We know the entire set-up and construct of the Parks and Crump modus operandi. The Parks/Crump scheme cannot advance without removing the uncontrollable local players and replacing them with pre-selected outside agents. This is why they are continuing the call for removal of the Mayor, the Police Chief and the local prosecutor.
Parks and Crump need to duplicate the Trayvon Martin formula if they are going to succeed and get their “wrongful death” lawsuit claims, or 3rd base.
Parks and Crump
Subsequently, Parks and Crump turn to media entities they can trust to assist them in pushing the removal narrative.
As you are aware, and just like the 2012 Trayvon Martin scheme, their list of trusted media water-carriers includes: Al Sharpton, Joy-Ann Reid, Michael Skolnik and Frances Robles. Today, Frances picks up the removal ball and advances it toward the goal line. Note the phrase “who is white” – how does this pertain to the factual considerations?
Frances Robles - legal collectionCLAYTON, Mo. — It was a summer evening 50 years ago when a knife-wielding kidnapper made the kind of malevolent move that defines a boy for life: The kidnapper snatched a police officer’s gun and used it to kill a canine officer, leaving 12-year-old Robert P. McCulloch without his father.
The boy would grow up with dreams of becoming a police officer, too, but a few years after his father’s death, those hopes were scuttled when cancer claimed his right leg. He went on to become the St. Louis County prosecutor instead.
After the killing of Michael Brown by an officer in Ferguson, Mo., Mr. McCulloch, the county’s top lawman for 24 years, is again facing the questions that have dogged his career for two decades: Can he be objective in cases involving black men and white police officers, when his own wounds run so deep? His father’s killing, deep family ties to the police and past entanglements with the black community have contributed to a wave of calls for his removal from a case that has gripped the nation.
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Protesters angry over the killing of Mr. Brown, an unarmed black teenager, marched outside Mr. McCulloch’s office Wednesday demanding that he step down. At least 70 clergy members singing gospel hymns paraded to his office and read a letter asking, in part, that he recuse himself. A group of activists is expected to show up there again on Thursday with more than 70,000 signatures asking him to appoint a special prosecutor. A state senator wrote him a letter asking him to step aside, and even the governor, Jay Nixon, hinted that Mr. McCulloch, a fellow Democrat, should recuse himself.
To that the prosecutor publicly told the governor, “Man up.”
“I am not walking away from this,” he told the radio station KTRS in St. Louis, saying that if the governor wanted him off the case, he should remove him.
“I have absolutely no intention of walking away from the duties and responsibilities entrusted to me by the people in this community,” Mr. McCulloch, 63, told the station. “I have done it for 24 years, and I’ve done, if I do say so myself, a very good job.”
Mr. McCulloch, who is white, is well respected by his peers, serving previously as president of the Missouri Association of Prosecuting Attorneys and the National District Attorneys Association. And he has proved to be popular at the polls: This month, he won his Democratic primary race by a 30-point margin.
As the county’s top lawman, he pushed for legislation that made criminals serve longer portions of their sentences, and has fought back attacks against his trial conviction rate by noting that his conviction rate soars when plea bargains are counted.
Mr. McCulloch declined interview requests.
His executive assistant and spokesman, Edward Magee, said Mr. McCulloch had not spoken to the governor on the issue.
“His feeling is that he has been the elected prosecutor since 1991 and has been re-elected every four years since by a vast majority of the voters, including this past Aug. 5,” Mr. Magee said. “The voters and county have great faith in Mr. McCulloch, and he will continue to carry out his duties. He doesn’t let what happened in 1964 affect what happens in this office.”
Mr. Magee said his boss had prosecuted plenty of police officers for a variety of crimes, but he could not say how many had been charged with excessive force or wrongful shootings.
Senator Claire McCaskill, Democrat of Missouri and a former prosecutor, has defended Mr. McCulloch, whom she has known for more than 20 years. If she were governor, she said, she would not remove him. “I believe that Bob McCulloch will be fair,” Ms. McCaskill said Tuesday on MSNBC.
Early in his career, Mr. McCulloch gained notoriety when he prosecuted Axl Rose, the frontman of Guns N’ Roses, for allegedly assaulting a security guard during a concert melee. But the current case has brought the most attention toward Mr. McCulloch in his career.
The Aug. 9 killing of Mr. Brown, 18, by Officer Darren Wilson, who is white, roiled the African-American community, and residents have taken to the streets in ways both peaceful and violent.
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The county’s investigation fell to Mr. McCulloch. With pressure mounting, he announced that he would not make a decision to arrest the officer himself but would instead present the case to a grand jury. Many critics oppose the use of grand juries because they believe that route allows prosecutors to present halfhearted cases without anyone finding out.
A jury empaneled since May, and whose term is expected to be extended until mid-October, began hearing evidence here in the Brown case on Wednesday. Officer Wilson will be invited to testify before the grand jury, Mr. McCulloch’s office said.
Some critics have raised questions about Mr. McCulloch’s impartiality, citing his long history of taking tough law-and-order stances in police shooting cases. His mother was a secretary in the homicide bureau of the St. Louis Police for 20 years, and his uncle, brother and cousin were all officers. In 2001, he referred to two unarmed men shot by the police as “bums.”
“Nobody thinks Michael Brown can get a fair shake from this guy,” said Antonio French, a St. Louis alderman who has become a vocal critic. “There is very little faith, especially in the black community, that there would ever be a fair trial.”
Mr. French said some people were still smarting from this month’s Democratic primary election, in which Mr. McCulloch ran negative campaign ads against an incumbent African-American county executive. The county executive lost to a white challenger, whom Mr. McCulloch had endorsed. The prosecutor had long been known as a party upstart who was always willing to endorse new candidates despite the party line.
Some in the area remember Mr. McCulloch for a 2001 episode called the “Jack in the Box case,” in which two undercover officers shot and killed two drug suspects who they said had tried to run them over in a bid to escape.
The issue of whether the car was moving forward or in reverse was in dispute, and Mr. McCulloch was strongly criticized for referring to the dead men as “bums.” He later said that the killings could have been averted if the drug suspects had just surrendered. The case was presented to a grand jury, which declined to indict.
“This community right now is in turmoil; the only way to calm these tensions and reduce unrest is to remove Bob McCulloch from this case,” State Senator Jamilah Nasheed said. “People don’t have trust in him that he would do the right thing in this case.”
In a letter asking him to recuse himself, Ms. Nasheed suggested that the violent death of Mr. McCulloch’s father would probably cloud his judgment. When asked about that potential conflict in past interviews, Mr. McCulloch dismissed the suggestion as “myopic.”
Mr. McCulloch said questions about his ability to serve had become a “tragic distraction.” Mr. Brown’s parents, he said, deserve better.  (link)
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