Ferguson protests peaceful as grand jury inquiry opens

US attorney general meets family of Michael Brown and promises thorough investigation

Demonstrators take a break from walking at the approved assembly area set up for them while they protest the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, USA, last night. Photograph: Larry W Smith/EPA.
Demonstrators take a break from walking at the approved assembly area set up for them while they protest the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, USA, last night. Photograph: Larry W Smith/EPA.

Small crowds staged largely peaceful protests last night over the fatal shooting of a black teenager by a white police officer in Ferguson, Missouri, the calmest night since riots erupted over the racially charged killing.

US attorney general Eric Holder met the parents of 18-year-old Michael Brown and promised his department would hold a thorough investigation into a case that has reignited a debate over the justice system’s treatment of African Americans.

“I am the attorney general of the United States, but I am also a black man...I can remember being stopped on the New Jersey turnpike on two occasions and accused of speeding. Pulled over,” Mr Holder told a community meeting in the St Louis suburb.

A grand jury also began hearing evidence in the case yesterday, though protesters stepped up their demands that the local criminal investigation be turned over to a special prosecutor.

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A few gunshots rang out overnight, at least one officer was hit by a bottle and police said early today that six people had been arrested, much fewer than the scores detained in the past nights of riots and looting.

“We saw a different crowd that came out tonight. We didn’t have as many agitators and, as I said, criminals in the crowd,” said Missouri State Highway Patrol Capt Ron Johnson, a black officer appointed to oversee security last week.

“The trend is good. Crowds were smaller, they were calm and orderly.”

An hour before sundown, groups of protesters began marching peacefully along a main thoroughfare that has been the scene of nightly demonstrations and sporadic violence, chanting: “Hands up, don’t shoot.”

A thunderstorm struck just after dark, scattering demonstrators, including an angry crowd that had surrounded a couple carrying a pro-police sign.

Members of the clergy were seen in the crowd, helping direct the march and acting as intermediaries between police and demonstrators.

Mr Holder, the first African-American to take on the role of the top US law enforcement official, met students and community leaders in the St Louis suburb.

The Justice Department has launched an investigation to whether federal prosecutors can bring criminal charges against Darren Wilson, the police officer involved in the August 9th shooting.

The turmoil has cast the St Louis suburb of 21,000 people into the international spotlight as a symbol of often troubled US race relations. Ferguson is predominantly black, but its police force, political leadership and public education administration are dominated by white officials.

St Louis County prosecuting attorney Bob McCulloch said his office could continue presenting evidence to the separate grand jury investigation through mid-October.

“On one side, people are saying: ‘You’re rushing to justice,’ and on the other side, they’re saying: ‘You’re dragging this thing out,’” he told a news conference. “We’re going to present this as expeditiously as possible, but we are not going to present it in a half-hearted manner.”

Outside Mr McCulloch’s office, scores of protesters led by clergy members called for his removal from the case. They also demanded the appointment of a special prosecutor, an expedited grand jury proceeding and the immediate arrest of the police officer, Mr Wilson, who has been placed on leave.

Mr McCulloch’s father was a police officer killed in the line of duty by a black man. “There is no trust in Bob McCulloch,” said Clinton Stancil, senior pastor of Wayman AME Church in St. Louis. “We are seeking justice. We don’t think he can be fair.”

Mr McCulloch has repeatedly promised a fair and impartial investigation.

Accounts of Mr Brown’s slaying differ. According to police, Mr Wilson reported that Mr Brown reached into the policeman’s cruiser when Mr Wilson approached him on the street, then grabbed for the officer’s gun.

A companion of Mr Brown said the teenager was initially shot after the officer tried to grab him through the car window and again after Mr Brown stopped and put his hands in the air.

Hundreds of people have already been interviewed and federal medical examiners have performed an independent autopsy, the third conducted in the killing.

Reuters