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No Criminal Charges For 'Pepper Spray Cop' Or Other Officers

Nov. 18, 2011: Occupy protesters get sprayed at University of California Davis.
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Nov. 18, 2011: Occupy protesters get sprayed at University of California Davis.

This may be one of the last developments in the story of the "pepper spray cop" and what happened last November when University of California Davis Police Lt. John Pike infamously blasted some Occupy protesters who were blocking a campus road with some tear-inducing gas:

"The Yolo County District Attorney's Office will not seek criminal charges against the UC Davis police officers involved," reports The Davis Enterprise.

In a statement, Assistant Chief Deputy District Attorney Michael Cabral says his office has concluded "there is insufficient evidence to establish proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the use of force involved in the November 18, 2011, pepper spraying was unlawful and therefore warrants the filing of criminal charges."

The statement notes that while an independent investigation concluded that Lt. Pike's conduct "was not objectively reasonable," it also acknowledged that Pike and other officers "believed that they and their prisoners [the protesters] were surrounded by a hostile 'mob,' and that the pepper spraying was necessary to clear the pathway so that the officers and their prisoners could leave."

Pike is no longer with the campus police. Because what he did was caught on video and posted online, it quickly went viral.

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Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.