Current:Home > FinanceMississippi won’t prosecute a deputy who killed a man yelling ‘shoot me’ -Wealth Pursuit Network
Mississippi won’t prosecute a deputy who killed a man yelling ‘shoot me’
View
Date:2025-04-12 11:46:02
JACKSON, Miss. (AP) — A Mississippi grand jury decided not to bring criminal charges against a sheriff’s deputy who fatally shot a man who was yelling “shoot me,” the state attorney general’s office said Monday.
The Hancock County Sheriff’s Department said three deputies responding to a report of an attempted break-in found Isaiah Winkley, 21, of Coweta County, Georgia, when they arrived outside a home in Kiln on Dec. 10, 2022.
A federal judge reviewed video recorded by an officer’s body camera that showed Winkley holding a steel fence post in one hand and candy in the other as he yelled “Shoot me” several times to the deputies.
One deputy shot Winkley with a Taser that had little effect, and then deputy Michael Chase Blackwell used a gun to shoot Winkley multiple times, wrote the judge, who is overseeing a separate civil case brought by Winkley’s family.
The Mississippi Bureau of Investigation examined what happened, as it does for most shootings involving law enforcement officers, and Attorney General Lynn Fitch’s office presented the findings to a Hancock County grand jury last week.
“The grand jury reported that it found no criminal conduct on behalf of the officer involved,” Fitch’s office said in a news release Monday. “As such, no further criminal action will be taken by this Office in this matter.”
The Sun Herald reported in March that federal prosecutors said they would not to bring criminal charges against Blackwell after he agreed to surrender his law enforcement license and certification and not serve as a law enforcement officer anywhere in the U.S.
Winkley’s family filed a federal lawsuit in 2023 against Hancock County and its sheriff’s department. The suit said Winkley, a student at Pensacola Christian College in Florida, was at the home looking for assistance after his car became stuck in mud along Mississippi Highway 603.
The lawsuit is on hold as attorneys for Blackwell appeal an April ruling by U.S. District Judge Louis Guirola Jr. denying his request for qualified immunity, a legal doctrine that shields officials, including law enforcement officers, from lawsuits that seek money for actions they take on the job.
The person who called the sheriff’s department to report a possible break-in said a man outside his cousin’s house was carrying a “come-along” or “chain fall,” which is a portable winch, and that the man seemed not to be in “his right state of mind,” Guirola wrote.
The judge wrote that Winkley “was clearly having a mental or emotional health crisis” and “he never directed verbal threats toward the officers; instead, he begged the officers to shoot him.”
“A reasonable officer at the scene could have viewed Winkley’s actions as nonthreatening because Winkley did not touch his waistband and he could not have grabbed an additional weapon while his hands were grasping other objects,” Guirola wrote.
Winkley had the fence post in one hand and a container of Mentos candy in the other, the judge wrote.
veryGood! (8974)
Related
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Salvage crews to begin removing first piece of collapsed Baltimore bridge
- NC State carving its own space with March Madness run in shadow of Duke, North Carolina
- A River in Flux
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Here and meow: Why being a cat lady is now cool (Just ask Taylor)
- Solar eclipse glasses are needed for safety, but they sure are confusing. What to know.
- Powerball winning numbers for March 30, 2024 drawing: Jackpot rises to $935 million
- Current, future North Carolina governor’s challenge of power
- Men's March Madness highlights: Elite Eight scores as UConn, Alabama advance to Final Four
Ranking
- Off the Grid: Sally breaks down USA TODAY's daily crossword puzzle, Hi Hi!
- The Bachelor’s Joey and Kelsey Reveal They’ve Nailed Down One Crucial Wedding Detail
- With Shohei Ohtani, Dodgers' Big 3 of MVPs is a 'scary' proposition | Nightengale's Notebook
- I'm a trans man. We don't have a secret agenda – we're just asking you to let us live.
- Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
- Newspaper edits its column about LSU-UCLA game after Tigers coach Kim Mulkey blasted it as sexist
- Vague school rules at the root of millions of student suspensions
- The pool was safety to transgender swimmer Schuyler Bailar. He wants it that way for others
Recommendation
Alex Murdaugh’s murder appeal cites biased clerk and prejudicial evidence
Police searching for Chiefs' Rashee Rice after alleged hit-and-run accident, per report
Ohio authorities close case of woman found dismembered in 1964 in gravel pit and canal channel
South Korea's birth rate is so low, one company offers staff a $75,000 incentive to have children
Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
AT&T informs users of data breach and resets millions of passcodes
Demolition crews cutting into first pieces of Baltimore bridge as ship remains in rubble
Beyoncé fans celebrate 'Cowboy Carter,' Black country music at Nashville listening party