RICHMOND, Va. (DC News
Now) — The Virginia Legislative Black Caucus released a statement condemning
Gov. Glen Youngkin for commuting a former Fairfax County Police Department
sergeant’s sentence.
Sgt. Wesley Shifflett was
sentenced on Friday, Feb. 28, to serve three years in prison for fatally
shooting Timothy Johnson during a police pursuit. He was accused of shoplifting
at Tyson’s Corner Center.
“I am convinced that the
court’s sentence of incarceration is unjust and violates the cornerstone of our
justice system—that similarly situated individuals receive proportionate
sentences. I want to emphasize that a jury acquitted Sgt. Shifflett of the more
serious charge of involuntary manslaughter, a conviction for which the
sentencing guidelines recommend no jail time or up to six months’
incarceration,” Youngkin’s statement read in part.
Following Shifflett’s
conviction for the reckless handling of a firearm, Johnson’s mother
acknowledged “that most Black and Brown families that find themselves in this
situation do not get this far … Today’s verdict has provided Mr. Shifflett a
second chance-a benefit that my son, Timothy McCree Johnson, was not afforded.”
Members of the Virginia
Legislative Black Caucus believe this pardon is reckless and a gross misuse of
power that threatens public safety. We will not allow him to use the chaos his
friends are causing in Washington as cover to evade consequences as he places a
recently convicted, violent criminal back in our communities.
Melissa Johnson, Timothy
Johnson’s mother, said on Monday that she found out about the commutation from
media reports, and the governor’s office had not reached out to her in advance
of the announcement.
“It felt like I could hear
my son’s voice crying out from the dirt at Tysons Corner mall again, saying,
‘Why did you shoot me? I didn’t have anything.’ That’s what it felt like,” she
said.
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