Seven deputies put on leave – and another 3 resign – over fatal shooting of Andrew Brown

Seven deputies have been put on leave – and another three have resigned – after a black man was fatally shot in North Carolina, it has been revealed.

Pasquotank Sheriff Tommy Wooten told WAVY-TV that seven deputies have been put on administrative leave following the shooting of Andrew Brown, 42, on Wednesday in Elizabeth City. CNN reported that another two deputies resigned and one retired as a result of the incident.

One deputy was initially placed on leave after the shooting, although their involvement in Brown’s death remains unclear. Six others have now since been suspended, with further details yet to emerge on their involvement in the shooting.

Wooten told CNN that not all of the deputies that were placed on administrative shot their guns – but they were all part of the warrant operation.

The sheriff told WAVY-TV that body camera footage would be released ‘in the next couple days’ after protesters took to the streets for two nights in a row demanding that officers release the footage. 

Andrew Brown, 42, was shot and killed by sheriffs in North Carolina on Wednesday morning

Andrew Brown, 42, was shot and killed by sheriffs in North Carolina on Wednesday morning

Brown, a father of ten, was described by his family as a 'good guy'

Brown, a father of ten, was described by his family as a ‘good guy’

The Pasquotank Sheriff told WAVY-TV that seven deputies are on administrative leave after the shooting

The Pasquotank Sheriff told WAVY-TV that seven deputies are on administrative leave after the shooting

The Elizabeth City Council held a press conference after an emergency meeting to address the shooting

The Elizabeth City Council held a press conference after an emergency meeting to address the shooting

Elizabeth City council members hold a press conference following an emergency meeting to direct the City Attorney to file a petition with court for body cam footage of the Andrew Brown Jr. shooting

Elizabeth City council members hold a press conference following an emergency meeting to direct the City Attorney to file a petition with court for body cam footage of the Andrew Brown Jr. shooting

Glenda Brown Thomas displays a photo of her nephew, Andrew Brown Jr., on her cell phone at her home in Elizabeth City, N.C., on Thursday

Glenda Brown Thomas displays a photo of her nephew, Andrew Brown Jr., on her cell phone at her home in Elizabeth City, N.C., on Thursday

A small memorial is at the scene where a Pasquotank County sheriffs deputy shot and killed Andrew Brown

A small memorial is at the scene where a Pasquotank County sheriffs deputy shot and killed Andrew Brown

Brown was shot and killed in his car at around 8.30am while police were executing search-and-arrest warrants for drug offenses, officials said. 

Authorities would not provide details of the shooting but an eyewitness said that he was shot while trying to drive away, and that deputies fired at him multiple times. 

The car skidded out of Brown’s yard and eventually hit a tree, said Demetria Williams, who lives on the same street.

Williams said after hearing one gunshot, she ran outside, where she saw other shots being fired at the car.

‘When they opened the door he was already dead,’ Williams told The Associated Press. ‘He was slumped over.’ 

She said officers tried to perform chest compressions on him. A car authorities removed from the scene appeared to have multiple bullet holes and a broken rear windshield.

However, the body camera footage cannot be released to the public without a court order under North Carolina law.

The Elizabeth City Council held an emergency meeting at 3.30pm on Friday and voted unanimously to petition the sheriff to release the body camera video, WAVY-TV reported.

City council members said that the Elizabeth city attorney will petition a superior court for an order of release if the sheriff denies the request.

A demonstrator holds a sign for Andrew Brown Jr. during a protest march on Thursday

A demonstrator holds a sign for Andrew Brown Jr. during a protest march on Thursday

Kirk Rivers, president of the Pasquotank County chapter of the NAACP,  leads a group of demonstrators as they block Ehringhaus Street, a main retail avenue in Elizabeth City, N.C., on Friday

Kirk Rivers, president of the Pasquotank County chapter of the NAACP,  leads a group of demonstrators as they block Ehringhaus Street, a main retail avenue in Elizabeth City, N.C., on Friday

However, the city attorney said during the meeting that he does not believe the city has much of a legal standing to request the body camera footage.

Council member Darius Horton made a motion to make the request anyway to ‘send a message,’ according to the outlet.

Police described Brown as someone who was well known to police – but his family described the father-of-ten as a ‘good guy’, despite his ‘flaws’ – and are demanding the body camera footage.

‘The police didn’t have to shoot my baby,’ Martha McCullen, an aunt of Brown, said on Thursday on the stoop of Brown’s rental home.

She said she raised him after his parents died and that he recently had has children taken from him but was working to get them back.

‘Andrew Brown was a good person,’ she said. ‘He was about to get his kids back. He was a good father. Now his kids won’t never see him again.’

Brown’s grandmother, Lydia Brown, and his aunt Clarissa Brown Gibson told The Associated Press that they learned about his death through a TV news report. Both said they want the shooting thoroughly investigated.

‘I am very upset. Andrew was a good person,’ Lydia Brown said. The deputy ‘didn’t have to shoot him like that.’

Clarissa Brown Gibson said: ‘We want to know if he was served with a warrant, why the shooting over a warrant?’

Kirk Rivers, president of the Pasquotank County chapter of the NAACP, led a group of demonstrators as they blocked Ehringhaus Street, a main retail avenue in Elizabeth City, on Friday.

Rivers told the Associated Press earlier this week that ‘people in charge’ need to be held accountable.

‘When is it going to stop? We just got a verdict yesterday,’ Rivers said in a phone interview, referring to the guilty verdicts handed down Tuesday in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in the death of George Floyd. 

‘Is it open season now? At some point, it has to stop. We have to start holding the people in charge accountable.’ 

On Thursday night Andrew Womble, the district attorney for the First Prosecutorial District, which encompasses Elizabeth City, said they were prevented by law from releasing the footage.

‘We know people want to see the body camera footage,’ said Womble, in a statement jointly signed with R. Michael Cox, the Pasquotank County Attorney.

‘It is reasonable for people to ask to see it, because such footage can help provide key context about what happens in incidents like this.

‘However, under North Carolina law police worn body camera footage is not a public record and cannot be released to the press or public without a court order.

‘We must follow the law and the law prohibits us from publicly releasing the body worn camera footage.’

Womble and Cox said they were allowed to show the footage privately to the family, however, and were making arrangements to do so. 

source: dailymail.co.uk