US cop acquitted in black couple shooting case

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A white Cleveland police officer who climbed onto the hood of a car and fired dozens of rounds at an unarmed black couple in 2012 was acquitted of voluntary manslaughter Saturday.

The verdict, which triggered minor protests, comes amid widespread tensions in the United States over police treatment of blacks following the deaths of a number of African Americans at the hands of law enforcement.

Just a month ago, riots erupted in Baltimore over the death of 25-year-old Freddie Gray, who suffered a fatal spinal injury while in police custody. Six officers have been charged.

Cleveland patrolman Michael Brelo, 31, was one of 13 officers who opened fire on Timothy Russell and Malissa Williams during a police chase on November 29, 2012.

The couple’s car had backfired as it drove past Cleveland police headquarters, and police thought the sound was a gunshot.

A total of 137 rounds were fired at the car, including 49 by Brelo. He shot the final 15 from the hood of Russell’s Chevrolet Malibu.

Judge John O’Donnell found Brelo not guilty of two charges of voluntary manslaughter and also acquitted him of felonious assault.

Brelo had requested that a judge hear his case, not a jury of his peers.

O’Donnell said Brelo fired two shots that could have killed Williams and one shot that could have killed Russell, but the evidence did not meet the standard for voluntary manslaughter.

“Proof of voluntary manslaughter requires finding beyond a reasonable doubt,” the judge said.

Brelo broke down in tears after the verdict was read out.

O’Donnell acknowledged that the United States is grappling with recent incidents of alleged police brutality and racial profiling. He however cautioned that no single case could resolve the problem.

“The suspicion and hostility between the police and the people won’t be extirpated by a verdict in a single criminal case,” O’Donnell said.

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