Houston Chronicle

4 officers are reinstated after Black man’s death

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ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. — Four deputies involved in the case of a Black man who was fatally shot last week are back on active duty after a review of body camera video showed they didn’t fire their weapons.

Pasquotank County Sheriff Tommy Wooten announced in a news release Thursday that he had restored to duty four of the seven deputies who were placed on administra­tive leave after the shooting death of Andrew Brown Jr.

Wooten said the three deputies who fired their weapons will remain on leave until an investigat­ion is completed.

“After reviewing the preliminar­y conclusion­s of the independen­t investigat­ors conducting the internal review, and after carefully examining the body camera footage of the incident with my own staff, it’s obvious that four of the deputies never fired their weapons and deserve to be reinstated to active duty,” Wooten said.

Brown was shot April 21 by deputies serving drug-related search and arrest warrants at his house in Elizabeth City, about 160 miles northeast of Raleigh. On Tuesday, Brown’s family released an independen­t autopsy showing he was shot five times, including in the back of the head. The state’s autopsy hasn’t been released.

Brown family attorney Harry Daniels called the decision to reinstate the four deputies “unprofessi­onal,” noting that the family hasn’t been shown the video that Wooten says shows they didn’t fire their weapons.

“They’re reinstatin­g deputies with no transparen­cy,” Daniels said. “We think that’s inappropri­ate and should not be done.”

“We have to take their word for it — that’s not transparen­cy,” he said.

 ?? Steve Helber / Associated Press ?? Demonstrat­ors march to protest the shooting death of Andrew Brown Jr. by sheriff ’s deputies in Elizabeth City, N.C.
Steve Helber / Associated Press Demonstrat­ors march to protest the shooting death of Andrew Brown Jr. by sheriff ’s deputies in Elizabeth City, N.C.

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