Ferguson councilman defeats prosecutor in Michael Brown case in St. Louis County race
Ferguson councilman beats 27-year incumbent in major upset.
In what is seen as a major upset, Wesley Bell, a member of the Ferguson, Missouri city council defeated 27-year incumbent Robert McCulloch for St. Louis County Prosecutor on Tuesday night.
McCulloch gained national attention in his handling of the investigation of the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri.
According to the board of elections, Bell earned 57 percent of the vote in the Democratic primary and with no Republican opponent, the councilman is expected to win the seat in November.
“These results demonstrate that voters care passionately about crucial civil rights issues from the unjust use of cash bail to how long people are sitting in our jails because they can’t afford to pay, to demanding their prosecuting attorney be transparent on his office’s work,” said Jeffrey A. Mittman, executive director of ACLU of Missouri in a statement.
“We provided voters with essential information on civil liberties issues and they demanded transparency and fairness from their prosecuting attorney. We look forward to working with our members and community partners to hold St. Louis County’s next prosecuting attorney accountable for protecting the rights of the people.”
Bell’s win comes nearly four years after Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager, was killed by Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson.
The grand jury ultimately didn't indict Wilson.
Bell ran on campaign promises to target crimes that matter most, end mass incarceration and reform cash bail, end the death penalty and resist the President Donald Trump administration.
“With this victory, voters took a stand toward a St. Louis County that respects and honors the lives of all residents,” Rashad Robinson, spokesperson for Color Of Change PAC said in a statement. “Voters made a decision that they needed a fresh new start. This was a major win for grassroots organizing, and proof that issues that affect the Black community are winning issue at the ballot box.”
Bell and McCulloch did not immediately respond to ABC News’ request for comment.