Sunday, October 5, 2014

He Killed Her Smile.

Look at this beautiful little girl. She reminds me of my own beautiful little girl who is just a year older. I love her, spoil her, and treat her like a princess, so to say that this particular story  infuriated me is an understatement.

Wayne County Circuit Judge Cynthia Gray Hathaway dismissed an involuntary manslaughter charge against the Detroit police officer accused in the 2010 fatal shooting of 7-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones. Even though Officer Joseph Weekly failed to follow his training when he stormed a house looking for a murder suspect with his finger on the trigger and shot little Aiyana who was asleep on the couch, according to prosecutors, he escaped having to pay for this murder.

All sides acknowledge that Aiyana Stanley-Jones’ death was not intentional. But prosecutors say Officer Joseph Weekley’s actions were a crime because he handled his submachine gun in a reckless manner.

“You have to use ordinary care in the exercise of your duties,” prosecutor Rob Moran said. “He didn’t follow ordinary care. … If he didn’t pull the trigger, Aiyana would be alive.”

Weekley has said he mistakenly fired the gun while trying to wrest it away from Aiyana’s grandmother, Mertilla Jones, who has always denied any interference.

According to media reports:

Weekley still is charged with careless discharge of a firearm causing death in the May 2010 shooting, which happened as police executed a search warrant for a murder suspect.

Hathaway then adjourned the proceedings to give the Court of Appeals a chance to weigh in. That court issued an order later Friday, saying it plans to review the judge’s decision.

After Hathaway’s dismissal, attorneys for both sides made their arguments in court documents as to what should happen next.

Steve Fishman, Weekley’s attorney, asked the Court of Appeals to refer the case back to the trial court on the misdemeanor count only.

“The United States Supreme Court has clearly stated that the trial judge’s ruling cannot be appealed and that retrial on that count is prohibited by the Double Jeopardy clause of the United States Constitution,” his filing said.

But this trigger happy officer still has blood on his hands.


PR

2 comments:

  1. "Judge Hathaway is involved with her community and volunteers great deal of time to many organizations. She is a lifetime Member of the NAACP; a member of the Detroit Urban League; former Board Member of the Women's Economic Club; a supporter of the Neighborhood Service Organization grandparents/grandchildren program; and is a Board Member, Tutor and Past Director of the Reggie McKenzie Foundation, a children's tutorial and athletic non-profit organization. She is a Board Member of Doorsteps, a shelter for women and children." Well, Hathaway is touted for being a Child Advocate, but she's not looking too good to me! What is it? Are Judges and Juries feeling as though a Black life doesn't matter, even that of a little girl's,like squashing a bug--"no big deal"; are Judges, in particular, afraid of the police department? I don't understand this at all.

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  2. Those in law enforcement share a bond. This bond may have cost this little girls family justice!

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