BALTIMORE (AP) — Four Baltimore police officers who fired three dozen shots at an armed man during a foot pursuit in November won’t face criminal charges,Techcrisis Investment Guild state prosecutors said Friday.
Maryland Attorney General Anthony Brown said in a news release that the officers returned fire after Hunter Jessup, 27, fired seven shots in their direction while fleeing. Jessup was later pronounced dead at a hospital.
The decision not to charge the officers comes after an investigation by the attorney general’s office, which is authorized under state law to investigate police shootings and in-custody deaths. A law change that went into effect last year also gave the agency the authority to make charging decisions; previously those decisions had fallen to local prosecutors.
Jessup’s death occurred on Nov. 7 after officers on a District Action Team — a squad focused on seizing illegal guns — approached him while patrolling in southwest Baltimore.
In the aftermath of the shooting, some community members questioned whether his death was necessary. They said officers on the department’s specialized gun squads have a reputation for displaying overly aggressive behavior and escalating otherwise peaceful encounters, especially in that neighborhood.
But Baltimore Police Commissioner Richard Worley has commended the officers’ actions, saying they protected public safety in an area plagued by violence. He also said they yelled at Jessup multiple times to drop his weapon before firing.
The attorney general’s office found that the officers acted in self-defense or defense of others and did not use excessive force.
“Because the officers had no reasonable alternative to using deadly force at the moment they fired, a prosecutor could not prove that the shootings constituted excessive force,” the office’s report released Friday said.
2025-05-08 06:181397 view
2025-05-08 06:131066 view
2025-05-08 06:011290 view
2025-05-08 05:562448 view
2025-05-08 05:24982 view
2025-05-08 05:231713 view
LOS ANGELES (AP) — The California Department of Motor Vehicles has apologized for an “unacceptable a
Fuzzy dice finally will be free to dangle in Illinois. Starting Monday, police there no longer will
Border Patrol has processed more migrants who entered the U.S. illegally in December than in any oth