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ELIZABETH CITY, N.C.: Pastors and denominational leaders rallied in Elizabeth City, North Carolina, on Saturday to call for greater transparency in the investigation into the death of a Black man who was fatally shot in his car by sheriffs deputies.
More than 100 people marched to the Pasquotank County Courthouse, where they posted on its doors a series of demands related to the killing of Andrew Brown Jr., the News & Observer reported.
Browns shooting on April 21 has drawn national attention to the small, majority Black city in the states rural northeastern corner. The confrontation occurred while deputies were serving a drug-related search warrant at Browns home. Brown was shot five times, including in the back of the head, according to an independent autopsy commissioned by his family.
A warrant is not a license to kill, said the Rev. Dr. William Barber II, one of the leaders of the march and president of a group called Repairers of the Breach.
The demands of rally participants include the public release of the full videos from the officers body cameras and the appointment of a special prosecutor.
North Carolina law gives local courts authority over the release of body camera video, and family members have so far only been allowed to view a 20-second clip from a single camera. A judge has ruled that they will get to view more footage, though only still a fraction of the full amount.
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