The Philippine Star

Autopsy prompts more protests

Black man’s killing in california

- SACRAMENTO (Reuters) — About 200 people demonstrat­ed in Sacramento on Saturday to protest the fatal police shooting of Stephon Clark, in the latest of nearly two weeks of mostly peaceful rallies since the unarmed black man was gunned down in his grandmoth

Another vigil with about 150 people was held on Saturday night, and a protester was apparently hit by a Sacramento sheriff’s vehicle, according to a video posted on the Internet and the Sacramento Bee newspaper.

The video shows the protester apparently hit and then fall to the ground as people screamed. The newspaper said the protester was taken to a hospital by the fire department and later released with bruises.

No officials were available for comment early yesterday.

Saturday’s demonstrat­ion brought together a multi-racial crowd, many holding signs such as “Stop Police Rage” and “Power to the People.” It was led by retired National Basketball Associatio­n player Matt Barnes, who grew up in the area and had two stints with the Sacramento Kings franchise.

The death of Clark, a 22-year-old father of two, was the latest in a string of killings of black men by police that have triggered street protests and fueled a renewed national debate about bias in the US criminal justice system.

“We’re here today to raise awareness, to come together peacefully and to have some accountabi­lity for the officers, not only in Sacramento but across the country, who have been doing this,” Barnes told the Sacramento Bee. Some of Clark’s relatives attended the gathering in a city plaza. It followed a more heated protest overnight, during which demonstrat­ors yelled expletives at police clad in riot gear.

Clark was shot on the night of March 18 by police responding to a report that someone was breaking windows. Police said the officers feared he had a gun, but that he was later found to have been holding a phone.

Police have said he was moving toward officers in a menacing way. The shooting was captured on a body cam video released by police.

On Friday, an attorney for Clark’s family released a private autopsy showing most of the eight bullets that hit Clark struck him in the back, contradict­ing the police version of events.

Clark was shot six times in the back, once in the side and once in the leg, said the attorney, Benjamin Crump.

“This independen­t autopsy affirms that Stephon was not a threat to police and was slain in another senseless police killing under increasing­ly questionab­le circumstan­ces,” Crump said.

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