Ex-Minnesota prosecutor in Daunte Wright case says due process 'at siege,' intimidation takes 'front row seat'
Fox News
The former local prosecutor in Minnesota who brought manslaughter charges against the police officer who fatally shot Daunte Wright during a traffic stop in April explained in a new interview why he resigned, citing "intimidation" and the erosion of the constitutional right to due process.
"Our criminal justice system is almost at siege," Ali said in a new on-camera interview, according to Fox 9 Minneapolis. "It's eroding the very basis of equal protection for all, due process." Just four days after Wright was fatally shot on April 11 during a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center, located in Hennepin County outside of Minneapolis, Washington County Attorney Pete Orput announced his office was charging Potter with second-degree manslaughter in connection to Wright's death.More Related News