Police in Ferguson, Missouri, did
not file an “incident report” on the fatal shooting of 19-year-old
Michael Brown because they turned the case over to St. Louis County
police almost immediately, the county prosecutor’s office tells NBC
News.
Critics and news media
outlets have questioned why Ferguson police released an incident report
from a robbery in which Brown was a suspect, as well as security video
showing the robbery, but not the report on the shooting of the unarmed
18-year-old a short time later by Officer Darren Wilson.
The reason, according to the office of St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert P. McCulloch, is that it doesn’t exist.
The St. Louis County
police department presumably did file an incident report, but any such
documents will not be made public until a grand jury investigating the
officer-involved shooting concludes its investigation, according to
officials from the office who briefed NBC News on the case.
The grand jury reviewing
the facts in the case is impaneled until mid-September, but could
continue to deliberate beyond its term, in which case their sole focus
would be on the shooting of Brown. At the conclusion of its
investigation, the grand jury will decide whether to indict Wilson in
connection with the shooting.
The St. Louis County
prosecutor's office stressed that it is cooperating with the concurrent
federal investigation of Brown’s death and is sharing information with
FBI agents who are looking into whether his civil rights were violated.
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