Friday 10 October 2014

Protesters Clash With St. Louis Police After Teen Killed

Photographer: Scott Olson/Getty Images
Demonstrators marched through the streets of St. Louis last night, after an off-duty... Read More
St. Louis police faced off with about 200 protesters one night after an off-duty officer shot an 18-year-old he was chasing.
The crowd marched through the streets on the city’s south side last night, blocking traffic, beating a bass drum and chanting, “Hands up, don’t shoot.” They burned two American flags in a residential neighborhood and a protester smashed a police-car window across an intersection from the line of officers. Eight people were arrested, according to the police department.
“They feel there’s been no justice with the system, how black men are constantly getting shot and killed,” said Derrick Robinson, pastor of Kingdom Destiny Fellowship, who led protesters down Grand Boulevard with a megaphone.
The confrontation came two months after a
police officer in Ferguson, a St. Louis suburb, shot unarmed teenager Michael Brown, touching off nights of rioting. The U.S. Justice Department is investigating the case and a grand jury is deciding whether to indict Officer Darren Wilson.
Last night’s clashes began about 10:15 p.m. local time. After keeping a distance from marchers, officers in riot gear blocked their progress with shields and pepper spray. A helicopter orbited, spotlighting groups of protesters.
Lokey Jackson, 15, sat on the curb across from a phalanx of police and said a friend was detained.
“He just didn’t move,” Jackson said. “So they Maced him and they arrested him.”

Police Tank

At least one business was damaged during last night’s protests. The glass front door of the Medicine Shoppe on Grand was smashed, and a half mile away, protesters pulled an American flag off the pole in front of a nursing home.
About 1 a.m. local time, an armored police tank moved in toward protesters near the intersection of Arsenal Street and Grand, and an officer on a loudspeaker directed the crowd to disperse or be arrested, calling the gathering an “unlawful assembly.” Most of the protesters disbanded within the hour.
Five people were arrested for unlawful assembly, two for property damage, and one person for marijuana possession, Schron Jackson, a police spokeswoman, said in an e-mail. Two department vehicles were damaged, and one officer was hit in the arm with a brick.
The unrest was set off by a killing Oct. 8. Police said Vonderrit Myers ran from an off-duty officer who had been working a second job as a guard. Myers shot at the officer after a struggle, police said. The officer returned fire, killing him.
Police said they found a 9mm pistol at the scene. Myers’s mother, Syreeta Myers, told the Associated Press that her son had been holding a sandwich, not a gun.

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