O’Donnell: Did you know Michael Brown?
Mitchell: No, not at all?
O’Donnell: And you’re not from that neighborhood where his took place?
Mitchell: No
O’Donnell: Why were you there?
Mitchell: I was on my way to pick up an employee, she lives right in front of where it happened.
O’Donnell: Tell us what you saw as you came into that area.
Mitchell: Okay, as I come around the corner, I hear tires squeaking and as I get closer I see Michael and the officer, like, wrestling through the window, Michael was pushing, like trying to get away from the officer and the officer was trying to pull him in. Um, as I see this I pulled out my phone because it didn’t look right, you never see an officer and someone just wrestling through the window. So, as I pull out my phone, the first shot was fired through the window and I just like try to get out of the way I pull onto the parking lot right beside where the cop car was and um, that’s when Michael kinda broke away and started running down the street. The officer gets out of his vehicle and he pursues him, as he’s following him he’s shooting at him and Michael’s body jerks as if he was hit, then he turns around and he put his hands up. The officer continued to walk up on him and shoot him until he goes all the way down to the ground.
My thoughts: Not to split hairs, but pulling out the phone and parking the car during an incident that couldn’t have taken more than a few seconds sounds a little fishy. That her account is missing nothing relative to other witnesses is odd to me. Also, we have the context of the phone call which discredits Piaget’s account of the phone call and looking out the window.
O’Donnell: Tiffany, how far away from the police car were you when you first started looking at this?
Mitchell: I was really close, like I was feet away, like can’t say exactly, I was about 10-20 feet away from the car.
My thoughts: In the context of the distance references, 20 feet was really far, 10-20 feet is really close. Curious!
O’Donnell: So were there any cars between you and the police car?
Mitchell: Not at all.
O’Donnell: So you had a clear line of sight of that car?
Mitchell: Yes
Video of chief
O’Donnell: Tiffany, is that what you saw?
Mitchell: No, I didn’t see the initial whenever they pulled up on each other, whenever the cop pulled up, so then, but what I saw was Michael trying to pull away from the cop through the window.
My thoughts: Probably nothing, but pulled up on each other? I’ll give her the benefit of the doubt, but it sticks out for some reason.
O’Donnell: Could you see if the police officer was touching Michael when he was trying to pull away?
Mitchell: Yes, he was, he was pulling him in
O’Donnell: What you saw was the police officer trying to pull Michael into the car?
Mitchell: Yes
O’Donnell: Did Michael’s body stay out of the car the whole time?
Mitchell: Yes
O’Donnell: Tell us about the first shot.
Mitchell: When I heard the first shot they were still like, like in a tug of war stance, like he was pulling in and he was pulling out and then the shot came through the window and that’s whenever like Michael like kind of pulled back and he yanked away.
O’Donnell: Could you see Michael’s hands when the first shot was fired?
Mitchell: Yeah, they were up against the SUV pulling away.
My thoughts: Tug of war indicates hands involved…like she knows not to give any room for Mike trying to get the gun.
O’Donnell: So you saw his hands outside of the car when the first shot was fired?
Mitchell: Yes
O’Donnell: You didn’t see the altercation the chief described (struggle)?
Mitchell: No, I did not
O’Donnell: Did you see anything that could have been a struggle over the officer’s weapon?
Mitchell: No
O’Donnell: Michael’s hands were outside of the car?
Mitchell: Yes
O’Donnell: You and the chief agree that that first shot was fired while the police officer was still in the car?
Mitchell: Yes
O’Donnell: Did you hear anything said by Michael or the police officer?
Mitchell: No, not at all. I couldn’t hear anything from either of them?
My thoughts: More on this in my conclusion.
O’Donnell: Does that make any sense to you (the police story about the officer injury from a blow to the side of the head)?
Mitchell: It doesn’t and don’t these guys supposed to have like dashboard cams on their vehicles or something like that?
O’Donnell: Well apparently not, if they did have a dashboard cam, it wouldn’t be aimed out the side of the car probably.
Mitchell: No, but it would have heard what was going on in there.
O’Donnell: Yeah that’s right, it would have picked up the sound.
O’Donnell: What did the police officer look like?
Mitchell: He was a white male, tall white male.
O’Donnell: Did he have a hat on when he got out of the car?
Mitchell: No, he didn’t
O’Donnell: How far away was Michael from the police car when the officer stepped out of the car?
Mitchell: Um, Michael was like right behind his car at like the next car right behind, there was a white Monte Carlo right behind the police car that was stopped behind them because he couldn’t get by and he was probably like passing that car at that time and that’s when the police got out and was firing right at him, as soon as like Michael like yanked away and started running, the police got out right after that.
My thoughts: This doesn’t seem credible. Johnson also described cars pulling up on this incident, I tend to think that if this cop executed
Michael Brown, the drivers of these cars pulling up would have stuck around to tell their story. I also question if both Brown and Wilson were running past cars in the street with occupants, someone would have come forward. Big issue for me!
O’Donnell: What position was the police officer in when he started firing for the second time?
Mitchell: He was running after him
O’Donnell: So, he didn’t stop to fire, he was actually physically moving and running and holding the gun while firing?
Mitchell: Yes
O’Donnell: And this was a handgun right, it wasn’t a long barrel firearm?
Mitchell: Yes, it was a handgun
O’Donnell: How many shots do you think were fired?
Mitchell: I can’t, I didn’t count the shots, but I know it was like more than five or six shots
O’Donnell: Was Michael facing the officer while the officer was shooting, once he started running and shooting?
Mitchell: Whenever he started running and shooting, no he wasn’t facing, he was running away from him, whenever his body jerked as if he was hit, that’s whenever he turned around and faced the officer.
O’Donnell: Did his body jerk on the first shot that the officer fired?
Mitchell: No
My thoughts: According to Dorian Johnson, the first shot after the cop exited the car and chased Brown was the one that caused Mike to stop, turn and raise hands. Major inconsistency!
O’Donnell: So, it’s possible that some of those shots missed Michael and the body jerking was the first one that hit him, that might be the case?
Mitchell: Yes, some of the shots did miss him because they went into, um, one of the neighbor’s house as the officer was shooting, they had to go in and remove the bullet from the neighbor’s house.
My thoughts: Two things. 1. I thought the shot from inside the car was the one that went into the house. 2. I wonder if police removed this bullet and why I haven’t heard about this from anyone but these two witnesses.
O’Donnell: You saw that after the fact - that they had to remove a bullet from the neighbor’s house?
Mitchell: My employee did, she lives right next door to where they had to come and remove the bullet.
My thoughts: Based on my understanding and projection of where things occurred, I don’t see how this is possible from the car or as Wilson encountered Mike in the street.
O’Donnell: Was Michael’s back to the police officer during all of the shots that were fired?
Mitchell: No, after his body jerked he turned and faced him and put his hands up that’s when the police continued to shoot until he went down
O’Donnell: And so when he turned and faced him and put his hands up was he standing still at that point?
Mitchell: Yes
O’Donnell: And then, do you know how many more shot shots you think the officer fired after he stood and put his hands up
Mitchell: Several, I didn’t count them but it was several?
My thoughts: Piaget said two, Johnson said several.
O’Donnell: Several more?
Mitchell: Yes
O’Donnell: How long did it take for Michael to go down as you said?
Mitchell: It was seconds, it wasn’t that long at all
O’Donnell: And did the officer stop as soon as Michael was down on the ground, were any shots fired when Michael was on the ground?
Mitchell: Yeah, it stopped as soon as he went down to the ground, he didn’t fire any more
My thoughts: Nothing about kneeling or going down in surrender.
O’Donnell: What did the officer do immediately after stopping firing the weapon?
Mitchell: He got on his radio, I don’t know what was said, but he got on his radio and at that time there was another cop pulling up
O’Donnell: Did the officer who shot Michael then approach Michael’s body?
Mitchell: He just paced back and forth in front of his body, like right by him
O’Donnell: Did he go back to his police car at any point?
Mitchell: I can’t say that, I don’t know if he did or not
O’Donnell: How long did you stay in your car watching this?
Mitchell: Oh, I got right out of my car immediately
O’Donnell: Immediately, Tiffany when…
Mitchell: After I pulled in and parked I got right out of my car
O’Donnell: So you got out of the car before the shooting or after the shooting?
Mitchell: I got out of my car while the shooting was going on
My thoughts: Who does this? Who drives up on an altercation, within 10-20 feet and gets out of their car when shots are being fired? Not credible in my opinion.
O’Donnell: What did it feel like to be in the middle of the gunfire situation?
Mitchell: It was shocking, I couldn’t believe what I saw. It didn’t register with me that he was dead until I saw the blood pouring from his body. Then like why and what exactly was going on. It was really, really shocking for me.
O’Donnell: Did the feeling get worse that something was wrong?
Mitchell: Yes, it definitely did. Shots continued to be fired after he put his hands up. I thought to myself, like, is he shooting rubber bullets, like, am I dreaming, like it just, nothing seemed right at all. And for him to not check his pulse after going down, I mean did you already know he was dead.
My thoughts: According to you and Piaget, you both did, why wouldn’t the cop?
O’Donnell: How long was it before anyone reached Michael?
Mitchell: It was like 30-45 minutes before an ambulance came and checked his pulse.
My thoughts: Both Piaget’s video and Black Canseco’s video show the ambulance and EMS tech arriving. Note that Black Canseco’s video shows police tape had not been put up yet for Piaget’s parking lot. Note that already Black Canseco’s video indicates the “arms up” statement, says “yeah, they said they shot him while he was on the ground”. Doesn’t square with Tiffany’s account, but indicates that within 30 minutes (or likely less in my opinion) there was discussion of what went on, long before any interviews started. Not a stretch to think that Tiffany and Piaget heard this talk. People who hadn’t seen the shooting already knew police had done it?
O’Donnell: And none of the police officers did that?
Mitchell: No, not at all.
O’Donnell: What did you do there in that area, after the shooting?
Mitchell: I went up to Piaget’s house, my employee, who I was on my way to pick up and I started calling police, I called the news thing…uh, the news stations, I called my fiancé, none of this seemed right so I called everybody I could, I knew I had to stay there and tell everyone what I saw.
My thoughts: Yet she told no news people her story for four days.
O’Donnell: Media discusses how the officer feels in danger…how do you feel?
Mitchell: I feel like I’m in danger. Who am I supposed to call if I need help and like, something’s going on with me, who do I call from seeing this? I don’t trust cops anymore.
My thoughts: You trusted them enough to call them and you said they treated you very well and didn’t try to coerce your story. But fair enough I guess.
O’Donnell: How do you feel about being on the other side of the police story?
Mitchell: I think about that all the time, but whether I’m scared or not, they need to know what happened.
O’Donnell: Can you think of anything else you saw in that street…
Video skips by one minute like it was edited.