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Two Police Officers Shot in Ferguson During Protest Over Disgraced Police Chief’s Resignation
As if the atmosphere in Ferguson wasn’t tense enough, two police officers were shot early Thursday morning during a demonstration outside the town’s police station following the resignation of the embattled police chief.
The officers are in serious condition—one shot in the shoulder, the other in the face—but their injuries are not life-threatening, according to authorities.
The small Missouri town has become a continuing symbol of America’s racial unrest, a place that seems to have accumulated every ill that racism has rained down upon Black people in America. The police department was the entity that delivered many of the daily blows to Black existence in Ferguson—a department that Attorney General Eric Holder last week said had fostered a “highly toxic environment” of racism and misconduct that turned the city into a “powder keg.”
It remains to be seen whether the shooting will exacerbate the already hostile relationship between the police and Ferguson residents—but it’s probably safe to say this will be a particularly precarious time to live in the city.
The police had no information about who might have fired the shots that rang out shortly after midnight Central time at the tail end of a rally that had been going on following disgraced Police Chief Thomas Jackson’s resignation late yesterday afternoon.
Reports say about 50 protesters and 30 police officers remained when the shots were fired, with everyone hitting the ground when they heard the “pop, pop, pop.”
Speaking to the media at an early-morning news conference, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said that it appeared at least three shots were “directed exactly at” the officers. Belmar said a 32-year-old officer (a five-year veteran) from the St. Louis suburb of Webster Groves had been shot in the face, while a 41-year-old St. Louis County police officer (14-year veteran) had been struck in the shoulder.
“I don’t know who did the shooting, to be honest with you,” Belmar said, adding that he could not provide a description of the suspect or gun.
He said both victims were conscious but their wounds were “very serious.”
“I was in Ferguson, across the street from the police department where the protesters were standing,” Ivory Ned, a witness to the shooting, told NBC News. “Police were coming back and forth, pushing us back to the sidewalk. I got down on the ground when the shots were fired. It sounded like it was around 30 feet away, coming from behind me up on the hill.”
“I did not want to take any chances because I did not know if the police were shooting or what was going on so I got down on my knees and I hid behind a car,” added Ned, who said “tensions were running high” before the shots rang out. “It put everybody in a panic. Police officers were crouched down and they had their guns out. Everybody was in a state of standstill. Once everybody started getting up, you saw two officers still down on the ground so you knew who got shot.”
Freelance producer Jennifer Roller, who had been covering the rally since about 8 p.m., also told NBC News that the demonstrations had been peaceful.
“I heard pop, pop, pop, pop,” Roller said. “I thought they were fireworks until I heard the cops screaming, ‘get down, get down’.”
The officers had been lined up in front of the police station in riot gear when the bullets came flying. After the shooting, dozens of officers from around the region swarmed on the scene, holding rifles and crouching behind any available car, wall or gate while a group of officers in tactical gear moved slowly up the hill in the direction from where the shots came.
Considering how peaceful the demonstrations have been in recent months, the shooting could change the relationship between the protesters and the police, who are bound to be more tense going forward and feeling under siege from not only political threats but now physical ones.
Jackson’s resignation came as just the latest in a wave of city officials stepping down following the scathing report from the Justice Department. While Holder’s Justice department failed to bring civil rights charges against officer Darren Wilson for killing Michael Brown, Holder said last week that he was prepared to dismantle the Ferguson police department if necessary.
“We are prepared to use all the power that we have … to ensure that the situation changes there,” Holder told reporters.
Civil rights lawyers have suggested the Ferguson police could be absorbed by the St. Louis County Police Department.
The Department’s investigation tore open the racism and corruption of the Ferguson Police Department—from the targeted deployment of police dog attacks on Black victims to nasty, racist emails exchanged between officials.
Before Jackson, City Manager John Shaw stepped down on Tuesday, while Capt. Rick Henke and Sgt. William Mudd resigned last week.
In addition, Ferguson Mayor James Knowles announced last week that another police department employee was fired following the release of the racist emails.
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Two Ferguson Police Officers Shot Amidst Protests
Officers sustained critical injuries, but are expected to survive
By Jon Blistein
Two police officers were shot outside the police station in Ferguson, Missouri during a night of protests following the resignation of Ferguson police chief, Thomas Jackson, The New York Times reports.
Four shots were fired, according to one source, at around midnight Thursday. A St. Louis County officer was shot in the shoulder, while the other, from the suburbs of Webster Groves, was shot in the face. While both remain in critical condition at Barnes-Jewish Hospital in St. Louis, their injuries are not life-threatening.
Authorities have yet to name a suspect, but they believe the shots came from a gunman perched on top of a hill about 220 yards across from the station. Chief Jon Belmar of the St. Louis County Police Department said he believed "these shots were directed exactly at my police officers.
"I've said all along that we cannot sustain this forever without problems," Belmar told reporters of the incident. He said he had feared violence against officers since protests began seven months ago after Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson killed Michael Brown, an unarmed black teenager.
Wednesday night's protest found demonstrators celebrating the resignation of Jackson and other high-ranking Ferguson officials such as city manager John Shaw and municipal judge Ronald J. Brockmeyer. Their resignations came after the release of a scathing Justice Department report, which uncovered widespread systemic racial bias and unconstitutional practices in the city's police department and court system.
While protestors were elated at the resignations, they demanded further action be taken, calling for Ferguson mayor James Knowles III to step down as well. Protests were generally peaceful before the shooting, though several arrests were made.
The shootings, however, could reignite tensions between protestors and police, which turned especially violent after a grand jury decided not to indict Officer Wilson for killing Brown in November. As the Times noted, a number of lingering protestors were approached by police investigators after the shooting, but few offered their help.
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Obama Says ‘No Excuse’ For Ferguson Shooting
“They’re criminals. They need to be arrested,” Obama said
Officers from the St. Louis police, March 12, 2015, in Ferguson, Mo.
More
Police, Other Groups Try to Tamp Down Tensions in Ferguson
Ferguson Activists Worry About Aftermath of Shooting
Ferguson Shooter Is a ‘Damn Punk,’ Eric Holder Says
President Obama had harsh words for whoever is responsible for the shooting incident in Ferguson, Mo., that left two police officers wounded.
“There’s no excuse for criminal acts,” he said in an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live, marking his first public statements on the incident. “They’re criminals. They need to be arrested.”
Obama offered prayers to the families of those who were wounded, but noted that the shooting shouldn’t detract from the issues in the community the federal government has been helping to address.
He also didn’t mince words about a recent Department of Justice report that showed patterns of racism within the Ferguson police department. “What happened in Ferguson was oppressive and objectionable,” Obama told the late-night talk-show host.
“There was a whole structure there that indicated both racism and just a disregard for what law enforcement was supposed to do,” he added.
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Originally posted by blugiant View PostObama Says ‘No Excuse’ For Ferguson Shooting
“They’re criminals. They need to be arrested,” Obama said
Officers from the St. Louis police, March 12, 2015, in Ferguson, Mo.
More
Police, Other Groups Try to Tamp Down Tensions in Ferguson
Ferguson Activists Worry About Aftermath of Shooting
Ferguson Shooter Is a ‘Damn Punk,’ Eric Holder Says
President Obama had harsh words for whoever is responsible for the shooting incident in Ferguson, Mo., that left two police officers wounded.
“There’s no excuse for criminal acts,” he said in an appearance on Jimmy Kimmel Live, marking his first public statements on the incident. “They’re criminals. They need to be arrested.”
Obama offered prayers to the families of those who were wounded, but noted that the shooting shouldn’t detract from the issues in the community the federal government has been helping to address.
He also didn’t mince words about a recent Department of Justice report that showed patterns of racism within the Ferguson police department. “What happened in Ferguson was oppressive and objectionable,” Obama told the late-night talk-show host.
“There was a whole structure there that indicated both racism and just a disregard for what law enforcement was supposed to do,” he added.
yet sum eediat blakks a still defend mixxed race man
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