A Missouri grand jury now has through the end of the year to decide whether to indict Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson in the fatal shooting of unarmed teenager Michael Brown.
St. Louis County Judge Carolyn Whittington extended the panel’s term until Jan. 7, tacking on an additional 60 days to the maximum term length that would have wrapped up in November, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.
While the grand jury may not use the full term before making a decision, the extension buys more time for the panel to hear evidence in a case that sparked weeks of protests and as anger continues to swell in calls to charge Wilson with a crime.
The 12-person panel — made up of nine white and three black jurors — will focus exclusively on the Brown case as it meets in secret to determine whether Wilson committed a crime when he shot Brown at least six times in broad daylight on Aug. 9.
Meanwhile, Wilson will remain on administrative leave while St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert McCulloch presents evidence in the case.
Police accounts and eye-witness testimony present a muddied picture of the altercation that led Wilson to open fire against Brown. According to the police, Brown attempted to grab the officer’s gun. Several eyewitnesses say they saw the 18-year-old surrender before Wilson fired nearly a dozen shots. An autopsy report ordered by Brown’s family found that the bullets hit the teen at least six times, with the final fatal shots striking him in the head.









