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Joseph Weekley, Detroit Police Officer, Charged In Aiyana Stanley-Jones' Death During 'The First 48' Raid

Aiyana Stanleyjones

By COREY WILLIAMS   10/ 4/11 09:00 PM ET   AP

DETROIT -- A Detroit police officer was charged Tuesday in the slaying of a 7-year-old girl who was shot to death during a midnight raid on her home by a special unit that was being shadowed by a reality television show crew.

Officer Joseph Weekley, a member of the Detroit Police Special Response Team, was indicted on an involuntary manslaughter charge after a nearly yearlong Michigan State Police investigation into the May 16, 2010, death of Aiyana Stanley-Jones.

Aiyana was on a sofa on the first floor of a two-family home when Detroit police tossed a flash grenade through a window and burst through the front door. Detroit police have said Weekley's gun accidentally discharged after he was bumped or jostled by the girl's grandmother.

A film crew with the A&E Network's "The First 48" crime reality cable TV show was shadowing Detroit police on the raid. The TV show tracks murder investigations during the first two days after a slaying, and Aiyana's death put a spotlight on the growing number of reality shows focusing on law enforcement.

Prosecutors announced Tuesday that the TV show's principal photographer, Allison Howard, also was indicted on perjury and obstruction of justice charges.

According to the indictment, Howard, of Brooklyn, N.Y., is accused of lying to prosecutors about showing or giving video footage of the raid to "third parties." It did not specify who the third party was, but after the raid, an attorney for the family told reporters they had seen a few minutes of the video footage.

Further details about the charges against Howard were not immediately available. Assistant prosecutor Robert Moran told a judge on Tuesday that the investigation into the girl's death was delayed seven months "because of the perjury," but he did not elaborate. All Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy would say was that "impediments" surfaced during the investigation. She declined to provide more details.

A judge entered a plea of not guilty for Howard on Tuesday at a court hearing. A message seeking comment was left with her Detroit-area attorney, Robert Harrison. A message seeking comment also was left after business hours Tuesday for an A&E spokeswoman.

A judge also entered a plea of not guilty for Weekley at the afternoon court hearing. The involuntary manslaughter charge carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison. He also faces a charge of careless discharge of a firearm causing death.

"He knows he was acting as a police officer in a dangerous mission," Weekley's lawyer, Steve Fishman, said of his client.

"I don't think anybody realizes how their lives change," Fishman said of police officers involved in shootings. "People think they're androids and robots, and they're wrong."

Soon after Aiyana's slaying, Detroit Mayor Dave Bing banned reality television crews from tagging along with police. He also admonished then-Police Chief Warren Evans for not telling him that he was permitting TV cameras on raids.

On May 18, 2010, an attorney representing the girl's family in a civil suit against the city and police department and told reporters that he viewed three to four minutes of video footage of the raid and that it showed a group of black-hooded officers approaching the house before the flash grenade was thrown through the window and the shot being fired.

"We know there's only one shot," attorney Geoffrey Fieger said during the press conference last year with Aiyana's family. "It's vividly depicted in the videotape ... right after the throw and the explosion of the bomb. At that point the officers rush into the home."

Fieger declined to say what footage he viewed and said he did not retain a copy. A message seeking comment from Fieger was not immediately returned Tuesday.

The focus of the raid was Chauncey Owens, the fiance of Aiyana's aunt. Owens was wanted in the May 14, 2010, shooting death of 17-year-old Je'rean Blake outside a nearby convenience store. Owens was found in the separate upstairs apartment.

Owens pleaded guilty in April to second-degree murder in Blake's death. On Tuesday, Worthy also announced that Charles Jones, the girl's father, had been arrested and charged with first-degree murder in Blake's slaying. Jones did not have an attorney on Tuesday and phone number for him and his family could not immediately be found.

"It is alleged that after an argument, Jones accompanied Owens to the scene of the shooting and aided, abetted, and encouraged Owens during the murder of Blake," Worthy said in a statement.

Charles Jones was expected to be arraigned Wednesday. A pretrial hearing is scheduled Friday for Weekley and Howard.

Weekley was released on a $100,000 personal recognizance bond. Howard was required to come up with a $5,000 of a $50,000 bond to be released.

"Our condolences remain with all affected by this tragedy. We must use this difficult moment to continue bringing our community and police department together," Bing said in a statement.

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DETROIT -- A Detroit police officer was charged Tuesday in the slaying of a 7-year-old girl who was shot to death during a midnight raid on her home by a special unit that was being shadowed by a real...
DETROIT -- A Detroit police officer was charged Tuesday in the slaying of a 7-year-old girl who was shot to death during a midnight raid on her home by a special unit that was being shadowed by a real...
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03:57 AM on 10/10/2011
Just some basic facts that are getting ignored in the comments section:
1)The officer didn't get away with murder- he hasn't had a trial yet
2)The Reality TV show isn't being blamed for the murder- a producer is being charged with perjury.
3)Their isn't a clear-cut explanation as to why the officer discharged his gun, whether it was bumped, it misfired, he got rattled, or he had some sort of intent to harm.

For one, I'm pretty sympathetic to police officers. I don't like them, and I want to stress that I don't like them, but I respect how stressful and difficult their jobs can be. The job is tough enough that you should give them the benefit of a trial before you condemn them.
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wonderfullone
01:41 AM on 10/10/2011
Let justice take it's course....If he's found guilty he needs to get sentenced just like everyone else.
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moonflowerjewelry
Buy American made, no excuses.
01:20 AM on 10/09/2011
There is no justice, really, for the child. She is the one person who had NO CONTROL over the situation, among all the "players" . I remember this story, it was on the FP for maybe a day, and quickly disappeared - whether to the skin color of the victim or the prestige of the show, idk. It haunts me, as one of mine is the same age. I only hope that the people who SHOULD feel responsible for their part in it actually experience shame, remorse, guilt and pain. The only thing that will lift that suffering (unless they are psychopaths, then they just won't care a bit) even a bit is to take responsibility - whether it's the crime that drew the crew/cops to that house or the people who fanned the flames for the camera.
10:16 AM on 10/07/2011
Does anyone know if these Reality TV Shows pay the police departments in any way for the ability to tag along and record their actions? Seems like this raid was hastily thrown together for this show to meet the 48 hrs requirement the show requires.
03:43 AM on 10/10/2011
The show doesn't require 48 hrs, however, I imagine there could be some pressure felt by the police. "The First 48" is actually a pretty cool show, and generally doesn't include police raids or dangerous situations- it's a lot more of interviewing witnesses, tracking down leads, and trying to coax out confessions.
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laundrybrick
08:27 AM on 10/07/2011
How about holding the parents responsible for having their child around a drug dealer? Keep your children FAR away from the drug scene and you don't have to worry about police raids!
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08:31 PM on 10/06/2011
The officers certainly are not androids and robots. But they also shouldn't be "Cowboy's".
07:55 PM on 10/06/2011
Unfortunate. However, the family is just as responsible for putting that little girl in harm's way by harboring murderers and keeping firearms in the home. That allowed all of this action to take place.
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taquinas
10:03 PM on 10/06/2011
Repeal 2nd amendment?
03:44 AM on 10/10/2011
I'm down for that.
07:29 PM on 10/06/2011
I had to stop myself for saying what I really wanted to say. The cops were willing to throw a grandmother under the bus to take the focus away from their own poor judgement. The only reason why law enforcement were able to use those tactics, is because they devalued the lives of the people lives in that house and in the neighborhood. They didn't care who would get hurt or killed, because they reduced the people in that home to expendable nobodies.
08:36 PM on 10/06/2011
Sorry for the errors.
11:07 AM on 10/07/2011
You can look at it that way Karmella, and you may be right. But so did Mr Jones and his partner, his sisters boyfriend when they killed that young man at the store because they didn't like the way he looked at them. They left the store on foot, drove back and shot a killed him, so now tell me who reduced who to expendable nobodies? If that act hadn't happen then the young man and Ayanna would BOTH still be alive. YOU REAP WHAT YOU SOW. And yeah sometimes those that are truly innocent pay the price for the mistakes of their idiot parents.
03:43 PM on 10/07/2011
I agree that there was a domino effect that led to death of this child. Surely there is enough blame to go around. Nevertheless, I hold law enforcement to a higher standard. I know very little about arrest procedures, but common sense tells me that the police were out of line.
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Vondrazy Priest
John 19:30 It is finished
03:29 PM on 10/06/2011
How sad. No need to think the cop will actually serve any time. They kill people all the time and not do a day in jail.
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Fred Lane
Rome is Burning Again Folks....
01:27 PM on 10/06/2011
Regardless of the circumstances, another sad, all-too-common-now police murder of an innocent person...thanks for gracing the world with your presence even if only for 7 years. RIP Aiyana.
11:25 AM on 10/06/2011
Ok YEAH I got the fact that a whole lot of stuff was done wrong by the cops and not only them but the city administration that allowed the flim crew in the beginning. What now we want to make apprehending a suspected murderer a reaility TV show? But what I want to know is where is the article about the girls father being arrested as an accomplice to 1st degree? In the original crime that brought this all about in the first place the people at the store described Mr. Jones as being the driver of the vehicle, and I mean described him to a tee. Now unless he has in identical twin brother, it was him. Not only that but the shooter, his sisters boyfriend or babydaddy, or whatever, who has already been convicted is going to testify that it was Mr. Jones that gave him the gun. It doesn't look good for homeboy. But "YOU REAP WHAT YOU SOW. The only ones I feel sorry for in this whole mess are the family of the young man that was killed at the store and Ayanna, who was the victim of all the adult(and I used that term loosely) IDOITS around her.
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paulwl
10:05 AM on 10/06/2011
Did the OWNER OF THIS HOME GIVE THE ' NOSEY' REALITY T.V. PEOPLE PERMISSION TO BE ON THEIR PROPERTY OR ENTER THEIR HOME? Duh, NO! SUE THEM BIG TIME! They created the situation for this senseless killing.
Duh, if the 'perp' lived there, he would soon be walking out of the house and the arrest would have been made without the destruction of property, you'd think?!?! The Chief of Police needs to be fired!!! Poor Detroit hasn't any money in the first place and these fools want 15 minutes of fame at the expense of law abiding citizens.
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mrluckyman
10:55 AM on 10/06/2011
"They created the situation for this senseless killing." I dont think thats quite right. "15 minutes of fame at the expense of law abiding citizens.".....Did you read the article? "The focus of the raid was Chauncey Owens, the fiance of Aiyana's aunt. Owens was wanted in the May 14, 2010, shooting death of 17-year-old Je'rean Blake outside a nearby convenience store.".. This is what you consider to be a law abiding citizens? Its a shame that, once again, the child pays the consequences for the parents mistakes. Another silenced voice.
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Tblack
12:56 PM on 10/06/2011
I think it's poor police work to throw a flash grenade into a residential home of which you apparently had done no surveillance on. Even if she were not killed she would at the very least have been injured physically and psychologically. Overkill. The risks far outweighed the reward.
04:55 PM on 10/06/2011
Jeff Fieger is ALL OVER this. The family will be paid.
11:09 AM on 10/07/2011
Half the family is going to jail.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
08:33 AM on 10/06/2011
What color was the police officer who shot the girl?
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paulwl
10:06 AM on 10/06/2011
MAKES NO DIFFERENCE!
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
03:38 PM on 10/06/2011
If he is white racism could be claimed.
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mrluckyman
10:56 AM on 10/06/2011
What difference does it make?
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
03:39 PM on 10/06/2011
If he is black then its not an example of racism.
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GlennWatson
Two million fans
08:28 AM on 10/06/2011
Moral of the story, don't let murders stay in the same house where you daughter is.
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Vanessa1129
Flash Light, Red Light, Neon Light, Ooh Stop Light
10:54 AM on 10/06/2011
Eactly!!!
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11:32 AM on 10/06/2011
You sound as if you think that the young girl's murder is justified by the presence of the young man in an upstairs apartment. Yet, according to the story, he was a subject of an investigation. He had not been convicted of anything, so the presumption of innocence still applies. Was the swat mentality necessary? Apparently they did not have the intelligence in place to apply such an operation.
Do you believe that all of that was necessary to bring in a suspect, or was it all about television?
11:27 AM on 10/06/2011
Don't let murderer's stay in your house PERIOD.
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MARTYB
61 years of age, happily divorced, father of three
04:34 AM on 10/06/2011
Read about this in the "Detroit Free Press" the father of the childs "lifestyle" led directly to something like this happening, i am not excusing in any way the cops lack of "fire discipline" or planning. But the father of this child put her in "harms way" big time, and now his "partner" in crime is turning "states evidence" against him so whatever feelings he had for his child were not enough to keep himself from being a felon and harboring a murderer in his house.