Of these two findings, the number and nature of gunshot wounds is the only important information here. The point of an autopsy, after all, is to prove how a person died. That's probably why media coverage of the autopsy results from The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, and Mashable all feature this harrowing information in their headlines.
Several news organizations, however, have opted to feature the information about Brown's marijuana use, instead. In fact, neither the New York Post nor Complex included information about Brown's gunshot wounds in its headline.
Those who wish to play devil's advocate could point to the often sensational headlines outlets like the Post employs. But, the situation at hand — one that, for the first time ever, required Amnesty International deployment in the U.S. — is already so sensational. Footage from Ferguson is violent, not to mention surreal. These headlines seek to make relevant to a criminal case a drug that's legal in several states — to somehow justify the unjustifiable.
A third autopsy, conducted by the Department of Justice, is forthcoming. Once all three autopsy results are gathered, we expect the legal activity surrounding the case will shift. Regardless of what the final autopsy results indicate, there's a clear disconnect between the alleged crime at hand and the way it was handled. As Baden noted in the press conference, "All of these gun shot wounds were survivable, except for the one that went through the head."
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