Thousands
of people rallied late Monday in U.S. cities including Los Angeles and New York
to passionately but peacefully protest a grand jury’s decision not to indict a
white police officer who killed a black 18-year-old in Ferguson, Missouri.
They led marches, waved signs and
shouted chants of “Hands Up! Don’t Shoot,” the slogan that has become a
rallying cry in protests over police killings across the country.
Activists
had been planning to protest even before the nighttime announcement that Officer Darren Wilson will not be
charged in the
shooting death of Michael Brown.
The racially charged case in Ferguson has inflamed
tensions and reignited debates over police-community relations even in cities
hundreds of miles from the predominantly black St. Louis suburb. For many
staging protests Monday, the shooting was personal, calling to mind other
galvanizing encounters with local law enforcement.
Police
departments in several major cities said they were bracing for large
demonstrations with the potential for the kind of violence that marred nightly
protests in Ferguson after Brown’s killing. Demonstrators there vandalized
police cars, hugged barricades and taunted officers with expletives Monday
night while police fired smoke canisters and pepper spray. Gunshots were heard
on the streets.
But police elsewhere reported that gatherings were mostly
peaceful immediately following Monday’s announcement.
About 100 people holding signs that read “The People Say
Guilty!” blocked an intersection in downtown Oakland, California, after a line
of police officers stopped them from getting on a highway on-ramp. Minutes
earlier, some of the protesters lay on the ground while others outlined their
bodies in chalk. A similar scene unfolded in Seattle as dozens of police
officers watched.
Several hundred people marched through downtown
Philadelphia with a large contingent of police nearby.
“Mike
Brown is an emblem (of a movement). This country is at its boiling point,” said
Ethan Jury, a protester in Philadelphia. “How many people need to die? How many
black people need to die?”
Several hundred people who had gathered in Manhattan’s
Union Square to watch the announcement marched peacefully to Times Square after
the family of Eric Garner, a Staten Island man killed by a police chokehold
earlier this year, joined the Rev. Al Sharpton at a speech lamenting the grand
jury’s decision.
In Los Angeles, which was rocked by riots in 1992 after
the acquittal of police officers in the videotaped beating of Rodney King,
police officers were told to remain on duty until released by their
supervisors. About 100 people gathered in Leimert Park while others held a
small news conference demanding changes in police policies.
A splinter group of about 30 people broke away and marched
through surrounding streets, blocking intersections, but the demonstrations
remained mostly small and peaceful.
Chris
Manor, with Utah Against Police Brutality, helped organize an event in Salt
Lake City that attracted about 35 people.
“There are things that have affected us locally, but at
the same time, it’s important to show solidarity with people in other cities
who are facing the very same thing that we’re facing,” Manor said.
In Denver, where a civil jury last month found deputies
used excessive force in the death of a homeless street preacher, clergy
gathered at a church to discuss the decision, and dozens of people rallied in a
downtown park with a moment of silence.
At Cleveland’s Public Square, at least a dozen protesters
held signs Monday afternoon and chanted “Hands up, don’t shoot,” which has
become a rallying cry since the Ferguson shooting. Their signs referenced
police shootings that have shaken the community there, including Saturday’s
fatal shooting of 12-year-old Tamir Rice, who had a fake gun at a Cleveland
playground when officers confronted him.
A few hundred people marched from Chicago police
headquarters toward downtown after hearing the Ferguson decision, using
profanity but causing no damage. Police on bicycles, horseback and in squad
cars closed portions of roads along the protesters’ route.
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