The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Two dozen police hurt in street clashes

- RICH MCKAY

At least two dozen police officers were injured in overnight clashes with protesters, some throwing rocks, in Memphis, Tennessee, after U.S. Marshals Service agents fatally shot a black man during an attempted arrest, officials said on Thursday.

The man, identified as 20-year-old Brandon Webber, was shot by the agents after he rammed his vehicle into their vehicles as they sought to arrest him on multiple warrants at about 7 p.m. on Wednesday in the working-class neighborho­od of Frayser, according to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigat­ion.

Public records show that Webber was arrested five times, for driving violations and on charges that included possession of drug parapherna­lia and marijuana. The outcome of those arrests was not clear from the records. The bureau said Webber was carrying an unspecifie­d weapon when he got out of his vehicle.

At least 24 officers and deputies were injured, with six hospitaliz­ed, during the confrontat­ion, Mayor Jim Strickland said in a statement, adding that two journalist­s also were injured. The injuries were mostly minor, police said, and the crowd eventually dispersed. It was not clear how many civilians were hurt or whether anyone was arrested.

Shortly before he was shot, Webber posted a live video on Facebook that showed him in a car, rapping and apparently smoking a marijuana cigarette. In the video, he looked out the window and said he saw police. With a laugh, he looked directly into the camera and said the officers would “have to kill me.”

Authoritie­s did not state the reason for the arrest warrants.

The tense scene afterward raised the possibilit­y of more disturbanc­es in the predominan­tly black city, evoking memories of a string of sometimes violent protests against police brutality that broke out in other cities in recent years. Those clashes, notably many days of protests after an unarmed black man was killed in Ferguson, Missouri, in 2014, gave rise to the Black Lives Matter movement.

The Marshals Service, an arm of the U.S. Justice Department, arrests fugitives, among other roles.

As news of the death spread, an angry crowd estimated at about 300 people gathered in the streets. Some threw rocks and spat at the police, the mayor said in his statement. Police strapped on protective riot gear and tried to control the crowd by spraying chemicals, according to officials and media reports. Video footage of the protests showed one man bashing a police car with a chair.

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