• OzzModz is no longer taking registrations. All registrations are being redirected to Snog's Site
    All addons and support is available there now.

State, county take over security at Ferguson protests

Luke Skywalker

Super Moderator
{vb:raw ozzmodz_postquote}:
Get the news
Log In or Subscribe to skip

643 15 [h=6]Share This Story![/h]Let friends in your social network know what you are reading about

635617488597402770-GTY-465953872.jpg
[h=4]State, county take over security at Ferguson protests[/h]In the wake of the wounding of two police officers outside the Ferguson police department during demonstrations, the Missouri highway patrol and St. Louis County police were taking over security at any renewed protests.

{# #}
[h=4]Sent![/h]A link has been sent to your friend's email address.



[h=4]Posted![/h]A link has been posted to your Facebook feed.



[h=6]Join the Nation's Conversation[/h]To find out more about Facebook commenting please read the Conversation Guidelines and FAQs






29906170001_4107382506001_video-still-for-video-4107332890001.jpg
[h=2]UP NEXT[/h][h=2]03[/h]


While police still do not have a suspect in the shooting of two cops early Thursday morning in Ferguson, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar says a handgun was most likely the weapon used. VPC


An agent with the Department of Alcohol Tobacco and Firearms arrives to investigate the scene outside the Ferguson (Mo.) Police Department on Thursday.(Photo: Michael B. Thomas, Getty Images)


FERGUSON, Mo. — After the wounding of two police officers outside the Ferguson police department during demonstrations, the Missouri highway patrol and St. Louis County police were taking over security Thursday night at any renewed protests, St. Louis County police officials said.
Mayor John Knowles was notified that the highway patrol and county would take over the security duties from the Ferguson police department "until further notice," the county police department said in a statement.
29906170001_4107671158001_video-still-for-video-4107645578001.jpg
[h=2]UP NEXT[/h][h=2]03[/h]


Police searched a home in Ferguson Thursday morning, following the shooting of two officers. According to neighbors, three people were taken away in handcuffs. A car was also towed from the home. VPC

Routine police service remains in the hands of the embattled Ferguson police department, whose chief resigned in the wake of scathing criticism of the force by the Justice Department for racially biased policing.
St. Louis County police chief Jon Belmar had called for a "measured response" to the shooting of the two officers around midnight Wednesday, but reserved the right to beef up security as warranted.
The two officers "took a very hard hit" and were seriously injured, but will not sustain long-term injuries, he said. They were released from the hospital Thursday morning.
"We were lucky by God's grace that we didn't lose two officers last night," Belmar told reporters. "We could have buried two police officers over this. ... It's a miracle we haven't had any instances similar to this in the summer and fall."
Police recovered shell casings at the scene and fanned out across the city looking for the shooter.
A St. Louis County SWAT team stormed a home about four blocks from the police station Thursday morning, clambering on top off the roof, KSDK-TV reported.
Neighbors said three people were taken from the home in handcuffs. Police said they were taken in for questioning, but there were no immediate arrests.
The shootings occurred as demonstrators were winding up a protest following the resignation of the city's police chief in the wake of a scathing Justice Department report alleging bias in the police department and court.
"This is really an ambush," he said. "You can't see it coming. You don't understand that it's going to happen and you're basically defenseless from the fact that it is happening to you at the time. "
Belmar said one of the officers, a 32-year-old, seven-year veteran from nearby Webster Groves, was shot below his right eye. The bullet lodged near his right ear, he said.
The second officer, a 41-year-old with 14 years on the St. Louis County force, was hit in the shoulder by a bullet that came out his back.
At the time of the shooting, Belmar said, the number of demonstrators had dwindled from around 150 to about 75 and the number of police at the scene had dropped to about 40.
He said the two wounded officers were standing in a line of 20 to 25 other officers when three or four shots were fired from about 125 feet away.
29906170001_4106847026001_video-still-for-video-4106743665001.jpg
[h=2]UP NEXT[/h][h=2]03[/h]


Two police officers are hospitalized after being shot outside the Ferguson Police Department. One officer was hit in the face, the other in the shoulder. Protesters gathered there after the police chief announced his resignation on Wednesday. VPC

"I feel very confident that whoever did this was there for the wrong reason, not the right reason, and came there for whatever nefarious reason it was," Belmar said in a news conference. "But I do feel like there was an unfortunate association with that gathering."
635617302990162865-AX233-3E8C-9.JPG
Police mobilize in the parking lot of the Ferguson Police Station after two police officers were shot while standing guard in front of the Ferguson Police Station on March 12.<span style="color: Red;">*</span>(Photo: St. Louis Post-Dispatch/AP)

Jeff Roorda, who heads the St. Louis Police Officers Association, said the shooting sent a chill through the law enforcement community.
He called on state and county officials to restrict protests to daytime hours.
"This is a very volatile situation," Roorda said. "You have outside agitators racing to be here. This isn't safe for police, community or peaceful protesters."
Roorda said he's spoken to the police officer who was shot in the shoulder and that he was doing remarkably well considering the circumstances.
Police officers at the scene last night said were jolted by the timing of the incident. The protests were breaking up and only a few dozen demonstrators were left when the shots were fired.
"There's been a recurring phenomenon throughout the protests where you see the flash-points, the bad things coming ," he said. "But last night, as it was described to me by many of the cops that were here here, it wasn't that way. The crowd was just mulling around. A lot of the protesters were starting to disperse. No one saw it coming."
The shootings came hours after Ferguson officials announced that Police Chief Thomas Jackson, who will step down March 19.
Jackson, 57, became the third top city official to leave following the release of the Justice Department report. Judge Ronald Brockmeyer and City Manager John Shaw resigned earlier this week.
Lt. Col. Al Eickhoff is serving as acting chief until the city completes a nationwide search for a new police chief, the city said in a news release. Jackson will receive a severance payment of approximately $100,000 and health insurance for one year.
Belmar said he has called for a "measured response" to the shootings, but reserved the right to call upon the highway patrol for additional help if necessary.
He said police are planning to assess their security plans outside the Ferguson Police Department and talk to protesters and community leaders about how to move forward.
When asked about security in the area moving forward, Belmar said it is very difficult to sustain this kind of situation without injuries to the public or police officers.
"I think we need to re-evaluate that, and that's one of the things I've been doing since my phone rang at midnight tonight," said Belmar. "We're going to be looking for different ways to approach this. Obviously my first priority is to the community, but that's followed very very closely to my police officers and making sure that they're able to do what they're supposed to do out there in a safe manner."
President Obama condemned the shootings on Thursday, saying in a tweet that "violence against police is unacceptable." "Our prayers are with the officers in MO," he wrote. "Path to justice is one all of us must travel together."
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder sharply condemned the shootings as a "disgusting and coward attack." "What happened last night was a pure ambush," he said. "This was not someone trying to bring healing to Ferguson, but someone who wants to stoke unrest."
Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon said in a statement that his thoughts and prayers were with the officers and their families.
"Each day, our law enforcement officers risk their lives to protect the public and the fact that these officers appear to have been intentionally targeted is deeply troubling," Nixon said.
St. Louis County Executive Steve Stenger said doesn't believe the shooting will set back any gains made in the city.
"I don't consider this incident a setback toward healing," he said. "I don't believe it's going to affect any healing process that is going on in the community. I think the community at large is fully supportive of these police officers and probably wishes the very best for them."
Knowles and the Ferguson City Council released a statement thanking law enforcement agencies that have helped the city in the past seven months and reaching out the community.
"While we respect the right to peacefully protest, we cannot continue to move forward under threats of violence and destruction to our community," the statement said. "We ask our residents and clergy in this area to partner with us as we make our way through this process."
The shootings came as a shock to the crowds gathered outside the police department. DeRay McKesson, 29, one of the most visible protesters in Ferguson, was sitting in his car and about to tweet that the crowd was thinning out when he heard about four gunshots to his right.
"It was like pow, pow, pow, pow — like four consistent shots," he said. "I was looking straight up at the police department and I see an officer fall and I see officers surround him."
McKesson said protesters, who had been gathered at the police department since 8 p.m. Wednesday, hit the ground as soon as the shots rang out and scattered trying to get to safety amid the chaos.
"Every single gun any officer had was drawn and they were all behind something," he said, adding that officers ran and ducked behind cars and the department building.
St. Louis County Alderman posted a Vine showing people crawling on the ground after police reacted to the gunshots.
Heather De Mian, 44, of St. Charles, Mo., was live streaming the scene outside of the police department when the shots rang out.
"Those gunshots went right past my head," said De Mian, who is in a wheelchair and tried to duck down. "I tried to go down low so my head wasn't sticking out."
She said soon after the shots a swarm of St. Louis County Police crime scene cars showed up and later, a group of officers marched up the hill on a side street in the direction of where the sound of gunshots had come from.
Meanwhile, De Mian is adamant that the shooters were not with demonstrators.
"The shots came from a block away from the protests," she said. "It's incredibly dangerous to try to link the protesters to this without evidence. It could be someone trying to frame the protesters or someone who was aiming at the protesters and was a bad shot. Whoever shot put everyone's life in danger."
USA TODAY
Ferguson, Mo., police chief resigns



An Aug. 9 shooting of unarmed African-American teen Michael Brown by white Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson set off weeks of unrest and violence in the St. Louis suburb.
Brown's family issued a statement Thursday condemning the police shootings. "We reject any kind of violence directed toward members of law enforcement," the statement said. They also denounced the actions of "stand-alone agitators" who might try to derail the a peaceful movement addressed at police brutalit
Wilson was not charged in Brown's killing and the Justice Department found no reason to bring civil rights charges against him.
Contributing: Jimmy Bernhard, KSDK-TV, St. Louis; Associated Press
29906170001_4106833892001_video-still-for-video-4106815216001.jpg
[h=2]UP NEXT[/h][h=2]03[/h]


Two St. Louis County Police officers were shot outside the Ferguson Police Department early Thursday. St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said one officer was shot in the shoulder and one was shot in the face. Both officers were conscious.

0) { %> 0) { %>
0) { %>




Powered By WizardRSS.com | Full Text RSS Feed
 
Back
Top