Prosecutors dropped charges Friday against a man accused of being the fleeing driver in a police pursuit that resulted in a crash, killing an innocent bystander and resulting in a conviction for the Minneapolis police officer involved.
The Hennepin County Attorney's Office dismissed counts of fleeing police and auto theft against James Jeremiah Jones-Drain, 20, citing an "inability to prove all of the charges beyond a reasonable doubt at this time," according to a brief court filing. Jones-Drain was set to stand trial Monday, a month after Brian Cummings was sentenced to serve less than a year in the county workhouse after pleading guilty to criminal vehicular homicide.
On July 6, 2021, Cummings pursued the vehicle in north Minneapolis, reaching 100 mph on residential streets before his squad car ran a red light and struck a Jeep driven by Leneal Frazier, killing him. According to the charges, Cummings was traveling nearly 80 mph when he hit Frazier at 41st and Lyndale avenues N.
Jones-Drain was arrested 18 months later. He pled not guilty to two counts of theft and causing death by fleeing police.
Frazier, a 40-year-old father of six, was the uncle of Darnella Frazier, the teen who recorded ex-MPD officer Derek Chauvin kneeling on George Floyd's neck for more than nine minutes until he died in 2020.
Attorney Jeff Storms, representing the Frazier family in a potential lawsuit against the city, said the family is "deeply disappointed" by the dismissal.
"Officer Cummings serving a few months in local confinement as the sole criminal accountability for Leneal's death is not justice for Leneal and his family," said Storms in a statement.
Jones-Drain had 10 pending cases in Hennepin County alleging a string of robberies before the crash, according to charges, and remains jailed on an unrelated case of illegal gun possession.