Los Angeles Times

Perspectiv­e on Ferguson

Police officers share behind-the-scenes accounts of challenges faced

- By Matt Pearce matt.pearce@latimes.com

As stressed-out officers policed last year’s protests in Ferguson, Mo., it was sometimes hard for them to know who was in charge, with more than 50 law enforcemen­t agencies swarming the suburb. Sometimes they had confusing directions.

When they got home, some argued with their spouses. Hackers stole officers’ identities. As the streets seethed with anger for 17 days over an officer’s fatal shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown, authoritie­s were exasperate­d by opportunis­tic burglars running amok.

On Thursday, the Department of Justice’s Office of Community Orienting Policing Services released a damning report that primarily slammed the police response to the August 2014 protests in Ferguson, confirming what had been documented in news coverage and by social media users: The heavy-handed tactical response by the Missouri State Highway Patrol, St. Louis County police, St. Louis city police and the Ferguson Police Department often worsened the unrest and at times was unconstitu­tional.

The report found that the snipers perched on top of armored vehicles frightened and angered unarmed crowds. In addition, the use of police dogs went against national recommenda­tions and echoed images from the worst moments of the civil rights movement of the 1960s; tear gas was sometimes launched without warning and too close to homes; and a five-second “keep moving” rule violated the 1st Amendment right to assemble.

But another insightful component of the report compiled from 160 anonymous interviews from November to May offered rare behind-the-scenes accounts of how front-line officers and upper-level officials saw the protests.

In their own words:

“In over 20 years of working here, this crowd was unlike anything I had ever seen.” — St. Louis-area police super visor

The size, speed and anger of the crowd that gathered around Brown’s body after he was shot by Ferguson Officer Darren Wilson on Aug. 9, 2014, stunned officials. The roughly 200 people on Canfield Drive occasional­ly scattered police with gunshots and set the tone for the unrest to come.

“Boss, we have had a bad afternoon up here,” a St. Louis County tactical response captain recalled telling St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar. “We almost didn’t get this crime scene processed. We had a lot of gunshots and people surrounded the body.”

“I honestly don’t know how all of this happened — I’m at a loss to explain,” a police supervisor said of the initial crowd. “The pulse of the situation was different.”

“We just abandoned Canfield Green Apartments.” — An officer

The scene grew so hostile and chaotic on Canfield Drive and nearby West Florrisant Avenue that police gave up responding to normal calls for service at the apartment complex where Brown lived and near where he was shot.

“Canfield Apartments became a no-police zone,” one officer said. “We were told we could not go into Canfield Apartments. We contained the area but did not go into the area, and by default the area became a safe haven for criminals.”

Some residents told the Justice Department that they felt police had “abandoned” the complex, and some officers felt they had abandoned the riot scene. As looters ravaged stores on Aug. 15, Missouri Highway Patrol Capt. Ron Johnson, the incident commander, told officers not to intervene because he thought it would put the lives of rioters, protesters and officers lives at risk.

“It was difficult for law enforcemen­t officers to stand by and watch the criminal activity taking place and do nothing about it,” one officer said.

Direction from leaders on whether or when to arrest demonstrat­ors shifted constantly.

“What should we be doing? How should we be doing it?” an officer said. “Citizens became bolder by the third or fourth day — shooting drugs, stealing in front of officers. Police were on their heels because what we could or could not do changed every single day.”

“We have to keep our people safe. Sometimes policing is not pretty.” — A police commander

The federal report condemned deploying snipers on top of armored vehicles, pointing their guns at protesters in “overwatch” in case a gunman appeared in the crowd. The authors also criticized keeping armored vehicles on the front lines of protests and the use of military-looking camouflage uniforms by St. Louis County police.

However, the report did not fully condemn the socalled militarize­d tools used by police, saying “some tactical response was necessary as a result of increased aggression by some of the protesters.”

Some of the BearCat tactical vehicles were struck by bullets and were used to rescue gunshot victims. Local agencies reported that at least 39 officers were hurt during the protests.

Some officers reported being told not to wear protective gear because of the intimidati­ng message it sent, and they said they felt “a sense of abandonmen­t” and that “public image trumped officer safety.”

“I was noticing that I was arguing with my wife at home.” — An officer

Officers privately felt uncharacte­ristically irritable and angry. They lost sleep and grappled with the stress put on relationsh­ips with their loved ones, whom they sometimes couldn’t check on during the protests.

Repeated 12-hour shifts and extensive verbal abuse from some protesters put officers on edge; African American officers in particular took the worst invective, often being called “Uncle Toms.” Some officers refused to wear name badges despite orders from superiors, the report said.

Making matters worse, hackers infiltrate­d area police department­s’ servers and stole officers’ personal informatio­n, the report said. Identity thieves took out credit cards in officers’ names, put liens on their property and filed false tax claims.

 ?? J.B. Forbes St. Louis Post-Dispatch ?? FERGUSON, MO., streets seethed with anger for 17 days over an officer’s fatal shooting of Michael Brown, 18.
J.B. Forbes St. Louis Post-Dispatch FERGUSON, MO., streets seethed with anger for 17 days over an officer’s fatal shooting of Michael Brown, 18.

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