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Sandra Bland: Grand Jury votes not to indict Texas county jail over black woman who died hanging in cell

The 28-year-old was found dead in her cell three days after she was pulled over for a minor traffic violation

Caroline Mortimer
Tuesday 22 December 2015 04:44 EST
A young girl holds a sign in front of the DuPage African Methodist Episcopal Church during the funeral service for Sandra Bland
A young girl holds a sign in front of the DuPage African Methodist Episcopal Church during the funeral service for Sandra Bland (Jonathan Gibby/Getty Images)

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A grand jury has decided no felony crime was committed in connection with Sandra Bland, a black woman who was found dead in her cell in a Texas jail earlier this year.

The jury met for the third time in six weeks to decide whether the Waller County sheriff’s office had a case to answer over the death of Ms Bland, who was found hanged in her police cell in July three days after being pulled over for a minor traffic violation.

She had been pulled over by a Texas state trooper for making an improper lane change. Police say dashcam footage showed her becoming aggressive. She was then arrested for assault.

She was taken to the county jail in Hempstead, about 50 miles north-west of Houston and was forced to remain there because she could not raise the $500 (£335) bail.

Sandra Bland stands before a desk at Waller County Jail in Hempstead, Texas
Sandra Bland stands before a desk at Waller County Jail in Hempstead, Texas (Waller County Sheriff's Department via AP)

Prosecutor Darrell Johnson said the grand jury had failed to decide whether to indict the state trooper who made the original arrest and it will return in January to consider it again.

Ms Bland’s relatives have questioned the verdict from the medical examiner that she killed herself.

Cannon Lambert, the attorney for the 28-year-old’s family said the grand jury decision was “disappointing” and consistent with what they believe is a cover up by the Texan authorities.

In a press conference on Monday before the verdict was made public, Ms Bland’s mother Geneva Reed-Veal said: “Right now the biggest problem I have is the entire process. It's the secrecy of it all.”

Demonstrators hold signs during a vigil for Sandra Bland, who died in police custody after apparently killing herself
Demonstrators hold signs during a vigil for Sandra Bland, who died in police custody after apparently killing herself (Christian K Lee/Associated Press)

Following her death, county authorities released a video from the jail in the 90 minutes before she was found dead to dispel rumours Ms Bland was already dead when she arrived at the jail or had been killed in custody.

Ms Bland is one of a number of high profile deaths of black people in America who have died in custody or at the hands of the police.

Her cause has been taken up by the Black Lives Matter movement set up in the furore following the death of black teenager Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri in August 2014.

Ms Bland's family have said they plan to file a wrongful death lawsuit.

Additional reporting by AP

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