Global Times

St Louis protest turns violent

Peaceful rally devolves into late-night unlawful assembly

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Clashes between demonstrat­ors and riot-clad police marred the end of what had been a largely peaceful second day of protest rallies in St. Louis following the acquittal of a white police officer in the fatal shooting of a black man.

Several hundred people gathered near Washington University after dark as the main rallies and marches wound down on Saturday evening.

As the night wore on violence broke out between some of roughly 100 remaining protesters, some holding bats or hammers, and riot-clad police who ordered them to disperse.

Shop and restaurant windows were smashed, including at businesses crowded with patrons, and demonstrat­ors hurled trash cans at officers, who numbered about 200.

Police declared the scene an unlawful assembly and threatened to deploy tear gas and arrested at least eight people.

“We had been getting such a good turn out earlier and it was a peaceful protest,” said Jomar Jackson, 32. “But then a bunch of people came and decided to be disruptive.”

The demonstrat­ions began peacefully on Friday after Circuit Judge Timothy Wilson acquitted former St. Louis Police Officer Jason Stockley, 36, of first-degree murder in the shooting death of Anthony Lamar Smith, 24.

But as on Saturday, Friday’s protests ended in late night violence, with 33 arrests after clashes on which 10 officers were hurt.

Smith was shot five times in his car after attempting to elude Stockley and his partner, who had chased the suspect after an alleged drug deal, authoritie­s said.

Stockley left the St. Louis Metropolit­an Police Department in 2013 and was arrested last year. He waived his right to a jury trial.

“This court, as a trier of fact, is simply not firmly convinced of defendant’s guilt,” Judge Wilson ruled.

The verdict came about three years after rioting broke out in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson when a black teenager was shot dead by a white police officer.

That incident touched off nationwide soul-searching over law enforcemen­t’s use of force against African-Americans, the mentally ill and other groups.

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