At the close of Tuesday’s meeting, Vera Ekwuan told commissioners she had repeatedly raised concerns about the investigation into her son’s death and said the case appeared to have been closed quickly “without what appears to be a fully documented investigation.”
Ekwuan asked the board what oversight mechanisms exist to ensure that death investigations are conducted thoroughly: what audits or reviews are performed, and what accountability exists when documentation supporting investigative conclusions is missing. “If investigative standards exist, the public should be able to understand what those standards are,” she said, asking the county to disclose its procedures for oversight and audit of public‑safety investigative work funded with county dollars.
She told the board families should not have to spend months or years trying to determine whether basic steps occurred, and asked commissioners to make oversight procedures and accountability mechanisms transparent to the public.
Commissioners did not provide an immediate, detailed response at the microphone. The matter was raised as a public‑comment request for more information and transparency; county staff follow‑up or a public response would be required to answer the questions about audits, review processes and specific case documentation.
Ekwuan’s remarks were entered into the public record; no formal board action or referral was recorded during the meeting.