotionally raw protests in Ferguson are bracing for the possibility that the police officer who shot and killed Michael Brown in August may not be indicted or charged with civil rights violations in fatally shooting the unarmed teen.
Leaders of the movement expressed shock and disappointment Saturday in response to reports that Officer Darren Wilson told investigators that he feared for his life during a scuffle with Brown and that the teen reached into the vehicle attempting to take the officer’s gun.
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The testimony, first reported by The New York Times, is the first public account of what Wilson told investigators of the Aug. 9 shooting, and varies little from the narrative provided by police shortly after Brown was killed. The only new information, coming from FBI forensics tests, shows Brown’s blood on the barrel of the officer’s gun after Wilson shot at the teen twice, hitting him in the arm the first time and missing the second.
That government officials familiar with the civil rights investigation into the shooting are leaking information to the media on Wilson’s side of the story, however, suggests the Justice Department will not be pressing civil rights charges against the police officer. It also calls into question whether the St. Louis County grand jury, tasked with determining whether Wilson committee a crime, will indict him.
“Many of us are shocked. This feel likes a coordinated media campaign to prepare us for a no indictment decision,” Deray McKesson, an organizer for the protests in the wake of Brown’s death, told msnbc Saturday. “The timing of this article suggests there will not be even a civil rights filing, which is dangerous.”
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Brown’s killing sparked months of demonstrations and clashes with law enforcement officials, unearthing deep-rooted racial tensions in the St. Louis suburb where raw emotions at times turned to violent protests and an aggressive police response.
Organizers say they are forming a contingency plan should the grand jury panelists choose to not indict Wilson, an event likely to spark a fresh round of outrage for the protesters demanding that the officer be arrested.
“All of us are meeting to figure out how we will respond in the event the county prosecutor doesn’t indict,” Ashley Yates, found of the group Millennial Activists United, said through an email Saturday. “The federal government has a major role to play — the real question is how will they respond to the climate of injustice created in Ferguson and St. Louis?”








