Judge dismisses Kenneth Walker suit - 2nd Grand Jury Not Allowed
Tron Nick
Unarmed Insurance Salesman, Black Man, face down, complying with police orders shot in the head. Officer not punished.
Kenneth Walker was shot and killed by former Deputy David Glisson in December of 2003. A grand jury cleared him of criminal charges 11 months later. Civil rights leaders then filed a petition saying Glisson wasn't sworn in during that hearing, and they wanted a new one. In a hearing Wednesday, Judge Jordan ruled to dismiss the petition, meaning no other grand jury will hear the case. The ruling ended the suit for a writ of mandamus filed Nov. 30, 2004, by Edward DuBose, former president of the Columbus chapter of the NAACP. The complaint sought an order compelling Dougherty County District Attorney Kenneth Hodges to correct an error that allowed former Muscogee Deputy Sheriff David Glisson to make an unsworn statement to the grand jury on Nov. 22, 2004. The next day, the grand jury returned a no bill, refusing to indict Glisson in the Dec. 10, 2003, shooting death of Walker during a traffic stop. Jordan's ruling granted the motion to dismiss argued by Assistant Attorney General Kay Baker, who said a writ of mandamus was the wrong mechanism for a remedy.The judge noted that the prosecutor still has the discretion to present the case to a second grand jury. "Broad discretion remains with the district attorney, who may exercise his discretion to present to a subsequent grand jury... or, in his discretion, to choose not to present to a subsequent grand jury," Jordan said. [more] and [more]
VIDEO: View the Kenneth Walker tape (Blurry, no audio) [more] and [more]
Pictured above: The 39-year-old black insurance manager from Columbus was either exiting an SUV that had been pulled over on I-185 or was getting set to lie on the ground. A bullet, one of two shots fired from an MP5 9 mm submachine gun, ripped into Walker's brain. Six hours later, the husband and father of a 3-year-old girl was dead.
The Wrong Car. On Wednesday, Dec. 16, four professional African American men were supposedly identified by a police informant as drug suppliers from Miami who were heavily armed. Who really was inside the vehicle were four friends en route to a local restaurant to continue their weekly ritual of male/friendship bonding. All of that changed when the gray Yukon was pulled over. Eyewitnesses recounted the incident as the men were being physically snatched from the car, guns pointed directly in their faces and to the head area and being thrown to the ground. It was during this time that 39-year-old Kenneth Walker was shot. According to the sheriff, he was shot after failing to show both of his hands. "Mr. Walker refused to follow a direct command from the deputy." When the dust settled, a terrible mistake had been made. Walker and his companions were not drug dealers and they were not armed. The car was searched and no drugs were found. [more]