The Palm Beach Post

St. Louis police defend shooting

Chief says teen was armed; death spurs new protests.

- By Jim Suhr and Jim Salter Associated Press

ST. LOUIS — The police chief on Thursday defended the fatal shooting of a black 18-year-old who was killed by two white officers in a confrontat­ion that drew protesters and unrest back to the streets.

Protesters pledged to stand firm. Said the director of a group called the Organizati­on for Black Struggle: “We will not go away.”

Mansur Ball-Bey, who police said had a handgun, was shot as officers raided a home in a violence-plagued part of north St. Louis. Within an hour of Wednesday’s shooting, more than 100 people converged on the scene, taunting officers and decrying the use of deadly force.

A vacant building and at least one car were torched, police said. Officers responded with tear gas and arrested at least nine people on charges of impeding traffic and resisting arrest.

The scene unfolded less than two weeks after violence marred the anniversar­y of the day Michael Brown was fatally wounded by a white officer in nearby Ferguson. His death launched the national Black Lives Matter movement.

St. Louis Police Chief Sam Dotson said the crowd-control tactics were justified because officers were being hit with bottles and bricks and protesters refused to clear out of the roadway.

“I’d certainly much rather our officers focused in the neighborho­ods, intercedin­g violence before it happens,” Dotson said Thursday, noting that some in the neighborho­od implored police to leave them alone.

“It’s kind of ironic that we’re in that neighborho­od where police services are most needed, and people are telling us not to do our jobs.”

Activists vowed to continue their efforts.

“We have a right to live in freedom and specifical­ly free from fear,” said Montague Simmons, executive director of the Organizati­on for Black Struggle. “This can’t go unchecked. We’re going to stay in the street. No matter what (police) put forward, we are not going to stop.”

The latest shooting happened while officers were serving a search warrant. They encountere­d BallBey and another suspect running from the home, police said.

Ball-Bey turned and pointed a handgun at the officers, who shot him, authoritie­s said. He died at the scene.

 ?? AP ?? Police stand guard as firefighte­rs battle a blaze at a vacant house that was set on fire during protests Wednesday after a black teen died in a confrontat­ion with officers.
AP Police stand guard as firefighte­rs battle a blaze at a vacant house that was set on fire during protests Wednesday after a black teen died in a confrontat­ion with officers.

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