Ohio drops case against ex-cop in shooting


Associated Press

CINCINNATI

A white police officer who fatally shot an unarmed black motorist during a Cincinnati traffic stop won’t face a third murder trial, a prosecutor announced Tuesday while saying he’s asking federal authorities to consider possible civil-rights charges.

Hamilton County Prosecutor Joe Deters said he’s dropping the case against Ray Tensing, 27, on the eve of the two-year anniversary of the death of Sam DuBose, 43. Two previous juries couldn’t reach a unanimous agreement on murder and voluntary manslaughter charges against the former University of Cincinnati officer.

“I feel badly,” said Deters, who said he concluded he wouldn’t be able to get a jury to convict Tensing. “I’ve got to do what I think is right.”

Tensing’s attorney said Deters made the right decision because jurors he talked to after the second trial all said they felt there would “never be a unanimous decision” reached in the case.

“The system worked exactly as it’s designed to work,” Mathews said. “We tried it with two separate juries, and neither one could come to a unanimous decision, and that’s our justice system working.”

Deters agreed with Mathews that the U.S. justice system is “the best system in the world,” but added: “It’s imperfect.”

He referred to outrage among some people over football star O.J. Simpson’s 1995 acquittal in Los Angeles on murder charges.

“The division in this country is profound,” Deters said. “I mean, look at the O.J. Simpson case; people were like ‘What? Not guilty?’ OK? This goes both ways, hard.”