A Weekend of Protests Follow Ex-Cop’s Acquittal for 2011 Shooting

By: Karina Johnson
Impunity Watch Reporter, North America

ST. LOUIS, MissouriOn Friday, September 15, St. Louis Circuit Judge Timothy Wilson acquitted white former police officer Jason Stockley charged with first-degree murder of Anthony Lamar Smith, a black man.

Hundreds of people protesting in St. Louis on Friday following Jason Stockley’s acquittal of the 2011 murder of Anthony Lamar Smith. Photo Courtesy of The Washington Post.

In December 2011, Officer Stockley and his partner (who was not charged) engaged Mr. Smith in a high-speed car chase when he fled the scene of a suspected drug deal.  The officers rammed Mr. Smith’s vehicle.  Officer Stockley got out of the police SUV armed with his service revolver as well as an unauthorized AK-47, approached Mr. Smith’s car, and fired five shots into the car.  Mr. Smith was killed as a result.  Officer Stockley reported finding a handgun lodged between the center console and the passenger seat.

Prosecutors alleged the handgun was planted by Stockley after the shooting since it did not have Mr. Smith’s DNA on it, only Stockley’s.  Dashcam footage also recorded Officer Stockley telling his partner that he was “going to kill this [redacted], don’t you know it” immediately prior to their ramming of Mr. Smith’s vehicle.

Stockley was charged in May 2016.  He waived his right to a jury trial, opting instead for a bench trial where questions of both fact and law would be decided by the presiding judge.

Judge Wilson determined that the two points of contention alleged by the prosecution in the case were as follows:

  1. Whether Officer Stockley planted the gun found in Mr. Smith’s car.
  2. Whether Officer Stockley’s statement made prior to the end of the vehicle pursuit indicated premeditation.

Judge Wilson ruled that Officer Stockley’s comment lacked context and that there was no evidence that the handgun found in Mr. Smith’s car had been planted. “This Court, in conscience, cannot say that the State has proven every element of murder beyond a reasonable doubt, or that the State has proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant did not act in self-defense.” Officer Stockley was found not guilty of Anthony Lamar Smith’s murder.

Protests around St. Louis began on Friday shortly after news of the acquittal, and continued throughout Saturday and well into Sunday afternoon.

Officer Stockley’s defense attorney, Neil Bruntrager, also represented Darren Wilson, the officer who killed Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri and whose lack of indictment by grand jury sparked protests around the United States in 2014.

In 2015, The Guardian began an investigative project called “The Counted” to document the number of people killed by police in the United States.  The database includes 1093 reports of people being killed by police in the US in 2016.

For more information, please see:
The Guardian – More protests expected over acquittal of white officer in police killing – 17 September 2017

Al-Jazeera – Ex-officer cleared in killing of Anthony Lamar Smith – 16 September 2017

New York Daily News – Here’s why a judge acquitted a St. Louis cop of first-degree murder – 16 September 2017

The Washington Post – Police and protesters clash in St. Louis after former officer who shot black driver acquitted on murder charges – 16 September 2017

National Public Radio – Protests in St. Louis After Ex-Cop Acquitted In Anthony Lamar Smith Murder Case – 15 September 2017

Vox News – St. Louis police shooting of Anthony Lamar Smith: ex-cop Jason Stockley found not guilty of murder – 15 September 2017

The Guardian – “The Counted: People killed by police in the US” – Series

Syria Deeply: Natural gas and tensions in Eastern Syria, Syrian-Kurds vote in northern Syria, and Syria at the UNGA

Syria Deeply
Sep. 25th, 2017
This Week in Syria.

Welcome to our weekly summary of Syria Deeply’s top coverage of crisis in Syria.

Eastern Syria: The U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in eastern Syria said they captured the major Conoco natural gas field in their advance against the so-called Islamic State (ISIS) in Deir Ezzor.

The Conoco gas plant is capable of producing nearly 450 tons of gas a day, according to the Wall Street Journal. According to al-Jazeera, it had the largest capacity of any natural gas field in Syria prior to the conflict, producing up to 459 million cubic feet (13 million cubic meters) of natural gas a day.

Tension also risks rising between Russian and U.S.-backed forces in the area. Russian special forces supporting Syrian government loyalists are only miles away from the SDF in Deir Ezzor. They are fighting simultaneous but separate campaigns against the militant group.

An American official told CNN on Sunday that U.S. forces have amped up surveillance efforts of Russian troops in Syria. The move comes after last week’s statement from Russia’s defense ministry that said Moscow would target U.S.-backed militia positions in east Syria if its forces come under fire by the group.

Russia accused the SDF of opening fire on Syrian troops and allied forces on the eastern bank of the Euphrates twice over the past week, and any more “attempts to open fire from areas where SDF fighters are located would be quickly shut down,” the statement said.

Syrian-Kurds Vote: Kurdish-held regions of northern Syria held the first round of a three-phase election on Friday, as part of a plan to set up a federal system of government.

Residents cast their ballots to select community leaders for some 3,700 communities spread across three regions of Kurdish-held northern Syria. Elections did not take place in the city of Manbij, which is controlled by the SDF or in areas recently liberated from ISIS near the city of Raqqa, senior Kurdish politician Hadiya Yousef told Reuters.

The second round of voting will take place in November with the election of local councils, and the final stage is expected to take place in January with the election of a local assembly that will act as a parliament, Reuters said.

The Syrian government is opposed to elections, but Syrian Kurds insist that they are not seeking independence from Syria. Yousef told Reuters that Friday’s elections were “a message to the Syrian regime that we as the Syrian people have will and want our will to be represented in the election of our administration to run our regions and societies.”

Syria at the UNGA: Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem said that recent pro-government gains on the ground “prove that victory is now within reach,” in a speech on Saturday to the United Nations General Assembly.

As examples, al-Moualem cited military gains by pro-government forces in Aleppo and Palmyra, the recent breach of an ISIS-siege in an area of Deir Ezzor and the “eradication of terrorism from many parts of Syria.”

He also discussed the plans to create four de-escalation zones in Syria. Russia, Iran and Turkey signed off on the plan, proposed by Moscow in May.

“Syria reserves the right to respond to any violation by the other party,” al-Moualem said. “Syria also stresses that these zones are a temporary arrangement that must not violate the territorial unity of Syria.”

David Miliband, president and CEO of the International Rescue Committee, pointed out that the crisis in Syria was otherwise largely overlooked at the UNGA, despite ongoing human rights violations and fighting in many of the country’s provinces.

Read the full summary

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International Center for Transitional Justice: Ethnic Cleansing in Myanmar a Deepening Crisis

Ethnic Cleansing in Myanmar
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Amid Ethnic Cleansing in Myanmar, Where Does Transitional Justice Stand?

Over the past month, more than 400,000 members of Myanmar’s Rohingya Muslim community have been driven from their homes as part of an ethnic-cleansing campaign led by the military. What lies at the root of the current violence? How is it connected to the country’s political transition? And does transitional justice have a role to play? Anna Myriam Roccatello, who oversees ICTJ’s work in Myanmar, answers those questions and more.

“What we now finally call ethnic cleansing in Myanmar has gone on for years,” Roccatello says. “Had efforts to acknowledge victims been more actively supported by the international community in the last several years, the political dynamic might be different. Moving forward, once the violence stops, accountability and reforms must be pursued with renewed vigor to ensure a sustainable peace. Doing so will hopefully provide the opportunity to address the massive violations against not only the Rohingya, but against all victims of the regime.”

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