Slide Show|15 Photos
Protests in Ferguson and Across the Country
Protests in Ferguson and Across the Country
CreditWhitney Curtis for The New York Times
FERGUSON, Mo. â After a chaotic night of demonstrations that erupted in many fires, frequent bursts of gunshots, looting and waves of tear gas, Gov. Jay Nixon said early Tuesday that he would send additional National Guard troops to help quell the worst violence this battered St. Louis suburb has seen since a white police officer shot and killed an unarmed black teenager in August.
In a tweet, Governor Nixon said he was meeting with law enforcement and National Guard on Tuesday "to ensure people and property will be protected.â
âViolence like we saw last night cannot be repeated,â he said.
The hours of unrest followed the announcement on Monday evening that a grand jury had chosen not to indict the officer, Darren Wilson, for the death of Michael Brown. St. Louis County reported that 61 people had been arrested.
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âI really donât have any hesitation in telling you that I didnât see a lot of peaceful protest out there tonight, and Iâm disappointed about that,â Jon Belmar, the St. Louis County police chief, said early Tuesday at a news conference. âIâm not saying there werenât folks out there that were out there for the right reason â Iâm not saying that wasnât the case â but I am saying that, unfortunately, this spun out of control.â
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Play Video|1:36
Nation Reacts to Ferguson Decision
Nation Reacts to Ferguson Decision
People around the country protested after a St. Louis County grand jury decided not to bring charges against Darren Wilson, a police officer who fatally shot an unarmed teenager.
Video by Quynhanh Do on Publish Date November 25, 2014. Photo by Sam Hodgson for The New York Times.
Chief Belmar said demonstrators had set fire to at least a dozen buildings in and around Ferguson, and estimated that he had heard about 150 gunshots. The police, he said, did not fire any live ammunition.
Asked whether he would call the unrest that unfolded in Ferguson a riot, the chief replied, âOh yeah, this fits.â
Fires continued to burn into Tuesday, and some of the flames and smoke on West Florissant Avenue, a main thoroughfare that was an epicenter of violence in August, lapped over the fence lines behind the storefronts, swooping perilously close to homes.
âItâs horrible, horrible, horrible, horrible,â said Tammy Ruffin, 54, standing in stinging smoke that swept over her house Tuesday morning. âI knew this was going to happen.â
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From Page 34 of Officer Wilson's Testimony
At this point it looked like he was almost bulking up to run through the shots, like it was making him mad that I'm shooting at him.
And the face that he had was looking straight through me, like I wasn't even there, I wasn't even anything in his way.
View annotated transcript of Officer Wilson's Testimony »
Although she said that she, too, was upset that Officer Wilson had not been indicted, âItâs the wrong reaction,â she said.
The outbreak of violence played out even as President Obama spoke from the White House and pleaded for calm and restraint from both the police and the protesters.
âFirst and foremost, we are a nation built on the rule of law,â Mr. Obama said. âAnd so we need to accept that this decision was the grand juryâs to make.â
Speaking at a news conference in Clayton, Mo., Robert P. McCulloch, the St. Louis County prosecuting attorney, described the series of events that led to the shooting, as well as the evidence presented to the 12-member grand jury. He detailed an altercation inside Officer Wilsonâs vehicle, after which Officer Wilson had Mr. Brownâs blood on his weapon, shirt and pants, the prosecutor said, as well as swelling and redness on his face.
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Documents Released in the Ferguson Case
But the words spoken by Mr. Obama and Mr. McCulloch seemed distant here on a night when screams and gunshots echoed through the streets, demonstrators looted stores and set vehicles ablaze, and officers were pelted with rocks and bricks. Demonstrations also played out across the country, including in Atlanta; Los Angeles; New York; Oakland, Calif.; and Philadelphia. The demonstrations were largely peaceful.
In Ferguson, the unrest that began outside the police station quickly spread through other parts of the city and region, as people braved chilly temperatures to take to the streets. In St. Louis, protesters shuttered Interstate 44 and marched along Grand Boulevard in the southern part of the city.
Disorder broke out moments after Mr. McCulloch announced that Mr. Wilson would not face charges for the Aug. 9 shooting.
Mr. Brownâs mother, Lesley McSpadden, and stepfather, Louis Head, stood with protesters outside the barricaded Ferguson police station as Mr. McCulloch made the decision public. As Ms. McSpadden cried, Mr. Head turned and yelled, with an expletive injected, âBurn this down!â
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The crowd began to roar, and some demonstrators rushed toward a fence near which police officers had assembled.
âYou need to disperse,â a voice over the loudspeaker of an armored police vehicle said after protesters threw rocks at officers, vandalized buildings and set fire to a police squad car. âLeave the area immediately.â
Almost on cue, right after Mr. McCulloch said that Officer Wilson would not be charged, cars began flooding what was an empty West Florissant Avenue. Outraged pedestrians foretold the volatility that ensued.
As the unrest began in some parts of Ferguson, the police initially held back. On West Florissant, demonstrators shattered windows at a McDonaldâs restaurant and a wireless phone store, and they removed wooden boards that were intended to protect a liquor store.
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Michael Brownâs Mother Reacts
Michael Brownâs Mother Reacts
Lesley McSpadden, mother of Michael Brown, reacted to a grand juryâs decision not to indict the police officer who killed her son.
Video by Brent McDonald on Publish Date November 25, 2014.
But the police eventually returned to the streets with significant force. As the authorities regained control of most of West Florissant, they formed a line with armored vehicles to restrict access and threatened to arrest those who remained on the street.
âYou need to stop destroying the city of Ferguson,â an officer said over a loudspeaker.
Chief Belmar said the initial, hands-off tactics by the police were intended to allow protesters to stage peaceful demonstrations, but he said that the situation ultimately grew so unstable that it required a more forceful approach.
But Rev. Waltrina Middleton, who traveled here from Chicago to help maintain peace, blamed the police for aggression. âI think theyâre going over the top,â she said. âA lot of what you see is a response to the aggressive nature of the police.â
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Locations of Violence After the Announcement
Ferguson Police
Department
Site of Michael
Brown’s death
Ferguson Market
and Liquor
Ferguson Police
Department
Site of Michael
Brown’s death
Ferguson Market
and Liquor
Ferguson Police
Department
Site of Michael
Brown’s death
Fires
Violence or looting
A variety of businesses in the Ferguson area, including nail shops, a Walgreens and a public storage facility, went up in flames. Firefighters, the police said, could not easily reach burning businesses because the conditions were too dangerous.
Gunfire rang out frequently throughout the night â sometimes sounding like it came from an automatic weapon â forcing protesters and reporters along the strip to rush for cover.
The scenes of fire and smoke throughout the city were both intimidating and captivating to residents of the area. Mike Jones, 30, who lives on the north side of St. Louis, said he was watching the events unfold from his home but then raced out to assess the situation in person. He had mixed feelings about what he saw. The black community needed to take a stand, he said, but the looting and fires only take money away from people.
âPeople, theyâre only able to express themselves so many ways,â said Mr. Jones, who is black. âItâs never a win-win situation.â
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Graphic: Q. and A.: What Happened in Ferguson?
In a terse statement issued just after 1 a.m., the office of Mr. Nixon, who visited Ferguson hours before the grand juryâs announcement, said the governor had ordered more members of the National Guard into the city, but did not specify how many.
âThe Guard is providing security at the Ferguson Police Department, which will allow additional law enforcement officers to protect the public,â the statement said.
On Monday night, National Guard soldiers had been assigned to protect, among other locations, a police command post and an electrical substation. That approach, though, frustrated Fergusonâs mayor, James Knowles III, as the unrest spread.
âTheyâre here in the area,â Mr. Knowles said, âI donât know why theyâre not deploying.â
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Timeline: Tracking the Events in the Wake of Michael Brownâs Shooting
It remained unclear what other steps the authorities would take to manage protests that were expected to continue. Earlier this year, Mr. Nixon briefly imposed a midnight curfew in Ferguson.
Captain Ronald S. Johnson of the Missouri State Highway Patrol, one of the commanders overseeing the police response, deflected a question about whether Missouri officials might reinstate a curfew.
âA curfew wouldnât have made a difference tonight,â he said.
Just up the street from Fergusonâs besieged police station, several patrons, most of them white, drank and socialized in Marleyâs Bar and Grill. The television showed scenes of fire and chaos, and outside police officers with riot gear stood toe-to-toe with agitated crowds. Inside, there was an air of relaxation.
Chief Belmar described the night as an especially treacherous one for police officers, and officials displayed a .45-caliber semiautomatic pistol they seized from a protester who was stopped for failing to disperse on South Florissant Road.
The nightâs events clearly unnerved Captain Johnson, who grew up in the area.
âOur communityâs got to take responsibility for what happened tonight, what happened tonight as far as tearing our community apart,â he said. âWe definitely have done something here that is going to impact our community for a long time.â
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