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Saturday, November 29, 2014

Darren Wilson resigns from Ferguson Police Department - USA TODAY






Video Keywords Saint Louis post dispatch Saint Louis Missouri



Darren Wilson officially resigned from the Ferguson Police Department on Saturday night. The announcement comes nearly 4 months since he shot and killed Michael Brown and less than a week since a grand jury decided not to indict him. VPC



Video Transcript

Automatically Generated Transcript (may not be 100% accurate)



00:02 There are rules and officially resigned from the Ferguson police
00:04 department on Saturday according to his attorney. The announcement comes nearly
00:08 four months after the white police officer fatally shot unarmed teenager
00:12 Michael brown and less than a week after a Saint Louis
00:15 county grand jury decided not to indict him on any charges.
00:19 The shooting has sparked massive protests in Missouri and throughout the
00:22 country. Wilson has been on administrative leave since the August 9
00:26 shooting and his resignation is effective immediately according to one of
00:29 his lawyers. In a story published Saturday evening Wilson told the
00:33 Saint Louis post dispatch that he resigned due to threats made
00:36 against the police department. He is quoted in the article as
00:39 saying he resigned on his own free will.






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Darren Wilson resigned from the Ferguson Police Department, his lawyer said Saturday, nearly four months after the white police officer's fatal confrontation with the unarmed Michael Brown sparked protests across the USA.


Wilson, 28, had been on administrative leave since the Aug. 9 shooting of Brown, 18, who was black. His resignation is effective immediately, said one of his lawyers, Neil Bruntrager.


Wilson told the St. Louis Post-Dispatch that he resigned after the police department told him it had received threats of violence if he continued to work there.


"I'm resigning of my own free will," he told the newspaper in a phone interview. "I'm not willing to let someone else get hurt because of me."







He added that resigning is "the hardest thing I've ever had to do" and that serving as a police officer is "the only thing I've ever wanted to do."


The text of the letter:



I, Darren Wilson, hereby resign my commission as a police officer with the City of Ferguson effective immediately. I have been told that my continued employment may put the residents and police officers of the City of Ferguson at risk, which is a circumstance that I cannot allow. For obvious reasons, I wanted to wait until the grand jury made their decision before I officially made my decision to resign. It was my hope to continue in police work, but the safety of other police officers and the community are of paramount importance to me. It is my hope that my resignation will allow the community to heal. I would like to thank all of my supporters and fellow officers throughout this process.



Brown family lawyer Anthony Gray released a statement in response to Wilson's resignation: "I believe Officer Darren Wilson made a personal decision that was in his best interest given the circumstances."


Wilson's resignation comes less than a week after a St. Louis County grand jury's decision not to indict him. Peaceful protests turned into riots in Ferguson and elsewhere around the country.



Officer Darren Wilson, who shot and killed Michael Brown in August, officially resigned Nov. 29, 2014, from the Ferguson Police Department.(Photo: Getty Images)



In one protest earlier this week in Ferguson, a St. Louis woman lost her eye when police fired a bean bag round at a car she was riding in, shattering a window, her father said.


Donnell Conner told the Post-Dispatch that his daughter, Dornella Conner, 24, lost her left eye and is having trouble focusing with the right eye after being sprayed with glass and debris. He said his daughter, the mother of two, is a few months' pregnant and that the fetus is fine.


Police said her boyfriend, DeAngelas Lee, 21, was arrested after trying to drive into an officer early Tuesday.


Lee was charged with second-degree assault of a law enforcement officer and was being held on $50,000 bond.


"I see her like this and I am hurt and confused," Donnell Conner of O'Fallon, Mo., told the newspaper. "She's very depressed, very emotional."


Her injury is among the most serious reported this week.


The injured woman's father said the couple had driven to Ferguson late Monday night "just to be there'' during the protests.







"Like the young people do, in support, like kids do, but no violence, not looting. She just wanted to be there,'' he told the newspaper.


County officers and a detective were in a police car with emergency lights on at a gas station where 20 to 30 people had gathered. When the detective got out of the car, a white sedan sped at the detective, police said.


Fearing for his life, the detective shot a bean bag round into the car, shattering the front passenger-side window, according to a statement from police.


Contributing: KSDK-TV, St. Louis; The Associated Press


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