Guys, it is NOT the job of a prosecutor to get an indictment. That's a fascistic, disgusting view of the law that promotes putting innocent ppl in prison. (I know no one here believes in this, but that's what the articles are saying when they say "the prosecutor is supposed to get an indictment.") The prosecutor is the one lawyer/advocate who isn't going for a particular result, his goal is JUSTICE. If a prosecutor thinks that a suspect didn't commit a crime. OR that he couldn't prove it beyond a reasonable doubt, then he should not pursue an indictment. Its illegal AND unethical to pursue an indictment when you don't even believe in what you're saying. Its fine for a defense attorney because he represents his clients' interests; but the prosecutor's client, the state of Missouri, does not have an interest in convicting innocent ppl.
You guys do rightfully bring up the disparity in indictments between cops and non-cops. The solution? Tell prosecutors to stop being gung-ho about indictments in general. Don't throw Darren Wilson under the bus because other cops are assholes, even if Wilson is one of those assholes. The prosecutor did not think Wilson did it, therefore he did not treat the grand jury as a bunch of gullible stooges, he gave them all the information. This was 100% ethical. Blame the prosecutor here when he DOESN'T do that when dealing with a non-cop, when that inevitably happens.