BFF-52 White Chicago cop goes on trial for black teen shooting death

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US-CRIME-POLICE-CHICAGO

White Chicago cop goes on trial for black teen shooting death

CHICAGO, Sept 5, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The hotly anticipated trial of a white
Chicago cop over the fatal shooting of a black teenager — an incident that
roiled America’s third-largest city in months of protests — was set to begin
Wednesday with jury selection.

Police officer Jason Van Dyke faces murder charges for shooting 17-year-old
Laquan McDonald 16 times in an October 2014 confrontation.

The incident, captured on police dash-cam video, has upended the city’s
politics and left residents on edge — fearing violence could break out if
the officer is acquitted.

McDonald’s family, in rare public comments, urged people to remain
peaceful.

The start of the trial in downtown Chicago was expected to be met with
demonstrations, as potential jury members gathered inside for a selection
process that could take days.

Police video of the shooting shows Van Dyke firing bullets into the knife-
wielding teen, who appeared to have been walking away from officers. The
officer continues to fire after the teen collapses to the ground.

None of the other officers at the scene fired their weapons.

In an interview with the Chicago Tribune newspaper last week, Van Dyke
said: “I never would have fired my gun if I didn’t think my life was in
jeopardy or another citizen’s life was.”

The video, which was filmed from a distance and has no audio, was initially
withheld from the public for a year, until a judge compelled its release.

The political fallout claimed the jobs of the city’s police chief and lead
prosecutor.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel, once a star of the Democratic party, announced Tuesday
he would not seek re-election, after years of unrelenting calls to resign
amid accusations of an attempted cover-up.

“This case is a very high-profile case,” said Father Michael Pfleger, a
pastor on Chicago’s South Side and an outspoken anti-gun violence activist.

“We’ve got to see justice or there’s going to be a mass amount of folks
that just say, you know what, I no longer believe in the system,” Pfleger
told AFP.

McDonald’s family, through a spokesman, called for calm.

“We are asking for complete peace,” the teen’s great uncle Martin Hunter
told a Tuesday news conference.

“We don’t want any violence before, during or after the verdict in this
trial,” he said.

The trial will test the justice system’s ability to wrest a conviction in
a high-profile police shooting case.

A series of such incidents around the country, publicized by smartphone and
police video, have given rise to the “Black Lives Matter” movement.

But prosecutions, let alone guilty verdicts, have proven rare.

BSS/AFP/RY/1835 hrs