From the moment Officer Darren Wilson first encountered Michael Brown Jr. on Aug. 9 until the time the fatal shots were fired at the unarmed teen may have been a matter of minutes — even seconds — according to audio and video footage newly obtained by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
The police records, first obtained by the Post-Dispatch through Missouri’s Sunshine law, plot out the events leading up to Brown’s death, including reports relayed by the dispatcher of a robbery in action.
Put together, the records show that Wilson called for back-up from nearby squad cars before his altercation with Brown, leaving less than two minutes between the time the police dispatcher acknowledged that Wilson had first spotted the teen and when more officers came to Wilson’s aid.
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EMS records begin when Wilson was called to respond to a two-month-old suffering from breathing problems. During that time, a dispatcher called in a “stealing in progress” at the nearby Ferguson Market, where the suspect was described as a black man wearing a white T-shirt, having just stolen a box of Swisher cigars, the Post-Dispatch reports.
The alleged robbery is likely the same incident raised by Ferguson police in August when they released the name of Brown’s shooter along with surveillance video of what they said may be Brown robbing a convenience store shortly before his death.
At the time police released the surveillance video, Ferguson Police Chief Thomas Jackson first suggested that Wilson’s initial encounter with Brown had nothing to do with the alleged robbery. Later that same day, Jackson backtracked, saying the first contact was made once Wilson “saw cigars in Brown’s hand and realized he might be the robber.”
Attorneys representing Brown’s family on Saturday criticized the Ferguson Police department’s handling of the case.
“From the very beginning, the Ferguson Police Department has followed what is now seemingly standard operating procedure for police departments around the country: to vilify the victim and put the shooter on a pedestal,” attorneys Benjamin Crump, Anthony Gray and Daryl Parks said in a statement.
The newly obtained police calls show that Wilson became aware of the alleged robbery once he finished attending to the sick baby — according to the Post-Dispatch, Wilson called in and offered to help the officers track down the two suspects. Two minutes later, after his fellow officers called in to say the suspects had disappeared, Wilson called in his location, and asked for back-up.
“Put me on Canfield with two. Send me another car,” Wilson said, according to the Post-Dispatch.








