Full Answer
A prosecutor could file charges against that person, but Fu’s argument is that the case would be a waste of limited resources.
Hired at the DA’s office by Harris in 2009 after graduating from the University of Oklahoma School of Law, Fu left in 2017 and went into private practice. He said his time at the DA’s office showed him the goodness of the people who work there, but also what he says are the inefficiencies of the criminal justice system.
Fu said he sees Tulsa County as an area that’s ready to embrace change . State prisons are crumbling and well beyond capacity and jails are routinely full, he says. His views don’t fit neatly into one political box. Criminal justice reform is needed, but State Question 780, which lessened punishments for drug possession and some property theft crimes “went too far.”
The court system’s time and funding are “a finite bucket,” Fu believes, and using those resources on cases that can be adjudicated differently might be a waste.
Crump demanded that dashboard video of the incident be released, threatening legal action and encouraging Attorney General Eric Holder to launch a federal probe. In October 2013, one of the arresting officers was charged with felony assault of Thomas, pleading not guilty.
In 2017 Crump announced the opening of a new law firm, Ben Crump Law, PLLC.
Early life and education. Benjamin Lloyd Crump was born in Lumberton, North Carolina, near Fort Bragg. The oldest of nine siblings and step-siblings, Crump grew up in an extended family and was raised by his grandmother. His mother Helen worked as a hotel maid and in a local Converse shoe factory.
In 2019, Crump partnered with law firm Pintas & Mullins to hold a number of rallies in Flint, Michigan for communities affected by the Flint water crisis. Also in 2019, Crump began representing a number of plaintiffs in a lawsuit against Johnson & Johnson alleging that the company's talc powder was directly related to said-plaintiffs' ovarian cancer diagnoses.
In 2012, Crump began representing the family of Trayvon Martin, who was killed by George Zimmerman on February 26, 2012. Crump also represented Ronald Weekley Jr., a 20-year-old African-American skateboarder beaten by police in Venice, California, in 2012.
Crump, Benjamin L. "Ben Crump — the Man Who Represented the Families of Michael Brown, Trayvon Martin, and Tamir Rice — Will Not Stop Fighting for Justice." NowThis, 2018.
Crump with U.S. Representative Terri Sewell on the 60th anniversary of the Montgomery bus boycott. In 2015, Crump represented the family of Antonio Zambrano-Montes, an undocumented immigrant from Mexico who was killed by three policemen in Pasco, Washington.