Madison (US), Jul 28 (AP) A Wisconsin judge is set to announce Wednesday whether he would invoke a rarely used process to charge a police officer in the 2016 slaying of a Black man.
Prosecutors declined to file charges against Joseph Mensah in Jay Anderson Junior's death. But Milwaukee County Judge Glenn Yamahiro is taking a second look at the case under a rarely used process known as a John Doe proceeding. The judge is set to announce whether he would file charges against Mensah in the case.
Mensah, who is also Black, discovered the 25-year-old Anderson sleeping in his car after hours in a park in Wauwatosa, a Milwaukee suburb. Mensah said he shot Anderson after he reached for a gun.
Anderson was the second of three people, Mensah fatally shot during a five-year stint with the Wauwatosa Police Department. Prosecutors cleared him of criminal wrongdoing in each case.
Anderson's family asked Yamahiro to review the case under the John Doe procedure that allows judges to directly question witnesses. If a judge finds sufficient evidence for charges, he or she can file them directly, leaving prosecutors out of the equation. At least six other states have similar statutory provisions but attorneys say the process is rarely used in Wisconsin.
Mensah joined the Wauwatosa Police Department in 2015. That year, he fatally shot Antonio Gonzales, who identified as Latino and American Indian. Prosecutors said Gonzales refused to drop a sword.
The Anderson shooting came the next year. Then, in 2020, Mensah fatally shot 17-year-old Alvin Cole as he fled from police during a disturbance in a mall. Mensah said he shot Cole, who was Black, after he pointed a gun at him. That set off months of protests.
Milwaukee County District Attorney John Chisholm's decision not to charge him for that shooting led to more protests in Wauwatosa in October.
Mensah remained under pressure ever after being cleared in Cole's death and resigned in November. He collected a $1,30,000 severance payment and now works as a Waukesha County deputy.
The Anderson family's attorney, Kimberley Motley, also represents the Gonzales and Cole families. She said she was considering invoking the John Doe process for those families as well. (AP)
(The above story is verified and authored by Press Trust of India (PTI) staff. PTI, India’s premier news agency, employs more than 400 journalists and 500 stringers to cover almost every district and small town in India.. The views appearing in the above post do not reflect the opinions of LatestLY)













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