The Denver Post

Shooting, protests put Ferguson on edge

- By Jim Salter and Alan Scher Zagier

ferguson, mo.» Ferguson was a community on edge again Monday, a day after a protest marking the anniversar­y of Michael Brown’s death was punctuated with gunshots and police critically wounded a black 18-year-old accused of opening fire on officers.

Police, protesters and people who live and work in the St. Louis suburb braced for what nightfall might bring following more violence along West Florissant Avenue, the same thoroughfa­re that was the site of massive protests and rioting after Brown was shot fatally last year in a confrontat­ion with a white Ferguson officer.

Several hundred people had gathered by press time Monday, chanting and holding signs. Officers made several arrests after demonstrat­ors blocked a lane of traffic. Some threw water bottles and other debris at police.

Earlier in the day, the father of the suspect who was shot called the police version of events “a

bunch of lies.” He said two girls who were with his son told him he was unarmed and had been drawn into a dispute involving two groups of young people.

St. Louis County Executive Steve Stenger declared a state of emergency, which authorizes county Police Chief Jon Belmar to take control of police emergency management in and around Ferguson.

Protests spilled outside of Ferguson. Almost 60 protesters were arrested around midday for blocking the entrance to the federal courthouse in downtown St. Louis. Among those arrested was scholar and civil rights activist Cornel West.

That protest, like other commemorat­ion events the past few days, was largely peaceful and somber. But on Sunday, several hundred people gathered in the street, ignoring an officer on a bullhorn repeatedly warning them to get on the sidewalk or face arrest. Eventually, a few lobbed glass bottles and rocks at officers. One officer was hospitaliz­ed with cuts to the face after being hit with a rock. Two others had minor injuries after protesters sprayed them with pepper spray.

As tensions escalated, several gunshots rang out from the area near a strip of stores, including some that had been looted moments earlier. Belmar believes the shots came from about six shooters. What prompted the shooting was not clear, but Belmar said two groups had been feuding. The shots sent protesters and reporters running for cover. The shooters included the suspect, identified by his father as 18-year-old Tyrone Harris Jr., whom police had been watching because he was armed, Belmar said.

During the gunfire, the suspect crossed the street and apparently spotted plaincloth­es officers arriving in an unmarked van with distinctiv­e red and blue police lights, Belmar said. The suspect allegedly shot into the windshield of the van.

The four officers fired back then pursued the suspect on foot. The suspect again fired when he became trapped in a fenced-in area, the chief said, and all four officers opened fire.

Harris was in critical condition after surgery. Prosecutor­s announced 10 charges against him — five counts of armed criminal action, four counts of first-degree assault on a law enforcemen­t officer and a firearms charge. All 10 are felonies.

All four officers in the van, each wearing protective vests, escaped injury. They were not wearing body cameras, Belmar said.

Tyrone Harris Sr. told The Associated Press his son was a close friend of Michael Brown and was in Ferguson on Sunday night to pay respects.

The elder Harris said his son got caught up in a dispute among two groups of young people and was “running for his life” after gunfire broke out.

“My son was running to the police to ask for help, and he was shot,” he said. “It’s all a bunch of lies. ... They’re making my son look like a criminal.”

Belmar said the suspect who fired on officers had a semi-automatic 9 mm gun that was stolen last year from Cape Girardeau, Mo.

The police chief drew a distinctio­n between the shooters and the protesters. “They were criminals,” he said of those involved in gunfire. “They weren’t protesters.”

Gov. Jay Nixon agreed, saying in a statement that such “reprehensi­ble acts must not be allowed to silence the voices of peace and progress.”

Some protest groups said police were too quick to go into riot mode. Others questioned why plaincloth­es officers were part of the patrol. “After a year of protest and conversati­on around police accountabi­lity, having plaincloth­es officers without body cameras and proper identifica­tion in the protest setting leaves us with only the officer’s account of the incident, which is clearly problemati­c,” said Kayla Reed, a field organizer with the Organizati­on of Black Struggle.

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