Source: thinkprogress.org - Wednesday, December 03, 2014
CREDIT: Shutterstock The case of New York Police Department officer David Pantaleo wasn’t supposed to be like Ferguson. There was a video showing how a simple stop for selling untaxed cigarettes turned into a chokehold — a move prohibited by the NYPD. The medical examiner ruled the incident a homicide. Eric Garner repeatedly shouted “I can’t breathe” just before he died. Yet, as in Ferguson, the Staten Island grand jury voted not to indict Pantaleo for anything , leaving the nation — even legal experts – exacerbated, frustrated, and grasping to understand why . There are many things we don’t yet know about the Staten Island grand jury proceeding, and we may never know. Donovan said Wednesday that New York law does not permit the same transparency surrounding grand jury proceedings as in Missouri, and that “disclosure of anything further may be a violation of New York law” unless Donovan is granted a special exception by court order. He said he applied for such an exception Wednesday. So we don’t know if Donovan appeared to advocate for the defendant in the way that McCulloch seemed to do. But some things we do know suggest that the Staten Island grand jury, like the Ferguson one, was set up in ways that may have favored Wilson. For one thing, jurors in these two cases heard evidence for more than two months, while the typical grand jury lasts a few days or less. And as Donovan himself explained in his statement Wednesday, the scop
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