More recently, a handful of Philadelphia City Council members — Jamie Gauthier, Kendra Brooks, Katherine Gilmore Richardson, Helen Gym, and Isaiah Thomas — released a statement expressing “solidarity in the fight for justice for Fanta Bility.”
“What we are seeing in Sharon Hill is a shocking miscarriage of justice. Today we stand together in solidarity with the Bility family and concerned community members to call for transparency regarding the investigation into the actions of the police officers responsible for this grievous act, and to demand that these officers be dismissed from duty,” the statement issued Wednesday said.
Though the statement acknowledged that the teens deserve to face “appropriate consequences,” the council members specifically took aim at Stollsteimer by calling the first-degree murder charges “completely inappropriate.”
“Legal experts who have weighed in on the matter say there is little chance of these charges standing up in court. From our perspective, and from the perspective of the victim’s family, this is just a ruse to distract from the terrible decisions police officers made that day – and to allow them to evade scrutiny,” the statement said.
The council members called on Stollsteimer to terminate the police officers and commission an independent investigation, all before addressing the racial implications.
“It is inconceivable that police officers would shoot into a crowd of white people — and it’s inconceivable that two young white men would be charged with first-degree murder in a similar scenario,” the statement said.
WHYY News reached out to Stollsteimer’s office, but his spokesperson declined to comment, citing the ongoing grand jury proceedings.