A friend e-mailed last week with a question: "You said that you were reserving your [Ferguson] opinion until you read the evidence. What do you say now?"
Fair enough. In late summer, I wrote:
"If there is so much we don't know, why are so many committed to a particular outcome? ... The only thing anyone should desire at this time is a full accounting of what occurred — not that the officer be charged and convicted, nor that he be exonerated."
Now, having immersed myself in the evidence presented to the grand jury, I've concluded that while the process investigating the shooting death of 18-year-old Michael Brown was imperfect, the result was nonetheless just.
First, prosecutor Robert McCullough was in a no-win position. He didn't think there was probable cause to arrest Officer Darren Wilson, but recognized the community would not accept his unilateral decision after questions had been raised about his affinity for law enforcement. That's why he turned to a grand jury, or as veteran criminal defense attorney Mark O'Mara described it to me, a "super" grand jury, where he presented all evidence without any recommendation. The net effect was a trial with little to no cross-examination.
Many have criticized this process. Jeffrey Toobin, writing in the New Yorker, remarked:
"By submitting all the evidence to the grand jury, he added to the perception that this process represented an independent evaluation of the evidence. But there is little doubt that he remained largely in control of the process; aggressive advocacy by prosecutors could have persuaded the grand jurors to vote for some kind of indictment."
At National Review, Rich Lowry saw it differently: