USA TODAY International Edition

St. Louis sees third day of protests

City already besieged by two nights of violence following white officer’s acquittal in fatal shooting of black man

- Sam Clancy, Brandie Piper and John Bacon USA TODAY Network Clancy and Piper report for KSDK-TV in St. Louis; Bacon for USA TODAY in McLean, Va. Contributi­ng: The Associated Press

ST. LOUIS Hundreds of protesters marched in a third consecutiv­e day of demonstrat­ions Sunday following the acquittal of a white former city police officer in the death of a black motorist.

Protests began Friday after a judge cleared the one-time St. Louis Metropolit­an police officer, Jason Stockley, of first-degree murder charges in the 2011 shooting of Anthony Lamar Smith, 24, during a high-speed car chase.

Stockley shot Smith after Smith fled from Stockley and his partner, who were trying to arrest him for a suspected drug deal.

Judge Timothy Wilson ruled Stockley acted in self-defense. His decision prompted demonstrat­ions Friday that left 11 police officers injured. Authoritie­s made 33 arrests.

St. Louis County police said they arrested nine people Saturday night and early Sunday in suburban University City, home to Washington University, one day after protests that turned violent led to 33 arrests in two St. Louis neighborho­ods.

Some stores reopened Sunday despite the damage, with artists trying to enhance the appearance of plywood covering broken windows.

On Sunday afternoon, about 1,000 people gathered outside the St. Louis Police Department and marched into the city’s Midtown area, the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.

Protesters formed lines in front of the barricaded police headquarte­rs, banged drums, held up “Black Lives Matter” signs and chanted, “Stop killing us” and “No justice, no peace.” They also staged a “die-in,” lying on the street in front of the police station as if dead.

The U.S. Department of Justice on Sunday also revealed that there was insufficie­nt evidence to pursue a separate federal civil rights prosecutio­n of Stockley. The department withheld its conclusion while Stockley’s murder trial was

underway in St. Louis, the Post-Dispatch reported Sunday.

Justice department spokeswoma­n Lauren Ehrsam told the Post-Dispatch that the civil rights division finished its own internal review of the case in September 2016 and concluded that the evidence did not support a prosecutio­n under federal criminal civil rights statutes. But it made no formal statement at the time “to avoid having any impact” on the pending state criminal case.

The University City Police Department said 23 businesses and five police vehicles were damaged Saturday night when protesters hurled rocks, bricks, water bottles filled with paint thinner or gasoline, and balloons filled with red liquid.

St. Louis Police Chief Lawrence O’Toole said the protests have been peaceful until after dark, when chaos has ensued.

“Saturday night, some criminals decided to pick up rocks and break windows,” Missouri Gov. Eric Greitens, a Republican, said in a statement. “They thought they’d get away with it. They were wrong. Our officers caught ’em, cuffed ’em, and threw ’em in jail.”

Judge Wilson’s decision prompted demonstrat­ions Friday that left 11 police officers injured.

On Saturday, demonstrat­ors marched through a shopping mall. At about 9 p.m., organizers announced to the crowd that the protest was a success, citing zero arrests. The crowd dispersed shortly thereafter.

About an hour later, a smaller, separate crowd gathered. A police line formed once the tension between demonstrat­ors and police grew. One person reportedly threw red paint on a shield held by a University City police officer.

A short time later, the St. Louis County and St. Louis Metropolit­an police department­s were called in to assist the University City police, according to a statement released by county police.

As protesters and police clashed, a window in the nearby Starbucks was broken. Several other businesses and cars were also vandalized as police moved in on the crowd. Trash can lids were thrown through storefront windows.

Friday’s protests also were mostly peaceful until demonstrat­ors spattered red paint on St. Louis Mayor Lyda Krewson’s home and broke a window, prompting riot police to lob tear gas to disperse the crowds.

 ?? PHOTOS BY JEFF ROBERSON, AP ?? Demonstrat­ors protest Sunday outside the St. Louis Police Department headquarte­rs in response to a not guilty verdict in the trial of former St. Louis police officer Jason Stockley, who was acquitted Friday in the 2011 killing of a black man following...
PHOTOS BY JEFF ROBERSON, AP Demonstrat­ors protest Sunday outside the St. Louis Police Department headquarte­rs in response to a not guilty verdict in the trial of former St. Louis police officer Jason Stockley, who was acquitted Friday in the 2011 killing of a black man following...
 ??  ?? Cori Bush speaks on a bullhorn to protesters outside the St. Louis Police Department headquarte­rs Sunday.
Cori Bush speaks on a bullhorn to protesters outside the St. Louis Police Department headquarte­rs Sunday.

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