The
family of Michael Brown, the teen killed last year by Ferguson police
officer Darren Wilson, will file a civil wrongful death lawsuit in the
case "very shortly," attorney Anthony Gray said Thursday.
Neither
he nor attorney Daryl Parks would say exactly when the suit would be
filed, but they said that they disagreed with the grand jury's and the Justice Department's decisions not to charge Wilson in the shooting.
"They have accepted (Wilson's) self-defense," Parks told reporters. "We do not accept his self-defense."
The
slain teen's parents, Michael Brown Sr. and Lesley McSpadden, were in
attendance at the news conference but did not speak on advice of their
attorneys, Parks said.
"The last 24 hours have been tough for them," he said.
Word
of the lawsuit comes a day after the Justice Department determined
there was not sufficient evidence to charge Wilson in Brown's death but found in a separate investigation that the Ferguson Police Department showed a pattern of racial bias.
Brown
Sr. and McSpadden released a statement Wednesday saying they were
disappointed that Wilson would not face charges, but, they added, the federal report on the police department could provide a silver lining.
"We
are encouraged that the DOJ will hold the Ferguson Police Department
accountable for the pattern of racial bias and profiling they found in
their handling of interactions with people of color," the statement
said. "It is our hope that through this action, true change will come
not only in Ferguson, but around the country. If that change happens,
our son's death will not have been in vain."
In November, a grand jury cleared Wilson and, in an uncharacteristic move in grand jury proceedings, the prosecutor released all the evidence that was considered.
Gray
said the civil lawsuit will rely on "pretty much the same evidence,"
but it will be cast differently. The jury in the civil lawsuit will be
asked to make a determination based on a lower burden of proof -- by a
preponderance of evidence, rather than beyond a reasonable doubt, Parks
said.
Summing up the crux of the Brown
family's case, Parks said, "There were other alternatives available to
(Wilson). He did not have to kill Michael Brown."
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