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In reply to the discussion: Here we go again-St Louis policeman kills 18-year-old, reviving Ferguson tensions [View all]Travelman
(708 posts)127. AFAIK, he only actually *fired* last night
In June, he was involved in a high-speed chase in St. Louis and after the crash, he took off on foot. He had a gun and threw it into a storm sewer as he ran. He was captured and the gun recovered. But as far as I can tell, he didn't actually fire at police in that incident.
It was for that incident that he was out on bond and due in court in November. This is why he had a GPS monitor on his ankle.
http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/police-officer-fatally-shoots-teenager-in-south-st-louis/article_2d5a8c2a-97db-5cec-a477-1130d7d26f7e.html
Court records show that Myers was scheduled to stand trial in November for unlawful use of a weapon and resisting arrest. This summer, Myers was a passenger in a car involved in a high-speed car chase in St. Louis, officials say. The car crashed just after midnight on June 27 in the 1100 block of South Grand Boulevard. Myers got out of the car, and a police officer yelled at him to stop. Instead, Myers ran off and tossed a gun into a sewage drain. Police caught him nearby and recovered the gun, a loaded .380-caliber pistol.
Myers was jailed for a few days. Then, in early July, Myers was released on bail after posting $1,000 cash bond. His bail originally was set at $30,000 by Judge Rex Burlison but was dropped to $10,000 after Judge Theresa Counts Burke agreed with a defense motion that it was excessive. Burke allowed Myers to post 10 percent of that in cash. A second judge upheld that bond amount later.
On July 8, as a condition of bail, Myers was activated on electronic monitoring for house arrest, court records say. He could leave his home in the 4200 block of Castleman Avenue for work, school, court appearances, meetings with attorneys and meetings with the private monitoring firm.
That firm, Eastern Missouri Alternative Sentencing Services, Inc., was supposed to monitor Myers' movements and contact the court if he violated the rules. Nothing in the court file indicates any violations. Susan Ryan, a spokeswoman for the St. Louis circuit attorney's office, said prosecutors weren't told of any violations.
Myers' attorney, Peter Cohen, said going out to get a sandwich would have been OK under the conditions of the electronic monitoring. He said the ankle monitor is standard in most cases for anyone facing a gun charge in the city who is allowed out on bail.
Myers was jailed for a few days. Then, in early July, Myers was released on bail after posting $1,000 cash bond. His bail originally was set at $30,000 by Judge Rex Burlison but was dropped to $10,000 after Judge Theresa Counts Burke agreed with a defense motion that it was excessive. Burke allowed Myers to post 10 percent of that in cash. A second judge upheld that bond amount later.
On July 8, as a condition of bail, Myers was activated on electronic monitoring for house arrest, court records say. He could leave his home in the 4200 block of Castleman Avenue for work, school, court appearances, meetings with attorneys and meetings with the private monitoring firm.
That firm, Eastern Missouri Alternative Sentencing Services, Inc., was supposed to monitor Myers' movements and contact the court if he violated the rules. Nothing in the court file indicates any violations. Susan Ryan, a spokeswoman for the St. Louis circuit attorney's office, said prosecutors weren't told of any violations.
Myers' attorney, Peter Cohen, said going out to get a sandwich would have been OK under the conditions of the electronic monitoring. He said the ankle monitor is standard in most cases for anyone facing a gun charge in the city who is allowed out on bail.
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Here we go again-St Louis policeman kills 18-year-old, reviving Ferguson tensions [View all]
malaise
Oct 2014
OP
Lots of new comments since I posted, but here's some samples of the type that prompted me ...
Scuba
Oct 2014
#72
Why, do you have something that shows that they washed it away before they had what they needed?
cstanleytech
Oct 2014
#37
Well I would say no since standard practice is they collect what they need before they clean
cstanleytech
Oct 2014
#47
So are you saying they should have removed the body before collecting the evidence?
cstanleytech
Oct 2014
#52
Its not anymore reliable which again is why you need physical evidence rather than just the sworn
cstanleytech
Oct 2014
#33
Aren't you just accepting (despite what witnesses(?) have commented) ...
1StrongBlackMan
Oct 2014
#68
As cops become more and more militaristic it won't be just the St. Louis community
scarystuffyo
Oct 2014
#97
I have to wonder if things have changed or if more people simple have cameras.
Gore1FL
Oct 2014
#116
Who is responsible for putting dangerous weapons into the hands of these psychotics we
valerief
Oct 2014
#8
Does that apply to off-duty police officers, working as security guards? eom.
1StrongBlackMan
Oct 2014
#71
Not 100% sure but I think it just might. I know about a week or two ago I read
cstanleytech
Oct 2014
#79
Umm streetlights? Car lights? Lights from a store? Lights from a billboard?
cstanleytech
Oct 2014
#81
No one has eyes in tghe back of their head, the leos in that are don't deserve the benefit of the ..
uponit7771
Oct 2014
#112
AMEN AND AMEN!!! Same thing happened to me as a teenager!!! No sign of LEO and chases
uponit7771
Oct 2014
#111
At this point I would want more proof than just a weapon recovered being recently discharged
scarystuffyo
Oct 2014
#91
It's time to throw out all the police manuals and start all over again.
Baitball Blogger
Oct 2014
#84
My God, my developmentally disabled daughter has more common sense than the entire Ferguson,
jwirr
Oct 2014
#104
So I see. But why do they always shoot to kill? When I was in college we talked about police who
jwirr
Oct 2014
#109
He was not busy shooting the officer. Also I'm an old lady and I do not remember a time when this
jwirr
Oct 2014
#115
Might be time for everyone here to review this tasty little morsel from our
KingCharlemagne
Oct 2014
#120
What I remember about the 70s and 80s is police brutality not shooting so many UNARMED people.
jwirr
Oct 2014
#121
or the LEO did ID himself and began chasing 3 people in an unmarked while off duty. Same thing..
uponit7771
Oct 2014
#113
I'm a bit late to your thread. But your final comment in your original post
KingCharlemagne
Oct 2014
#118