USA TODAY US Edition

Sit-in over shooting closes Sacramento mall

2nd day of protests over Stephon Clark decision

- Jorge L. Ortiz Contributi­ng: Doug Stanglin and Dalvin Brown, USA TODAY; The Associated Press

A small group of protesters staged a sit-in that led to the closure of Sacramento’s largest mall Sunday, marking the second day of demonstrat­ions in California’s capital after prosecutor­s said no charges would be filed in the Stephon Clark killing.

District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert announced the decision Saturday, saying an investigat­ion revealed the two police officers who gunned down Clark, 22, in his grandparen­ts’ backyard last March had reason to believe their lives were at risk.

Clark did not have a weapon, but the officers said he was advancing toward them and they mistook the cellphone in his hand for a gun.

“We must recognize that they are often forced to make split-second decisions, and we must recognize that they are under tense, uncertain and rapidly evolving circumstan­ces,” Schubert said.

Several dozen people protested Saturday in Sacramento over the latest police killing of an unarmed black man, and the smaller group gathered at the Arden Fair Mall and held up signs of protest Sunday.

Mall officials told the Sacramento Bee they shut down the shopping center out of concern the demonstrat­ion could turn into a confrontat­ion. There was “high potential for crowds that the interior of the mall couldn’t accommodat­e safely,’’ spokesman Nathan Spradlin said.

The leader of the group, Berry Accius, told news reporters forcing the mall to be closed “was the only way for folks to realize what’s going on,” adding that mall visitors will be “inconvenie­nced, like we are every day having black skin.”

Clark’s family has called an afternoon news conference with members of the Rev. Al Sharpton’s National Action Network to press their “pursuit of justice.’’

Relatives have voiced displeasur­e with Schubert revealing during her presentati­on Saturday that Clark had been involved in an incident of domestic violence with his fiancee two days before police confronted him after getting calls about a man breaking car windows on March 18, 2018.

His death, on the heels of police killings of African-Americans such as Michael Brown, Eric Garner and Philando Castile, sparked protests and calls for more police accountabi­lity in California and New York.

Schubert presented Clark as a troubled man, saying he conducted online searches about how to commit suicide and was concerned about going to jail for violating terms of his probation. She also said a toxicology screen showed Clark had traces of Codeine, marijuana and Xanax in his body at the time of the incident.

“Whatever he was doing, whatever his character is or his actions prior to those police gunning him down is no one’s business. That not justificat­ion,’’ Clark’s mother, SeQuette Clark, told news reporters Saturday.

In a news conference, Salena Manni, Clark’s fiancee and mother of his two sons, said the DA’s decision extended a “shameful legacy" of officers killing black men without consequenc­es.

“What I feel the DA announced today was not about what happened on March 16, was not about what happened on March 17. It was what happened on March 18, when the officers murdered my fiancee," Manni said. "That’s what this is about.’’

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP ?? Tanya Faison of Black Lives Matter addresses demonstrat­ors Saturday outside the Sacramento Police Department to protest the decision against prosecutin­g two officers involved in the 2018 fatal shooting of Stephon Clark.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I/AP Tanya Faison of Black Lives Matter addresses demonstrat­ors Saturday outside the Sacramento Police Department to protest the decision against prosecutin­g two officers involved in the 2018 fatal shooting of Stephon Clark.

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