Ferguson, Missouri Police Officer Darren Wilson told a grand jury hearing evidence in the case of the shooting death of Michael Brown that he believed the teenager was going to shoot him, according to a slew of documents released late Monday in the wake of the panel’s decision not to indict Wilson in the Aug. 9 incident.
The trove of newly released information includes photos of Wilson taken during his post-shooting trip to the hospital, more than 20 images from the scene of the incident and details from autopsies conducted on Brown. St. Louis County prosecutor Robert McCulloch teased the release of the documents during his 20-minute-long remarks on the grand jury’s decision that “no probable cause exists to indict Darren Wilson.”
The documents reveal that during testimony before the grand jury on Sept. 16, Wilson claimed Brown assaulted him when he confronted the teen about being a possible suspect in a local robbery. According to Wilson, when he tried to exit his police car, Brown slammed the officer’s door shut twice and hit Wilson across his cheek.
“I believe somewhere in there I put my hand up tryin’ to just get him away from me and there I was, I was already trapped and didn’t know what he was gonna do to me but I knew it wasn’t gonna be good,” Wilson testified.
Wilson described a harrowing struggle for his gun, with Brown at one point grabbing hold of the officer’s weapon and pointing it towards Wilson’s hip. Wilson told detectives on Aug. 10, a day after the shooting, that during the struggle for Wilson’s gun, the teenager told the officer, “You’re too much of a f——- p—- to shoot me.” Eventually, the situation escalated to the point where Wilson told the grand jury he feared for his own life.
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“At that point, I was guaranteed he was going to shoot me. That’s what I thought his goal was,” Wilson testified. A protracted struggle ensued, during which Wilson claimed he regained control of his gun, but not his suspect.
Wilson said Brown started running at him and “during his first stride, he took his right hand, put it under his shirt and into his waistband. And I ordered him to stop and get on the ground again. He didn’t; I fired, a, multiple shots.” A crime lab report confirmed that 12 rounds were fired from Wilson’s gun in his encounter with Brown.
“After I fired the multiple shots I paused for a second, yelled at him to get on the ground again, he was still in the same state. Still charging hands still in his waistband, hadn’t slowed down. I fired another set of shots. Same thing, still running at me, hadn’t slowed down, hands still in his waistband. He gets about eight to ten feet away, and he’s still coming at me in the same way. I fired more shots. One of those, however many of them hit on him in the head and he went down right there. When he went down, his hand was still under his, his right hand was still under his body looked like it was still in his waistband. I never touched him,” Wilson told jurors.
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