Source: United Press International Pubdate: 4 Mar 1998 NO CHARGES IN CANDY BAR SHOOTING NEW YORK, March 4 (UPI) -- A grand jury has decided not to file charges against a white U.S marshal on a drug stakeout who shot a black New York City teenager who was carrying a silver-wrapped Three Musketeers candy bar. Queens District Attorney Richard Brown says William Cannon and his partner did nothing criminal when they mistook the candy bar for a semi- automatic pistol and shot high school student Andre Burgess in the leg. On Nov. 6, 1997, Cannon, a U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service agent, and his partner were staking out a fugitive on 138th Street in the Laurelton section of Queens. Seventeen-year-old Burgess was on his way to a friend's house after stopping at a convenience store to buy two candy bars when he approached Cannon's unmarked car shortly after 7 p.m. The federal marshals thought the foil-wrapped food was a weapon, so the partners jumped out of the car, identified themselves as police officers and yelled to the Springfield Gardens teenager to put up his hands. According to Brown, Burgess turned to agents with the candy bar in his hand and Cannon shot him in the left thigh. The victim was taken to Jamaica Hospital and released several days later. The local prosecutor calls Cannon's conduct ``a terrible mistake that could have had even more tragic consequences.'' Copyright 1998 by United Press International