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No charges for cop involved in '08 shooting

District Attorney Lynne Abraham -- in one of her last acts as top prosecutor - decided not to press charges against a cop who was involved in a controversial off-duty shooting in 2008.

A hearty preview of a story running in Tuesday's Daily News:

Terry Bowen has waited more than a year to hear if authorities would bring criminal charges against an off-duty Philadelphia police sergeant who allegedly gunned down her unarmed son.
Unbeknownst to Bowen, former District Attorney Lynne Abraham — in one of her last acts as top prosecutor — decided not to press charges against the cop, Chauncey Ellison.
"We received a letter of declination from the District Attorney's Office, saying they're not going to prosecute. I think it came out on New Year's Eve," Police Commissioner Charles H. Ramsey told the Daily News last night.
No one bothered to tell Bowen, whose son Lawrence Allen died last February, three months after Ellison allegedly shot him in the back during a bizarre dispute in West Oak Lane. Allen, 20, was left paralyzed from the chest down. He dropped more than half his body weight and battled numerous infections before dying, his mother said.
"I am so furious," Bowen said, after a reporter informed her of Abraham's decision. "No one ever got in contact with me."
Bowen said she was further incensed to see quick action taken in a similar incident involving an off-duty cop who shot an unarmed man, while the officer accused of shooting her son has remained on the force.
Officer Frank Tepper was given his walking papers on Monday, less than two months after he fatally shot William "Billy" Panas Jr. during a fracas in Port Richmond that involved Tepper's relatives. A grand jury is reviewing evidence in that case.
Ramsey said Allen's family "will just have to be patient. We have not forgotten about the case."
The commissioner said he was reviewing the police Internal Affairs investigation into the shooting and plans to decide "within the next two weeks" if Ellison should face discipline for any departmental violations in the shooting.

District Attorney Seth Williams also plans to "review the case thoroughly," and could ultimately press charges against Ellison, even in light of Abraham's actions, said Williams' spokeswoman, Tasha Jamerson.
"The case hasn't been dismissed," Jamerson said, noting that she couldn't comment on the letter that Abraham sent Ramsey.
At a news conference earlier in the day, Williams said one of his goals is to expedite investigations into police-involved shootings, "so that those officers who should be exonerated are exonerated, and those that should be charged are charged."
Neither Abraham nor her former spokeswoman could be reached for comment last night.