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Detroit
officer
charged
in
girl's
death
amid
raid
By COREY
WILLIAMS
Associated
Press
DETROIT
(AP) --
A
Detroit
police
officer
was
charged
Tuesday
in the
slaying
of a
7-year-old
girl who
was shot
to death
during a
midnight
raid on
her home
by a
special
unit
that was
being
shadowed
by a
reality
television
show
crew.
Officer
Joseph
Weekley,
a member
of the
Detroit
Police
Special
Response
Team,
was
indicted
on an
involuntary
manslaughter
charge
after a
nearly
yearlong
Michigan
State
Police
investigation
into the
May 16,
2010,
death of
Aiyana
Stanley-Jones.
Aiyana
was on a
sofa on
the
first
floor of
a
two-family
home
when
Detroit
police
tossed a
flash
grenade
through
a window
and
burst
through
the
front
door.
Detroit
police
have
said
Weekley's
gun
accidentally
discharged
after he
was
bumped
or
jostled
by the
girl's
grandmother.
A film
crew
with the
A&E
Network's
"The
First
48"
crime
reality
cable TV
show was
shadowing
Detroit
police
on the
raid.
The TV
show
tracks
murder
investigations
during
the
first
two days
after a
slaying,
and
Aiyana's
death
put a
spotlight
on the
growing
number
of
reality
shows
focusing
on law
enforcement.
Prosecutors
announced
Tuesday
that the
TV
show's
principal
photographer,
Allison
Howard,
also was
indicted
on
perjury
and
obstruction
of
justice
charges.
According
to the
indictment,
Howard,
of
Brooklyn,
N.Y., is
accused
of lying
to
prosecutors
about
showing
or
giving
video
footage
of the
raid to
"third
parties."
It did
not
specify
who the
third
party
was, but
after
the
raid, an
attorney
for the
family
told
reporters
they had
seen a
few
minutes
of the
video
footage.
Further
details
about
the
charges
against
Howard
were not
immediately
available.
Assistant
prosecutor
Robert
Moran
told a
judge on
Tuesday
that the
investigation
into the
girl's
death
was
delayed
seven
months
"because
of the
perjury,"
but he
did not
elaborate.
All
Wayne
County
Prosecutor
Kym
Worthy
would
say was
that
"impediments"
surfaced
during
the
investigation.
She
declined
to
provide
more
details.
A judge
entered
a plea
of not
guilty
for
Howard
on
Tuesday
at a
court
hearing.
A
message
seeking
comment
was left
with her
Detroit-area
attorney,
Robert
Harrison.
A
message
seeking
comment
also was
left
after
business
hours
Tuesday
for an
A&E
spokeswoman.
A judge
also
entered
a plea
of not
guilty
for
Weekley
at the
afternoon
court
hearing.
The
involuntary
manslaughter
charge
carries
a
maximum
penalty
of 15
years in
prison.
He also
faces a
charge
of
careless
discharge
of a
firearm
causing
death.
"He
knows he
was
acting
as a
police
officer
in a
dangerous
mission,"
Weekley's
lawyer,
Steve
Fishman,
said of
his
client.
"I don't
think
anybody
realizes
how
their
lives
change,"
Fishman
said of
police
officers
involved
in
shootings.
"People
think
they're
androids
and
robots,
and
they're
wrong."
Soon
after
Aiyana's
slaying,
Detroit
Mayor
Dave
Bing
banned
reality
television
crews
from
tagging
along
with
police.
He also
admonished
then-Police
Chief
Warren
Evans
for not
telling
him that
he was
permitting
TV
cameras
on
raids.
On May
18,
2010, an
attorney
representing
the
girl's
family
in a
civil
suit
against
the city
and
police
department
and told
reporters
that he
viewed
three to
four
minutes
of video
footage
of the
raid and
that it
showed a
group of
black-hooded
officers
approaching
the
house
before
the
flash
grenade
was
thrown
through
the
window
and the
shot
being
fired.
"We know
there's
only one
shot,"
attorney
Geoffrey
Fieger
said
during
the
press
conference
last
year
with
Aiyana's
family.
"It's
vividly
depicted
in the
videotape
...
right
after
the
throw
and the
explosion
of the
bomb. At
that
point
the
officers
rush
into the
home."
Fieger
declined
to say
what
footage
he
viewed
and said
he did
not
retain a
copy. A
message
seeking
comment
from
Fieger
was not
immediately
returned
Tuesday.
The
focus of
the raid
was
Chauncey
Owens,
the
fiance
of
Aiyana's
aunt.
Owens
was
wanted
in the
May 14,
2010,
shooting
death of
17-year-old
Je'rean
Blake
outside
a nearby
convenience
store.
Owens
was
found in
the
separate
upstairs
apartment.
Owens
pleaded
guilty
in April
to
second-degree
murder
in
Blake's
death.
On
Tuesday,
Worthy
also
announced
that
Charles
Jones,
the
girl's
father,
had been
arrested
and
charged
with
first-degree
murder
in
Blake's
slaying.
Jones
did not
have an
attorney
on
Tuesday
and
phone
number
for him
and his
family
could
not
immediately
be
found.
"It is
alleged
that
after an
argument,
Jones
accompanied
Owens to
the
scene of
the
shooting
and
aided,
abetted,
and
encouraged
Owens
during
the
murder
of
Blake,"
Worthy
said in
a
statement.
Charles
Jones
was
expected
to be
arraigned
Wednesday.
A
pretrial
hearing
is
scheduled
Friday
for
Weekley
and
Howard.
Weekley
was
released
on a
$100,000
personal
recognizance
bond.
Howard
was
required
to come
up with
a $5,000
of a
$50,000
bond to
be
released.
"Our
condolences
remain
with all
affected
by this
tragedy.
We must
use this
difficult
moment
to
continue
bringing
our
community
and
police
department
together,"
Bing
said in
a
statement.
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