Ferguson jurors faced safety fears, lots of work

FERGUSON, Mo. - The grand jury responsible for reviewing the fatal shooting of Michael Brown faced "an awesome burden" and "an awful lot of work."

So said St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch, addressing jurors when they convened Aug. 20. Ninety-seven days later, those jurors decided not to indict white Ferguson officer Darren Wilson for the death of the black 18-year-old.

Their deliberations were confidential, under Missouri law, but McCulloch released thousands of pages of testimony, plus more than 250 photos and 25 television news videos.

The materials reveal that some jurors raised concerns about their personal safety as they drew close to a decision, and that jurors not only listened to, but questioned, the dozens of witnesses who appeared before them. A look at the process:

The start

On the first day, McCulloch assured jurors their identities would be kept secret. But he encouraged them not to wear their grand jury badges when entering and exiting his office to avoid attracting the notice of protesters or reporters.

McCulloch turned the case over to two assistants - Kathi Alizadeh, the prosecutor who was on call for August homicides, and Sheila Whirley, a prosecutor previously assigned to the grand jury. McCulloch did not participate in any additional grand jury sessions.

The prosecutors began by focusing on the physical evidence, calling as witnesses a medical examiner, crime-scene investigators and forensic pathologist.

Key players

On Sept. 10, grand jurors turned their attention to Dorian Johnson, a friend who was with Brown on Aug. 9, the day of his death. Prosecutors played several TV news interviews of Johnson and a two-hour audio interview with Johnson conducted by the FBI as part of a civil-rights investigation.

Jurors watched video of Brown robbing a convenience store of cigarillos before he was killed. hey heard testimony from Johnson, who portrayed Wilson as the aggressor after Wilson urged Brown and Johnson to quit walking in the street. Johnson said Brown had his hands raised when he was shot.

On Sept. 16, jurors heard Wilson's version of events. Prosecutors first called a Ferguson police sergeant, St. Louis County detective and FBI agent to testify about what Wilson told them.

Then Wilson spoke to jurors. He said he realized Brown was a robbery suspect after initially telling him to get out of the street. When he backed up his vehicle to cut off Brown, Wilson said Brown hit him and grabbed his gun through his window. During an ensuing foot chase, Wilson said Brown turned back to charge at him with a hand clenched in a fist and the other under his shirt at his waist. That's when Wilson said he fired.

Witnesses

From Sept. 23 through Nov. 4, grand jurors heard from dozens of witnesses with conflicting accounts. Most recounted a struggle between Brown and Wilson at the officer's patrol car. But there was no consensus about what occurred moments later.

Many said Brown's hands were raised when he was shot, though they were in disagreement about how high and in what fashion. Some said Brown's hands were facing outward as if surrendering while others said they were turned inward, as if gesturing.

Other witnesses insisted Brown's hands weren't raised at all, and they backed up Wilson's account of Brown appearing to move toward the officer.

Decision

In November, some raised concerns about their safety, and prosecutors on Nov. 10 assured they'd try to keep them safe.

In their final sessions, jurors heard from more forensic experts, including a pathologist hired by Brown's family. The closing witness was a St. Louis County detective who had testified twice. He fielded questions about eyewitnesses and Wilson's account. He confirmed that police had no video of the shooting.

Jurors asked about the standards for police to use deadly force, then deliberated for nearly three hours on Nov. 21. They took the weekend off and returned to deliberate further on Nov. 24, when their decision was announced.