Shelby Daily Globe

Protests over man shot dead at hospital reach police station

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) — Police in Ohio’s capital city used pepper spray on a small group of people who briefly breached the outer doors of the agency’s downtown headquarte­rs Tuesday night, following protests over the fatal police shooting of a Black man at an emergency room on Monday.

The clash followed a largely peaceful protest downtown earlier in the evening where dozens marched in anger over the fatal shooting of Miles Jackson, 27, at Mount Carmel St. Ann’s Hospital in suburban Columbus.

Protesters invoked that shooting as well as the killing of other Black men by police nationally, including the Sunday shooting of 20-yearold Daunte Wright in a Minneapoli­s suburb. A white police officer who authoritie­s believe mistakenly fired her gun instead of a stun gun has resigned in Wright’s shooting.

Columbus

Mayor

Andrew Ginther backed the protesters’ cause but denounced the attempt by a few to later enter police headquarte­rs.

“We share the frustratio­ns over police killings of unarmed Black men, and we support nonviolent protests,” Ginther, a Democrat, said in a tweet. “That does not include breaking into public buildings or violence against officers. Let me be clear: Violence and destructio­n will not be tolerated.”

One person was taken into custody in connection with the breach of police headquarte­rs.

On Monday, Westervill­e police officers responded to a report of a man — later identified as Jackson — passed out in a car and then followed medics to the hospital. Columbus police were called because Jackson had outstandin­g domestic violence and weapons warrants in the city.

Westervill­e police

then tried to transfer Jackson to the custody of Columbus police, but during that transfer, “an altercatio­n ensued” at about 2:15 p.m. Monday. That “resulted in the discharge of firearms” from the Columbus Division of Police and St. Ann’s security officers, according to a joint statement from the two police department­s and the hospital.

Immediatel­y after the shooting, Westervill­e Police Chief Charles Chandler described an “exchange of gunfire” in the emergency room. But the joint statement said only that an additional firearm was recovered at the hospital.

On Wednesday, Republican Attorney General Dave Yost said ballistic tests showed that Jackson had a gun. His agency’s Bureau of Criminal Investigat­ion is leading the investigat­ion into the shooting.

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