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State leaders representing Homewood are calling on ALEA to let the family of 18-year-old Jabari Peoples see the body camera video from the night he was shot and killed by a Homewood Police officer.
Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey is "confident the facts will prevail," as the investigation into the shooting death of Jabari Peoples by a Homewood police officer continues.
Family members of a Black teenager shot and killed by police in an Alabama suburb of Birmingham want to see the body camera footage of the shooting. Eighteen-year-old Jabari Peoples ...
Civil rights attorney Ben Crump is now the lead attorney for the family of Jabari Peoples. Crump demanded the release of the ...
The content of the bodycam and/or dashcam from that night has been the subject of much contention, as police say it shows Peoples resisting arrest and grabbing a handgun before he was shot, one that ...
National civil rights attorney Ben Crump has joined to fight for any footage to be released in the killing of a beloved ...
A fatal police shooting in Homewood has reignited the debate over access to body camera footage, highlighting the tension ...
WIAT Birmingham on MSN9d
Family of Alabama teen killed by police demand transparency, asks for bodycam video to be releasedOn Tuesday, the family of Jabari Peoples continued to demand the release of body camera footage from the night Jabari was killed. Peoples' father, mother, and brother spoke at the event alongside ...
WBRC is asking questions about the new law in Alabama regarding who can see bodycam videos, and learning this may be the first investigation in the state to use this law.
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