Smith, Beasley Speak Out on Andrew Brown Case

By Cash Michaels –

The two Black women vying for the Democratic nomination in the 2022 US Senate race have wasted little time before taking to social media to address the issues surrounding the controversial April 21 fatal police shooting of Andrew Brown, Jr. in Elizabeth City.

Erica Smith
Erica Smith

Both former state Senator Erica D. Smith and former NC Supreme Court Chief Justice Cheri Beasley have condemned the slaying and called for greater transparency in the subsequent investigation.

“Black men and women are being killed with impunity across the country,” Smith wrote via Twitter Monday, the day of Brown’s funeral. “We deserve and demand accountability. We deserve and demand justice. It’s for this case that we march, that we organize, and that we fight. #AndrewBrownJr. #ElizabethCity.”

“How long are we going to allow Black men and Black women to be shot down by the very people supposed to protect us?” Smith wrote in a follow-up tweet. “We can’t wait another day.”

And finally, she wrote in another tweet, “RELEASE THE TAPE, THE WHOLE TAPE,” a reference to the police bodycam video that has been withheld from the family, public and press by a Superior Court judge, by request of the Pasquotank District Attorney, until an SBI investigation has been completed.

Andrew Brown Jr.’s family and only one attorney were allowed to see only 20 seconds of the video from one of the five cameras recording. They were not allowed to retain any copies.

Cheri Beasley
Cheri Beasley

Former Chief Justice Cheri Beasley, who entered the Senate race at the beginning of May, took to Facebook to express her dissatisfaction with the judge who denied the Brown family’s petition to release the tape.

“This decision is an injustice to Andrew Brown’s family and the people of Elizabeth City,” she wrote. “The full footage should be publicly released without delay.”

Beasley continued, “The federal investigation and the Governor’s call for a special prosecutor are urgently needed to ensure accountability and transparency and prevent these tragedies from recurring.”

Ironically, a Republican candidate in the same race—former NC Gov. Pat McCrory—signed the bill into law that withheld police bodycam footage from the public, to be released only upon the order of a judge.

Brown, 46, was killed when Pasquotank County Sheriff’s deputies were reportedly serving him with a warrant at his home. At one point, Brown apparently attempted to get away from the deputies in a vehicle and was shot in the process. A private autopsy commissioned by Brown’s family revealed that he was shot four times in the arm, and once fatally to the back of his head.

His family and attorneys called Brown’s killing by sheriff’s deputies “an execution.” He reportedly was unarmed at the time.

During Monday’s funeral service, in which Rev. Al Sharpton delivered the eulogy and Rev. Dr. William Barber offered the Brown family worship of comfort, friends and family gathered to say goodbye, but also join in unity in a call for justice.

“The Holy Ghost is going to stand with you,” Rev. Barber told the family, “until the truth comes out.”