News (Media Awareness Project) - CN ON: DEA Shooting Unwarranted, Charges Widow |
Title: | CN ON: DEA Shooting Unwarranted, Charges Widow |
Published On: | 2005-08-22 |
Source: | Mississauga News (CN ON) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-15 19:16:48 |
DEA SHOOTING UNWARRANTED, CHARGES WIDOW
Shooting Under Investigation
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) says a 40-year-old
Mississauga man shot dead by police in Florida earlier this month was lured
to the state by a suspected drug dealer to buy thousands of dollars worth
of marijuana.
Donovan Brooks' family, including his four children and former wife,
Antoinette White of Mississauga, will be in Brooks' native Jamaica this
weekend to attend his funeral.
White has contacted a Miami law firm founded by the late trial lawyer
Johnnie L. Cochran, Jr., to assist her in bringing a complaint against U.S.
authorities.
"I want to see justice and nothing else," she said, adding she was outraged
by the shooting.
White said she has no knowledge of her ex-husband's alleged drug history,
believing Brooks to be a "good man and good father."
Police here say he has no criminal record.
"If a man does a crime, he should pay for it by going to jail. But he
shouldn't be killed," White said. "It's not right to shoot someone like that."
The DEA says when Brooks and a friend went to meet the man on Aug. 5 at the
Days Inn in West Palm Beach near Interstate 95 and 45th St., police were
there waiting for him. Officers ordered Brooks and his friend to the ground
before the fatal shooting, according to the DEA.
The male officer who shot Brooks was on assignment with the Palm Beach
County Sheriff's Office's organized crime bureau, which assisted the DEA
and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the operation, sheriff's
spokesman Paul Miller said Friday.
The officer was placed on paid administrative leave while the Sheriff's
Office investigates the shooting. The officer's name was not released
because he has worked in undercover stings and officials don't want to
jeopardize other investigations.
The Sheriff's Office hasn't provided any further comment on the shooting,
other than to say publicly the officer felt threatened.
Brooks, who works as a cook here, came to Canada from Jamaica in 1993, but
spends a lot of time in New York State, where he has relatives, the family
said.
He had two sons and two daughters with four women, White said.
Shooting Under Investigation
The U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) says a 40-year-old
Mississauga man shot dead by police in Florida earlier this month was lured
to the state by a suspected drug dealer to buy thousands of dollars worth
of marijuana.
Donovan Brooks' family, including his four children and former wife,
Antoinette White of Mississauga, will be in Brooks' native Jamaica this
weekend to attend his funeral.
White has contacted a Miami law firm founded by the late trial lawyer
Johnnie L. Cochran, Jr., to assist her in bringing a complaint against U.S.
authorities.
"I want to see justice and nothing else," she said, adding she was outraged
by the shooting.
White said she has no knowledge of her ex-husband's alleged drug history,
believing Brooks to be a "good man and good father."
Police here say he has no criminal record.
"If a man does a crime, he should pay for it by going to jail. But he
shouldn't be killed," White said. "It's not right to shoot someone like that."
The DEA says when Brooks and a friend went to meet the man on Aug. 5 at the
Days Inn in West Palm Beach near Interstate 95 and 45th St., police were
there waiting for him. Officers ordered Brooks and his friend to the ground
before the fatal shooting, according to the DEA.
The male officer who shot Brooks was on assignment with the Palm Beach
County Sheriff's Office's organized crime bureau, which assisted the DEA
and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement in the operation, sheriff's
spokesman Paul Miller said Friday.
The officer was placed on paid administrative leave while the Sheriff's
Office investigates the shooting. The officer's name was not released
because he has worked in undercover stings and officials don't want to
jeopardize other investigations.
The Sheriff's Office hasn't provided any further comment on the shooting,
other than to say publicly the officer felt threatened.
Brooks, who works as a cook here, came to Canada from Jamaica in 1993, but
spends a lot of time in New York State, where he has relatives, the family
said.
He had two sons and two daughters with four women, White said.
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