Friday, 12 August 2016

2nd anniversary of Michael Brown's death

<p>Shots fired during a protest in Ferguson, Mo., on the 2nd anniversary of Michael Brown’s death</p><p>Sharon Cowan chants Sharon Cowan chants as she marches Tuesday, Aug. 9, 2016, in Ferguson, Mo., on the second anniversary of the death of Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old who was shoot by a white police officer. (J.B. Forbes/St. Louis Post-Dispatch via AP)</p>

Gunfire broke out during a demonstration in Ferguson, Missouri, on the second anniversary of Michael Brown’s death, disrupting what had been a peaceful gathering Tuesday night but apparently wounding no one. Witnesses told an Associated Press reporter that a car sped through a group of protesters who were blocking a street during the demonstration marking two years since the unarmed black 18-year-old’s fatal shooting by a white police officer. They said the car struck a young man so hard that he flew into the air. 

As the car drove away, shots were fired, they said. “A lady came down and hit a protester — knocked the shoes off his feet,” said Sharon Cowan, who was at the scene. “Hit him, and he rolled and he bounced.” The man appeared to be badly injured and was put into a private car to be taken to a hospital, she said. Heather De Mian, who frequently livestreams protests in the St. Louis area, said she screamed when the man was hit. “Then when the bullets flew, I started screaming some more,” she said. Police responded to reports of gunfire but had found no evidence that anyone had been struck, said Ferguson spokesman Jeff Small, who declined to speculate about why the shots were fired. By around 10 p.m., the protesters had disbanded. 

Earlier in the day, a few hundred people gathered for a memorial service and moment of silence along Canfield Drive at the spot where Brown was fatally shot by officer Darren Wilson after a confrontation on Aug. 9, 2014. A state grand jury declined to press charges against Wilson, and the U.S. Justice Department later cleared him, concluding that he had acted in self-defense. He resigned in November 2014. Brown’s death led to months of sometimes-violent protests in Ferguson. 

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