Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

St. Louis police protest tactics draw criticism

- By Jim Salter Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — Police have given demonstrat­ors in the latest St. Louis protests a wide berth, applying a lesson learned in nearby Ferguson to offer protesters ample room to have their say, at least until trouble starts.

But critics complain that the tactic comes with an unjust catch: If vandalism or rock throwing begins, officers order crowds to disperse and block all exits. The result, they say, is an arrest net that sweeps up journalist­s, bystanders and peaceful demonstrat­ors.

The most recent round of protests began Friday after a judge acquitted former St. Louis police officer Jason Stockley, who is white, of murder in the death of a black drug suspect, Anthony Lamar Smith.

In Ferguson, police drew heavy criticism for their militarize­d response to protests after unarmed 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was black, was fatally shot on Aug. 9, 2014, by white officer Darren Wilson, who was not charged and later resigned.

This time around, officers standing near protests do not respond to verbal abuse, nor do they intervene when demonstrat­ors engage in minor civil disobedien­ce like blocking streets. In fact, officers reroute traffic to keep them safe.

At times in Ferguson, police would converge on protesters throwing things at them or breaking windows, then allow the protest to continue. But now, once things take a turn for the worse, authoritie­s declare that the protest is over.

David Klinger, a University of Missouri-St. Louis criminolog­ist and former Los Angeles police officer, said officers face a difficult task because they do not want to break up a protest without cause, but they must act quickly to protect people and property when things go awry.

“The key to managing gathering is to move in and catch it at that moment,” Klinger said. “When rocks and bottles start coming or people start smashing cars or windows, that’s the inflection point.”

When the trouble begins, additional officers quickly arrive from staging areas, with shields, helmets and gas masks. They form lines blocking streets. An officer on a bullhorn orders people to disperse.

Then the police lines start to close in, and arrests are made. The process is aimed at containing people into a limited area — known as “kettling.” But it has drawn objections from those who say it ensnares innocent people who cannot escape and subjects them to rough treatment that can include being struck by officers and pepper sprayed, not to mention detained for hours.

The tactics were used Sunday when about 100 people marched into downtown St. Louis. A small number of those in the group broke windows, smashed concrete flower pots and threw things at police.

Hundreds of officers in riot gear encircled the group. Many of the 123 people arrested were caught in the kettle. But some said they were just bystanders.

In fact, all but three of the 123 arrests were for “failure to disperse.” One man was arrested for resisting arrest, one for disturbing the peace and one for riding a bike on a sidewalk. No one was charged with assaulting an officer or destroying property.

St. Louis Post-Dispatch journalist Mike Faulk told the newspaper officers knocked him down, and he was pepper sprayed in the face. Some arrested protesters said they were roughed up.

St. Louis police said in a statement that the new tactics are deployed “when criminal activity arises” and that “escalation depends on the level of aggression.”

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/AP ?? A protester yells at police just before violence broke out Saturday in University City, Mo.
JEFF ROBERSON/AP A protester yells at police just before violence broke out Saturday in University City, Mo.

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