Police Shoot Man in Ferguson Amid Anniversary Protest for Michael Brown
FERGUSON, Mo. — A young man was shot
by the police and was in critical condition at a hospital, the St. Louis County
police chief, Jon Belmar, said early Monday after a day of protests commemorating the killing of Michael Brown, an
unarmed black 18-year-old, by a white police officer a year ago.
Chief
Belmar said that there were two more shootings in the area, and that the police
used smoke canisters.
The
shooting came after an otherwise peaceful day and as a spontaneous evening
demonstration intensified with a line of police officers in riot gear standing
off against a small but spirited group of protesters in the middle of the
street. About 300 yards away from the protesters, dozens of young people
appeared to be hanging out but not demonstrating.
It
was from this area that gunfire began ringing out around 11:15 p.m. People
scattered and crouched behind cars. Officers drew their weapons.
“Officer-involved
shooting,” crackled over police radios.
Chief Belmar began directing his
officers toward an abandoned building that used to be a Ponderosa restaurant.
Behind
the building, Tony Rice, an activist, said he saw a bloodied, handcuffed young
black man splayed on the ground with an officer standing over him. In a video
that Mr. Rice posted to Twitter, he can be heard frantically saying to the
officer: “Hey, he bleeding. Get him some help, man. Please get him some help.
He’s bleeding out, man. You see it. He’s breathing, man. Please get him some
help.”
Officers
eventually did so, Mr. Rice said, and the young man appeared to be alive when
he was placed into an ambulance.
The
day started with hundreds of activists gathered around the spot where Mr. Brown
was killed by Darren Wilson, a white police officer, and
giving speeches of remembrance and defiance. Mr. Brown’s father, Michael Brown
Sr., led a march to a church, where a service was held.
As nighttime came, a large crowd
gathered on West Florissant Avenue, which has been the
center of much of the unrest over the past year that stemmed from Mr. Brown’s
killing. The crowds appeared to dwindle a bit after heavy thunderstorms swept
through the area.
But
as the skies cleared, the situation became more intense.
Protesters
blocked the road, and the police responded by donning riot gear and ordering
them to move with a megaphone.
“This is the Ferguson Police
Department,” Sgt. Harry Dilworth, one of the department’s few black officers,
said into a megaphone. “You must leave the roadway immediately and remain on
the sidewalk or be subject to arrest.”
The demonstrators began venturing off
the road and toward the officers, and they started screaming at them.
After
the demonstrators had largely cleared out of the street, a caravan of police
cars with their sirens came racing down West Florissant, and dozens of officers
in riot gear formed a skirmish line. This drew the protesters back into the
street, running toward the line.
Amy
Hunter, the director of racial justice for the YWCA, stood to the side and
shook her head. She said she believed that the police’s racing down the street
and forming a skirmish line only provoked the protesters into a staredown in
the middle of the road.
“We learned the last time we did it
this way, there was more violence,” she said.
As
the protesters chanted in the street and the police held their position, things
started to get out of control in the strip mall down the street. People broke
through the storefront of a hair salon and began to rob it, said Antonio
French, an alderman in St. Louis. A reporter for The St. Louis Post-Dispatch
stumbled away with a bloody face and said he had been assaulted and robbed
after he tweeted that people were breaking into the stores.
Not
long after that, the gunshots rang out from the direction of the strip mall.
Mr. French said he ducked behind a sport utility vehicle. He saw a young woman
running and told her to come take cover, but, he said, she screamed: “No! No!
Where’s my brother?”
“It’s sad and disappointing,” Mr. French said of
the evening’s turn of events. “You have some people here who use the cover of
this anniversary to commit some violent acts. To see violence happen on this
day in this city is really disappointing.”
Police Shoot Man in Ferguson Amid Anniversary Protest for Michael Brown
Reviewed by Unknown
on
02:07
Rating:
Post a Comment