As Ferguson manhunt continues, Michael Brown鈥檚 family defends police
Many of those who criticized police over Michael Brown's shooting claimed solidarity with Ferguson, Mo., officers after two were shot early Thursday morning. Mr. Brown鈥檚 family said violence against police 鈥榗annot and will not be tolerated.'
People take part in a candlelight vigil on Thursday in Ferguson, Mo. Two police officers were shot early Thursday morning in front of the Ferguson Police Department during a protest following the resignation of the city's police chief.
Jeff Roberson/AP
The family of Michael Brown, and others who have criticized police actions in Ferguson, Mo., made a strong show of solidarity with local police, after two officers were nearly killed by gunfire early聽Thursday聽morning outside the Ferguson Police Department.
As officers hunted two suspects, one of whom could be the shooter, about 50 protesters held a vigil on behalf of the injured lawmen.
Notably, the parents of Mr. Brown, whose death last year sparked a wide-ranging national debate about the extent of racial bias in how police dispatch deadly force, warned that violence against law enforcement 鈥渃annot and will not be tolerated.鈥
While a variety of activist groups have taken part in protests following the聽Aug. 9聽death of Brown at the hands of a Ferguson police officer, spokesmen for core groups of protesters denounced the violence aimed at police.聽
There鈥檚 "no way [that the shooting suspects are] representative of the thousands of people ... who have been protesting," said聽Antonio French, a St. Louis alderman.
Undeniably, tensions between police and the community were ratcheted up by Thursday's shootings, and some conservative websites highlighted Twitter commentary celebrating the fact that officers were injured. The shootings came just after the protesters achieved one of their goals: the resignation of Ferguson Police Chief Thomas Jackson, news of which sparked a raucous rally that had begun to wind down when shots rang out.
Yet as a manhunt for the shooter entered a second day, the overall response from a stressed-out city聽seeking institutional reform and racial reconciliation mirrored comments by President Obama, who said police officers are doing a 鈥渢errifically tough job鈥 in managing at-times rowdy protests while letting people exercise their First Amendment rights.
The shootings came after the release of a damning Department of Justice report on the Ferguson Police Department, detailing ways that racial bias underpinned a regressive policy of using police officers as municipal revenue collectors, with black people bearing the brunt of the financial and personal costs. The report was issued at the same time the Justice Department said it had no cause to bring civil rights charges against former officer Darren Wilson, because the evidence showed Mr. Wilson shot Brown in legitimate self-defense, not out of personal bias or animus.
Attorney General Eric Holder has been personally involved in the investigation into discriminatory practices at the police department, and he lashed out at the shooter聽on Thursday, calling him or her a 鈥減unk鈥 who was 鈥渢rying to sow discord in an area that was trying to get its act together, trying to bring together a community that had been fractured for too long.鈥
Yet critics argue that the federal focus on Ferguson may also have exacerbated the situation.
Given the personal聽involvement in Ferguson by Mr. Holder, America鈥檚 top law enforcement official, and Mr. Obama, who has not visited Ferguson but spoke about it publicly, the debate has become polarizing to a dangerous point, says Linda Chavez, a syndicated columnist.
鈥淣o, [Holder] didn鈥檛 intend for someone to try to kill two police officers,鈥 Ms. Chavez writes. 鈥淏ut by portraying the police department as racist to the core, he contributed to the culture of vengeance that led to the shooting.鈥
So far, the names or affiliations of the shooter are not known. Brown鈥檚 family called the shootings the work of 鈥渙utside agitators.鈥
The protests Wednesday聽night were in part a celebration of the resignation of Mr. Jackson, the public face of the embattled department. Protesters also say they want the resignation of James Knowles, Ferguson鈥檚 elected mayor. Even with the resignation of six top officials, leaders in Ferguson have struggled to convince protesters that the city can effectively root out institutional racism.
Shortly after聽midnight on Thursday, several shots rang out and two officers went down. Both sustained serious, but not life-threatening, injuries. Both were released from the hospital聽on Thursday.
For police, the shootings have highlighted the depth to which the mostly black Ferguson community and a mostly white police force remain on edge. A sense of looming violence has dogged the seven months following Brown鈥檚 death, police say. 鈥淚 want everybody to understand how difficult this is,鈥 added St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar.
But concern among protesters for the safety of police officers also remained palpable. 鈥淣obody鈥檚 happy about this day,鈥 Bob Hudgins, a protester running for City Council, told The New York Times.
Obama weighed in on the shootings聽Thursday聽night during his appearance on 鈥Jimmy Kimmel Live,鈥 telling Mr. Kimmel that the perpetrators are 鈥渃riminals鈥 and should be treated as such.
"They need to be arrested, and then what we need to do is to make sure that like-minded, good-spirited people on both sides 鈥 law enforcement who have a terrifically tough job and people who understandably don't want to be harassed just because of their race 鈥 that we're able to work together to come up with some good answers,鈥 he said.
In a personally composed tweet posted earlier聽Thursday, Obama wrote: 鈥淧ath to justice is one all of us must travel together."