No Indictment of Tamir Rice’s Killers is the Prosecutor’s Failure, Not a ‘Perfect Storm of Human Error’

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Cuyahoga County Prosecutor Timothy McGinty 

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When a prosecutor presents a case to a grand jury, they do so solely for the purpose of securing an indictment and proceeding with the case. Period. That is the reason that evidence is gathered and carefully presented during the secret and seemingly enigmatic proceeding.

Speaking from experience, by the time a prosecutor has made the decision to put a case before a grand jury, they have already determined that the case they are seeking to pursue is one worthy of punishment. Any notions of justice that need consideration, from the prosecution’s perspective, are addressed before the presentation; if there is insufficient evidence or a grounded belief that no crime has occurred, the prosecution has all power to decline to present the case to the jury.

Therefore, once the prosecutor steps in front of that jury, it is his or her responsibility to do everything in his or her power, within the bounds of ethics and professionalism, to secure an indictment. Make no mistake: The prosecutor controls what takes place during a grand jury proceeding. Anything that falls short of an indictment should not be described as a “perfect storm of error” as a seemingly contrite McGinty suggested during his press conference but, rather, is a direct failure of that office in doing the job that they are supposed to do.

Given what we do know about the grand jury proceedings in the case against Loehmann and Garmback, as well as the comments made during McGinty’s press conference, it is clear that his office had not, from the very outset, adopted a winning strategy for securing this indictment.

The second issue with McGinty’s approach, is that he chose to act more like a defense attorney than he did a prosecutor. It is not only uncommon but nearly unheard of for a prosecutor to solicit the types of “independent” expert analysis that McGinty did during the early stages before this case was presented to the grand jury. (It’s worth noting that one of the “experts” had previously testified in the unsuccessful Michael Brelo prosecution–also by McGinty’s office–where an officer was acquitted after standing on the hood of a vehicle and firing 48 shots into a vehicle with an unarmed black man and woman.)

It is beyond curious that McGinty chose to publicly release the findings, all of which stated that Loehmann acted reasonably in shooting Tamir, while simultaneously being virtually silent on any of the plainly obvious facts that supported an indictment of the officers. If anything, this strikes as laying the groundwork to absolve himself of a piss-poor presentation that was never intended to obtain an indictment. Adding to this that Loehmann testified but was not cross-examined by the prosecutors presenting the case, and it strongly suggests that this was a very “hands off” approach toward securing the indictment. Of all of the things about McGinty’s approach that might seem amiss, this should jump off of the page most because the opportunity to cross-examine a witness in the grand jury is one that most prosecutors relish, primarily because there is no judge present and the defense attorney doesn’t have the ability to object as they would at trial. To have defense witnesses testify and not cross examine them strongly suggests that McGinty’s office was never serious about getting a true bill. 

Finally, during McGinty’s press conference, he astonishingly blamed everyone and everything else for Tamir’s death besides the bullets Loehmann fired at that child in less than two seconds of approaching him. McGinty found a way to blame the toy gun that looked real. Assistant prosecutor Matt Meyer quizzically referenced Tamir’s pants and clothes size and discussed that it was difficult for the officers to determine that Tamir was a child. These are all bizarre justifications and deflections for a prosecutor to offer up at this stage of a case, because they are facts that would buttress a defense rather than support a prosecutor who is seeking to secure an indictment. Everything about McGinty’s tone and the remarks coming from his office suggested that a no true bill was what he had in mind, raising the question why present the case in the first place to only give a half-hearted effort?

There is little doubt that a special prosecutor would have been the appropriate way to go before McGinty’s office even touched this case. From the very outset, McGinty publicly expressed doubt as to the criminal culpability of the officers involved in shooting Tamir. That gives immediate rise to notions of police bias but also sheds lights on one of the biggest flaws within our current justice system: prosecutors who rely on a positive relationship with police departments cannot be trusted to prosecute those same offices during instances of alleged police misconduct and wrongdoing. It is unrealistic that the public is going to get a fair attempt by a prosecutor’s office to convict officers that they work with daily under otherwise amicable circumstances.

The old saying about indicting a ham sandwich is a real one, jokingly rooted in the truth that indictments are not difficult to come by. The standard is low and the prosecutor is in total control. If there was enough evidence to decide to present this case to the grand jury, there was enough evidence to secure an indictment. The issue is that an indictment was never McGinty’s plan from the outset. Therefore, in addressing this case, it isn’t about what the grand jury did but more of what McGinty decided his own office wasn’t going to do: Hold criminally responsible the killers of 12-year-old Tamir Rice.

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