A King County juvenile probation officer who was charged with obstruction and assault after a September 2008 scuffle with police—which the Seattle NAACP claims was the result of racial profiling—has been found not guilty in Seattle Municipal Court.
Probation officer Yvette Gaston says that in September 2008, she took one of her juvenile clients shopping for back to school clothes and dropped him off in the Central District. Minutes later, Gaston received a call from the teen, who told her police had stopped him for jaywalking and accused him of stealing the clothes.
Gaston, who is black, drove to the scene to show the officers, who are white, the receipt for the clothing. Gaston says officers grabbed her, and when she tried to call 911, a sergeant at the scene told the 911 operator to cancel the call. Gaston also claims police called the King County Superior Court to complain about her. Three days after Gaston told her story and an NAACP press conference on racial profiling, the city attorney's office then filed obstruction and misdemeanor assault charges against her. It's unclear why the city attorney's office chose to pursue charges against Gaston, as assault on an officer cases are typically handled by King County prosecutors.
Yesterday, Gaston's obstruction charge was dismissed, and this morning a municipal court jury found Gaston not guilty of assault.
5
6
12
13
15
21
22
Comments (35) RSS