Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Protests enter third night

Organizers say bad actors are detracting from demonstrat­ors’ message, aims

- JIM SALTER AND SUMMER BALLENTINE

ST. LOUIS - Several hundred protesters were marching in downtown St. Louis near the city’s police headquarte­rs Sunday evening, and later through the St. Louis University campus, continuing demonstrat­ions over the acquittal of a white former police officer charged in the shooting death of a black man.

Heading into a third night of protests, organizers said they were frustrated that a few people who have caused trouble at night could make it harder to spread their nonviolent message.

Sunday’s crowd began protesting silently in the late afternoon in front of the police department building, then chanted “stop killing us” as officers looked on from headquarte­rs windows. Afterward, they resumed large-scale marching through streets, similar to what they’d done in previous days, chanting slogans such as “this is what democracy looks like.”

Protesters object to the not-guilty verdict released Friday for Jason Stockley, who had been charged with first-degree murder in the killing of Anthony Lamar Smith in 2011.

Authoritie­s closed off several blocks around the police headquarte­rs Sunday afternoon in anticipati­on of the demonstrat­ion, which followed two days of nonviolent marches that devolved after nightfall when small groups turned violent on Friday and Saturday nights.

Protesters and organizers say the violence and vandalism by a few people threatens to detract from broader messages of racial equity.

“It’s counterpro­ductive,” said Democratic Rep. Michael Butler, who added that people he described as “agitators” are not part of protest leadership.

Protest organizer Anthony Bell during demonstrat­ions Sunday said change is made through peaceful protests, such as those led by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. But Bell said he understand­s the anger that sometimes leads to violence and property damage.

“I do not say the demonstrat­ors are wrong, but I believe peaceful demonstrat­ions are the best,” he said.

On Friday night, a few thousand protesters were disruptive but organized as they marched in the early evening in front of hospitals and down the streets of the posh Central West End.

But as the night wore on and protesters converged outside the home of Mayor Lyda Krewson, someone threw a rock through a window and paint was splashed on the home. Police responded in riot gear and, shortly, began tossing tear gas. Within an hour, police say protesters were breaking windows.

The same scene played out Saturday. Protesters marched for hours in the trendy Delmar Loop area until organizers announced shortly before 9 p.m. that the event was over and most of the couple of thousand protesters went home.

Around 100 to 150 didn’t, continued to march, and some eventually began confrontin­g police. It wasn’t clear what set off the anger, but police in riot gear began to line the streets and some people tossed rocks, trash cans and other things at them.

Butler said police should target the agitators and allow others to continue demonstrat­ing. He protested Friday, and after that said police have been doing a poor job of identifyin­g bad actors amid protesters.

“There’s not been any learning from Ferguson,” Butler said.

Stockley shot Smith after Smith led from Stockley and his partner on a high-speed chase as they tried to arrest him for a suspected drug deal.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/AP ?? A man yells at police just before a crowd turned violent in University City, Mo. Earlier, protesters marched peacefully in response to the not-guilty verdict for Jason Stockley.
JEFF ROBERSON/AP A man yells at police just before a crowd turned violent in University City, Mo. Earlier, protesters marched peacefully in response to the not-guilty verdict for Jason Stockley.

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