FERGUSON, Mo.—The grand jury judge overseeing the Michael Brown case has not agreed to release evidence to the public if veteran police officer Darren Wilson is not indicted, according to a press release published Sunday by a court administrator.
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In response to a local report, Paul Fox, director of the St. Louis County Circuit Court Judicial Administration, said the presiding grand jury judge “has entered no such order and has made no such agreement” to release the evidence if Darren Wilson is not indicted.
“If the grand jury returns a no true bill, the judge anticipates the court will receive requests for grand jury records. Some of those requests will require the court to analyze the need for maintaining secrecy of the records with the need for public disclosure of the records,” Fox wrote in a document released Sunday.
The community anticipated a grand jury vote as early as Saturday, but the members now plan to meet next on Monday.
St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert McCulloch previously said the evidence seen by the grand jury over the past few months would be presented to the public if Wilson is not indicted, which many people expect will be the outcome.
Following the Aug. 9 shooting death of the unarmed 18-year-old, residents and community leaders in Ferguson called for McCulloch to recuse himself from the investigation. Many St. Louis County’s black community distrust McCulloch, who is white, for his extensive family ties to the police force and his failure to bring charges in several high-profile cases in which white police have shot black citizens.
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At the Greater St. Mark’s Family Church, just a few blocks from where Brown was killed, Rev. Tommie Pierson Sr. on Sunday urged congregants to keep marching peacefully for justice, whatever the grand jury decides. The church is one of several in the area that has agreed to operate as a safe haven during the protests, providing shelter and medical assistance to anyone who needs it.
“We are not going to loot, we are not going to break windows, we are not going to do any of that stuff,” said Pierson, who is also a Democratic state representative, as a steady rain came down outside. “But we are going to walk our faith.”
“We don’t know what’s going to happen,” Pierson added. “We don’t know who is going to be the next sacrificial lamb. It could be any of us.”
And Pierson, like many local black leaders in recent months, issued a call for civic engagement. His sermon described a group of lepers who were “isolated and segregated from the larger society,” and dependent on charity.
“I can just imagine that up until this point, they didn’t attend any civic meetings, they didn’t know who the mayor was, they didn’t know who the city council was, they didn’t know the governor,” Pierson said, to loud approval from the congregation. “They were just sitting there waiting for someone to come give them something. How often do we just sit and wait for someone to come give us something, when the power that we need is already in our hands?”
Many congregants, though hoping for an indictment, were just as anxious to ensure that protests stay peaceful.
“I’m putting it in the hands of God,” Michelle Jones said about the grand jury decision. “If you want to protest that’s fine. But don’t be breaking windows and looting in your own city because that’s somebody else’s livelihood.”
Rev. F. Willis Johnson of the Wellspring Church, which is just down the street from the Ferguson Police Department, said the issues underlying the unrest in the city won’t be wrapped up soon.








