The white former Ferguson police officer who shot dead an 18-year-old
unarmed black teenager has given his first published comments since the
controversial shooting that reignited a discussion about race in
America.
Twenty-nine-year-old Darren Wilson spoke with New Yorker magazine
from St. Louis, Missouri, where he is laying low after the uproar
triggered by his shooting of Michael Brown on August 9, 2014.
Wilson was cleared of wrongdoing by a grand jury and the federal government.
But the shooting, the circumstances of which are disputed, touched a
nerve in American society and ignited sometimes violent protests and
heavy-handed policing in response.
In the lengthy article published Monday Wilson expressed little emotion over the killing of Brown.
“Do I think about who he was as a person? Not really, because it
doesn’t matter at this point. Do I think he had the best upbringing? No.
Not at all,” he told the magazine.
The article chronicled Wilson’s own sometimes difficult upbringing,
his training as an officer and his work in a local Missouri police force
that the US Justice Department has criticized for targeting the
community’s African-American majority.
But Wilson maintains that race has had little to do with his work.
“I am really simple in the way that I look at life,” Wilson said.
“What happened to my great-grandfather is not happening to me. I can’t
base my actions off what happened to him.”
“Everyone is so quick to jump on race. It’s not a race issue,” he
told the magazine, adding that the real issue under discussion was
police power.
The reporter noted that Wilson at times seemed to use “racial code language.”
“They’re so wrapped up in a different culture than — what I’m trying
to say is, the right culture, the better one to pick from,” Wilson said
about policing a black community.
Wilson’s shooting of Brown has drawn attention to the police’s use of force, particularly in its dealings with black suspects.
A string of police killings of black suspects since the shooting in
Ferguson has caused an outpouring of anger at perceived police racism
and prompted calls for change.
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