Reformers Get Reformed Into the System: “Black” Prosecutor Wesley Bell Once Again Does Nothing for Black People: No Charges for White Kansas City Cops who Appear to Murder Malcolm Johnson in Store

From [HERE] A Kansas City, Missouri, police officer who fatally shot a man at a convenience store nearly two years ago will not be charged with a crime, following a decision by a special prosecutor.

Malcolm Johnson was killed in March 2021. Some civil rights, religious and community activists said the shooting of Johnson, who was Black, was part of a trend of officers in Missouri's largest city killing Black men. They questioned if officers gave Johnson sufficient time to surrender before shooting him.

St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Wesley Bell's office announced Monday that no charges should be filed, following an investigation by the Missouri State Highway Patrol. Bell's office took on the case after Jackson County prosecutors cited a conflict of interest.

"Given the review of all the evidence, there is insufficient evidence to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the officer who shot Malcolm Johnson was not acting in lawful self-defense or defense of others under Missouri law," Bell's office said in a statement.

The decision drew criticism from civil rights groups and Black leaders.

"This case is not only tragic but also a clear example of how KCPD gets away with murder, covers it up, and claims it is justice. This is not justice," the organization Decarcerate Kansas City wrote on Twitter.

Khadijah Hardaway, a spokeswoman for the family of Malcolm Johnson, said the family will ask the U.S. Department of Justice to investigate the decision not to charge the officer who shot Johnson.

Police said they were pursuing Malcolm Johnson for an aggravated assault, but a spokesperson for the family said police entered the gas station with guns drawn and could not have known it was Johnson because he was wearing a hoodie and driving a car that was not registered to him.

"What I saw was an execution," said Pastor Darron Edwards, of the United Believers Community Church. "The culture, the conditions, and the climate of Kansas City must change, and we're here to stand up today to demand that change."

"We're just asking for transparency and justice for the Malcolm Johnson family," Hardaway said.

Hardaway also contested the police's description of a struggle at the scene, and said that, at one point, Johnson was pinned by four officers on his left side.

“He has never had full function in that arm," she said, noting Johnson had previously suffered a gunshot wound there. "The mobility of his arm is little to none, so it was just impossible for that to happen.”

On the evening of March 25, 2021, two officers seeking Johnson for an unrelated shooting found him at a convenience store and approached him with their guns drawn. Surveillance video showed the officers grab Johnson. More officers joined in trying to restrain Johnson on the ground and an officer was shot. The report by Bell's office said the wounded officer shot Johnson twice in the head.

But videos of the shooting raised questions about the police version, and the leader of a group of clergy who questioned the circumstances called Johnson’s death "an execution."

Police Chief Stacey Graves said department officials "recognize there is still work to do with our community to build that trust and under my leadership relationships are among my top priorities," the Kansas City Star reported.

Last year, former detective Eric DeValkenaere was sentenced to six years in prison for fatally shooting Cameron Lamb, a Black man who was backing a pickup truck into a garage.

In September, the U.S. Department of Justice announced an investigation into allegations of discrimination against Black officers by the Kansas City Police Department that reportedly begins during hiring and extends to promotions and discipline.

Jackson County Prosecuting Attorney Jean Peters Baker announced shortly after Johnson's death that her office's prosecution of him in prior criminal cases could be seen as a conflict of interest. Baker’s office charged Johnson in 2014 in a fatal shooting, and he later pleaded guilty to reduced charges of involuntary manslaughter and armed criminal action.