st. louis post-dispatch ferguson coverage - august 13

7
THE NO. 1 ST. LOUIS WEBSITE AND NEWSPAPER Wednesday 08.13.2014 $1.50 Vol. 136, No. 225 ©2014 POST-DISPATCH WEATHERBIRD ® 1 M 82°/62° MOSTLY SUNNY 85°/66° MOSTLY SUNNY WEATHER A18 TODAY TOMORROW Looking for answers Golden Age leading lady Lauren Bacall dies at 89 Obituaries a17 Robin Williams battled depression and drinking Obituaries a17 FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS Sarah Sise, a partner at Bryan Cave, was diagnosed with colon cancer when she was 40. She had no fam- ily history of colon cancer and was 10 years younger than the recommended age for her first colonoscopy screening. She is now in remission after multiple rounds of chemotherapy and surgery following her 2012 diag- nosis. She’s hoping that those who are reluctant to BY KEN LEISER [email protected] > 314-340-8215 st. LOuis • In the past month, Missouri transporta- tion officials quietly removed signs marking a Travel Safe Zone on the seven-mile stretch of Interstate 70 just west of the city limit. The special designation had doubled the fines for speeders ticketed on that part of I-70, angering mo- torists who declared it a poorly disguised money grab. BY LEAH THORSEN [email protected] > 636-937-6249 arnOLd • Former Fox School District employees shredded documents and destroyed electronic files, the district’s chief financial officer said at a School Board meeting Tuesday in which the board asked for a state audit. The district also paid people at rates above those authorized by the board and apparently used money SHARPTON TAKES PULPIT: ‘YOU’VE GOT ISSUES IN THIS CITY’ TENSE QUIET RETURNS TO FERGUSON; LEADERS MEET TO REASSURE RESIDENTS FROM STAFF REPORTS FerGusOn • At two meetings with dis- tinctly different tones, the call Tuesday night was for justice. Packed houses at two churches heard speakers discuss the fatal shooting of Mi- chael Brown, 18, by a Ferguson police officer on Saturday afternoon — a killing that has rocked that suburb and drawn international attention to St. Louis. At Christ the King United Church of Christ near Black Jack, speakers included Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, who told the standing-room audience, “Justice must not simply be pur- sued, but in fact achieved. Instead of burning bridges in anger, we must rebuild them with love.” The racially diverse audience of about 400, many of whom were ministers, politely ap- plauded the speakers, even Ferguson Police Al Sharpton brings the glare of the national spotlight back to St. Louis A8 Justice Department gets more involved in police matters A7 Blacks account for 86 pct. of traffic stops in Ferguson A7 Children exposed to unrest feel purpose — and fear A8 Hacker activists target Ferguson, county police chief A8 McClellan: All killings should stir equal outrage A13 Nixon should start planning a Ferguson Commission Our View, A14 Letters, social media and other opinions A14-A15 Live updates STLTODAY.COM PHOTOS BY CHriS Lee [email protected] A group of young protesters left the QuikTrip area Tuesday night and walked to Greater St. Mark Missionary Baptist Church to join a gathering with Michael Brown’s family and the Rev. Al Sharpton. They entered the church chanting, “Hands up, don’t shoot.” The gathering at the church was in response to the police shooting of Brown, 18, on Saturday. Louis Head, stepfather of Michael Brown and Lesley McSpadden, Michael Brown’s mother, comfort each other Tuesday at the church. ‘Travel Safe Zones’ being removed from interstates See INTERSTATES Page a6 At-home DNA-based test for colon cancer is approved See COLON Page a6 OUTCRY AND RESOLVE With Fox left in disarray, board seeks state audit See FOX Page a6 See BROWN Page a9 NEW 2014 CADILLAC ATS $ 299 PER MONTH 36 MONTH LEASE 2.5 L *36 month lease, 10K miles per year, tax, title, license, additional, $2,439 down cash or trade due at signing with approved credit through Ally Financing. Example down payment, $0 security deposit.Total cost of lease $13,203. For qualified buyers. See dealer for details. www.bommaritocadillac.com 314-266-4001 I-70 Cave Springs Exit, 4190 N. Service Rd., St. Peters Bommarito 636-928-2300 1-888-590-0854 Toll Free *Artwork for Illustration Only.

Upload: bob-rose

Post on 03-Apr-2016

214 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

 

TRANSCRIPT

  • T H E N O . 1 S T. L O U I S W E B S I T E A N D N E W S P A P E R

    Wednesday 08.13.2014 $1.50

    Vol. 136, No. 225 2014POST-DISPATCH WEATHERBIRD

    1 M

    82/62MOSTLY SUNNY

    85/66MOSTLY SUNNY

    WeatherA18

    tODaY

    tOMOrrOW

    Looking for answers Golden Age leading lady Lauren Bacall dies at 89Obituaries a17

    Robin Williams battled depression and drinkingObituaries a17

    From staFF and wire reports

    Sarah Sise, a partner at Bryan Cave, was diagnosed with colon cancer when she was 40. She had no fam-ily history of colon cancer and was 10 years younger than the recommended age for her first colonoscopy screening.

    She is now in remission after multiple rounds of chemotherapy and surgery following her 2012 diag-nosis. Shes hoping that those who are reluctant to

    By Ken [email protected] > 314-340-8215

    st. LOuis In the past month, Missouri transporta-tion officials quietly removed signs marking a Travel Safe Zone on the seven-mile stretch of Interstate 70 just west of the city limit.

    The special designation had doubled the fines for speeders ticketed on that part of I-70, angering mo-torists who declared it a poorly disguised money grab.

    By Leah [email protected] > 636-937-6249

    arnOLd Former Fox School District employees shredded documents and destroyed electronic files, the districts chief financial officer said at a School Board meeting Tuesday in which the board asked for a state audit.

    The district also paid people at rates above those authorized by the board and apparently used money

    sharpton takes pulpit: youve got issues in this citytense quiet returns to ferguson; leaders meet to reassure residents

    From staFF reports

    FerGusOn At two meetings with dis-tinctly different tones, the call Tuesday night was for justice.

    Packed houses at two churches heard speakers discuss the fatal shooting of Mi-chael Brown, 18, by a Ferguson police officer on Saturday afternoon a killing that has rocked that suburb and drawn international attention to St. Louis.

    At Christ the King United Church of Christ near Black Jack, speakers included Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, who told the standing-room audience, Justice must not simply be pur-sued, but in fact achieved. Instead of burning bridges in anger, we must rebuild them with love.

    The racially diverse audience of about 400, many of whom were ministers, politely ap-plauded the speakers, even Ferguson Police

    Al Sharpton brings the glare of the national spotlight back to St. Louis A8Justice Department gets more involved in police matters A7

    Blacks account for 86 pct. of traffic stops in Ferguson A7

    Children exposed to unrest feel purpose and fear A8

    Hacker activists target Ferguson, county police chief A8

    McClellan: All killings should stir equal outrage A13

    Nixon should start planning a Ferguson Commission Our View, A14

    Letters, social media and other opinions A14-A15

    Live updates STLTODAY.COM

    PHOTOS BY CHriS Lee [email protected] A group of young protesters left the QuikTrip area Tuesday night and walked to Greater St. Mark Missionary Baptist Church to join a gathering with Michael Browns family and the Rev. Al Sharpton. They entered the church chanting, Hands up, dont shoot. The gathering at the church was in response to the police shooting of Brown, 18, on Saturday.

    Louis Head, stepfather of Michael Brown and Lesley McSpadden, Michael Browns mother, comfort each other Tuesday at the church.

    Travel Safe Zones being removed from interstates

    see interstates Page a6

    At-home DNA-based test for colon cancer is approved

    see CoLon Page a6

    outcry and resolve

    With Fox left in disarray, board seeks state audit

    see Fox Page a6

    see Brown Page a9

    NEW 2014 CADILLACATS$299 PER MONTH36 MONTH LEASE

    2.5 L

    *36 month lease, 10K miles per year, tax, title, license, additional,$2,439 down cash or trade due at signing with approved credit throughAlly Financing. Example down payment, $0 security deposit. Total cost

    of lease $13,203. For qualified buyers. See dealer for details.www.bommaritocadillac.com

    314-266-4001I-70 Cave Springs Exit, 4190 N. Service Rd., St. Peters

    Bommarito

    636-928-23001-888-590-0854Toll Free

    *Artwork for Illustration Only.

  • 08.13.2014 Wednesday M 1 sT. LOUIs POsT-dIsPaTCH A7

    Ferguson Police shooting

    Laurie Skrivan [email protected] Betty Davis stands with her daughter Rose Harrison and family friend John McFadden on Tuesday near the burned QuikTrip in Ferguson. Davis son was shot and killed by police in 2013.

    By WAlker Moskop [email protected] 314-340-8349

    Ferguson police are much more likely to stop, search and arrest African-American drivers than white ones. Last year, blacks, who make up a little less than two-thirds of the driving-age population in the North County city, accounted for 86 percent of all stops. When stopped, they were almost twice as likely to be searched as whites and twice as likely to be arrested, though po-lice were less likely to find con-traband on them.

    Pronounced as those statistics may seem, they dont necessar-ily make Ferguson an outlier.

    The figures are provided by the states attorney generals office, which collects the data from police agencies and creates a disparity index comparing the racial breakdown of drivers stopped to the racial breakdown of the driving age population in the police jurisdiction where they were stopped. An index of one means there is no disparity for a particular race. The index for blacks in Ferguson is 1.37.

    Statewide, the disparity in-dex for blacks 1.59 is higher than in Ferguson. The same is true for many other local police jurisdictions.

    On the other hand, the dis-parity index for whites, at 0.38, is one of the lowest in the state. The statewide index is 0.96. University of Missouri-St. Louis criminologist Rick Rosenfeld said the statistics for Ferguson dont stand out from many other St. Louis County municipalities.

    I dont think Ferguson would be at the top of many peoples lists for racial tension between police and the community, he said.

    Rosenfeld also noted that the attorney generals data has some limitations, specifi-cally that it doesnt account for whether drivers live in the juris-diction where theyre stopped. This means that an index could be skewed in an area with inter-state highways, busy roads or shopping centers. Additionally, an officer may not know the race of a driver when making the de-cision to stop someone.

    Rosenfeld said the rate at which drivers are searched is a more useful metric. While the data doesnt prove the existence of racial profiling, the fact that Ferguson police were more likely to search a vehicle when the driver was black yet less likely to find contraband than when the driver was white could be more indicative of a problem, he said.

    Last year, Ferguson police searched 12.1 percent of black drivers they stopped, compared to 6.9 percent for whites. Con-traband was found 22 percent of the time when the driver was black and 34 percent when the driver was white.

    Rosenfeld said he was puz-zled about why the stop rate for whites was so low in Fergu-son. He said one possible fac-tor is that the black popula-tion in the area, as a whole, is younger than the white popula-tion. Older people are less likely to be stopped, he said, and are less likely to be on the roads in general.

    WHAT ARE THE NUMBERS?POLICE STOPS IN FERGUSON

    By ChuCk [email protected] 202-298-6880

    WASHINGTON The U.S. Jus-tice Department has intervened in cases involving more than two dozen local or state law en-forcement departments over the last 20 years.

    The most recent interven-tion is coming in the fatal po-lice shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown in Ferguson on Saturday.

    Since 1997, 21 police depart-ments ranging from East Ha-ven, Conn., to Los Angeles have signed consent agreements with the Justice Department to improve procedures and poli-cies. They often have involved use of force or relationships with minority communities, according to Samuel Walker, a national authority on civil liber-ties, policing and criminal jus-tice policy.

    Not all Justice Department involvement goes as far as con-sent decrees, and the depart-ment does not announce all its investigative activities, particu-larly if it investigates and closes without further action.

    Consent agreements or in-vestigations reached between

    the Justice Department and police forces usually came af-ter broad allegations of police misconduct or, in a few cases, where specific instances spark broader action against a police force with a history of com-plaints against it.

    The Justice Department in-volvement in the Ferguson case has so far been what Attorney General Eric Holder describes as supplementary to local law en-forcement investigations of the shooting.

    U.S. Rep. William Lacy Clay, D-St. Louis, and two other members of Congress on Mon-day called for a broader inves-tigation than the parallel track laid by Holder.

    The concurrent investiga-tion may be insufficient for two reasons, Clay wrote Holder, in a letter co-signed by Reps. John Conyers, D-Mich., and Marcia Fudge, D-Ohio. First, the St. Louis County Police Depart-ment may not be the most ob-jective or credible body to in-vestigate civil rights matters in-volving law enforcement given evidence of racial profiling by that department in the recent past, which Congressman Clay had asked the Department of Justice to investigate.

    Second, only the federal government has the resources, the experience, and the full in-dependence to give this case the close scrutiny that the citizens of Ferguson and the greater St. Louis area deserve.

    The Missouri State Confer-ence of the NAACP in Novem-ber 2013 filed a federal civil rights complaint alleging that St. Louis County police officers racially profiled blacks in and around stores in south St. Louis County and that racism is ram-pant in the departments hiring, firing and discipline.

    The attorney generals reach in cases where race and civil rights violations are potential factors grew in the 1994 Vio-lent Crime Act that passed in the aftermath of the late Rodney Kings beating by Los Angeles police officers.

    The law gave the Justice De-partment power to bring civil suits against law enforcement agencies where a pattern or practice of conduct by law en-forcement officers exists that deprives persons of rights, privileges, and immunities se-cured or protected by the Con-stitution or laws of the United States or by the Constitution or laws of state.

    WHITES BLACKS

    Local population % 34 % 63 %

    Disparity index 0.38 1.37

    Search rate 6.85 % 12.13 %

    Contraband hit rate 34.04 % 21.71 %

    Arrest rate 5.25 % 10.43 %

    Population figures are 2010 census estimates for persons 16 and older who designated a single race. The disparity index is the proportion of stops divided by the proportion of population for a given race.

    SOURCE: Missouri attorney generals office

    BreAkdoWn of driver stops By rACe in ferguson

    JUSTicE dEpT. GETS iNvolvEd iN policE MATTERS

    866-472-9108

    If you or a loved one

    had a heart attack,

    cardio-pulmonary arrest,

    or even death

    during or after dialysis

    Attorney Laura Baughman is responsible for this ad.Dallas, TX (main office),

    Los Angeles, CA, Austin, TX, Baton Rouge, LA

    patientsDialysis

    call

    ADVERTISEMENT

  • A8 ST. LOUIS POST-DISPATCH M 1 WeDneSDAy 08.13.2014

    Looking backComparisons to four other

    racially charged killings in the U.S.

    images and videosView events

    as they transpired

    Live updatesTweets and instant reports

    from the shooting scene

    stltodAy.com

    Ferguson Police shooting

    By lilly [email protected] doug moore [email protected] 314-340-8225

    Where civil rights activist Al Sharpton goes, national attention follows.

    So as the Rev. Sharpton arrived in St. Louis on Tuesday to add his voice to the many who have protested the shooting of Michael Brown, it was seen as an event a kind of validation that the incident had become a national cause.

    Sharpton walked arm-in-arm down-town Tuesday morning with Browns family members, their attorney and clergy, before speaking to a crowd at the Old Courthouse.

    About 50 people and twice as many re-porters heard him call for peace, prayer and a continued push for justice.

    By evening, more than 1,000 people packed a church located half a mile from the shooting as the Baptist preacher and TV host hit on similar themes.

    Known for crisscrossing the country to deploy to civil rights controversies, this is Sharptons mode of operation. Recently, he led the charge against the handling of the Trayvon Martin case, calling the ac-quittal of George Zimmerman last year an atrocity and a slap in the face to those that believe in justice.

    To his critics, Sharpton is a spectacle and a divisive and self-serving one at that.

    To others, he is a galvanizing and potent orator and a mouthpiece for the message of justice.

    Flanked by Michael Browns parents at the Old Courthouse, Sharpton sought to keep the focus on that message.

    This is not a cause for them, Sharpton said. This is not some prop for politics. This is their child.

    Sharpton said the purpose of his visit was to help the Brown family gain justice

    and to ensure federal authorities complete a full investigation.

    He said Brown was killed while showing an arms-in-the-air surrender sign to the police officer.

    Deal with the last sign he had shown, Sharpton said in a booming voice to a re-sponsive crowd, with some clapping in agreement. We want answers why that sign was not respected.

    Sharpton lashed out against violent protests. To become violent in Michael Browns name is to betray the gentile giant that he was, Sharpton said. Dont be a traitor to Michael Brown.

    Baltimore-based Pastor Jamal Bryant joined Sharpton, saying the Brown shoot-ing has become a national event.

    St. Louis is in fact bearing witness for America, he said. The Band-Aid has been ripped off, and all of America is see-ing the open wound of racism exists.

    Tuesday wasnt the first time Sharpton has sought to draw attention to events in St. Louis.

    Perhaps his most notable visit came in 1999, when he was among 125 people arrested for standing on Interstate 70, bringing Monday morning rush hour traf-fic to a halt.

    The action was taken to seek to increase minority participation on highway proj-ects. A construction training program was initiated as a result, and including minor-ity contractors has become a more com-mon practice on various capital projects.

    Four years later, Sharpton was back in St. Louis as a Democratic presidential candidate to push Metro to hire more mi-nority contractors for a MetroLink expan-sion project.

    Less than two months later, in Sep-tember 2003, Sharpton was here urging students to boycott the first day of classes at St. Louis Public Schools. Opponents were upset that a New York management company had been hired to run the school district that year, which included some

    school closings. High first-day attendance numbers showed that Sharptons appear-ance had little bearing.

    Critics have accused Sharpton of stok-ing controversy instead of working for resolution.

    Perhaps Sharptons biggest stumble as a civil rights activist came in 1987 when he fiercely defended Tawana Brawley, a 15-year-old African-American girl who claimed she had been assaulted and raped by six white men, some of them police of-ficers, in upstate New York.

    A grand jury determined Brawley had fabricated her story. Sharpton and two other men were successfully sued for def-amation.

    On Tuesday, Sharpton drew a packed crowd to the Greater St. Mark Missionary Baptist Church, 9950 Glen Owen Drive. He did so at the same hour that faith lead-ers had already organized a competing fo-rum at Christ the King United Church of Christ, on Old Halls Ferry Road.

    Michael Browns cousin, Eric Davis, spoke prior to Sharpton.

    He wasnt the type of kid who wanted to hurt anyone, Davis said of his cousin. What happened on Saturday was they cut my cousins life short.

    Sharpton took to the podium and spoke for more than a half-hour, with the Brown family behind him.

    If you think you are mad, think about how they feel, he said to a crowd that repeatedly thundered in applause and amens.

    Sharpton said he knows St. Louis and mentioned his prior activism here. He said he has been shining a light on injustices for years, making sure what is done in the dark is seen by the world.

    This battle, he told the crowd, will take time.

    People should be in it for the long haul, he said. You have to have a long-term strategy. You cant be mad for two weeks.

    Four-year-old Aubrey Glover struggled with a broom even taller than her to sweep broken glass in the parking lot of a burned-out convenience store the morning after a riot in Fer-

    guson.Her mother, Erica Hampton, 31, woke

    up Aubrey and her brother, Jaden, 10, early Monday in their north St. Louis County home and said they were going to do some cleaning.

    Tearing up buildings and trashing places is not the way to solve anything, she told them. They brought large white trash bags and brooms.

    She called her sister, Dede Patterson, 29, who lives near the street where 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot and killed by a police officer on Saturday. Pattersons young children have slept in the bed with her the past few nights while they heard shouts from the crowds outside.

    I didnt even explain it to them, Pat-terson said. She wasnt sure what to tell them. It was just too much. The QuikTrip is where her 9- and 7-year-old walk for snacks. My kids cant ever come to the store anymore.

    Lets go clean it up, her sister said to her. Lets go.

    Patterson agreed: What I seen I didnt like. ... Its not going to bring him back.

    There is an urgency to do something, anything, to dull the terribleness of the past week. For Hampton, who will com-plete her masters degree in counseling in December, she wanted her children to see her picking up trash around the destroyed building.

    This what you do for your community, she told them.

    There is anger here, not just about the shooting, but toward the vandals who de-stroyed their businesses in their neighbor-hood. Toward those who have changed the conversation from trying to find out what happened and seek justice to the criminal reaction of some.

    They are judging us by this, Patterson said, waving her arms around the parking lot.

    Shamika Williams, 36, stood in the lot with two of her three daughters. They had seen Browns body lying in the street in broad daylight when he was killed. Their mother has been at protests, wanting to add her voice to those calling for a change in the way residents are treated by law en-forcement.

    I dont want them growing up getting mistreated, Williams said. I dont want them growing up afraid of the cops. Why cant we protest? Why cant we grieve? Let us get this out of our system.

    The stories shes heard and things shes seen make her glad she doesnt have a son. If I had a boy, Id be afraid to let him walk the street.

    Beyond anger and grief, there is weari-ness in this area.

    How many times have we seen this scene? How long will we march in streets?

    It seems like this has been going on a while, said Kenyana Shaw, 25, of St. Louis. I cant imagine if this happened to my son.

    A small child stood next to a young, black man speaking angrily to an older man in a parking lot. When I told him I wanted to speak to parents in the area, he became even more upset.

    He shook his head and started walking away from me but kept talking. He said he knew what it was like to be Michael Brown. He said he knew how it felt to be stopped walking down these streets, auto-matically a suspect.

    There was anguish in his voice: They hate us! Their daddies, their granddaddies hated us, and now they hate us!

    There is fear. A woman who owns a hair-braiding sa-

    lon said she told her children to stay in-side all day. She only came to check on her store and planned to lock up and stay home. Her older boys had been friends with Brown.

    Im so scared, she said. There were still parents pushing baby

    carriages down the debris-scattered street, past cracked and broken storefront windows, past graffiti that said kill the police and RIP.

    Randy Casson, 37, stood in a small group with his 11-year-old son, who partially hid behind his fathers legs. His sons eyes were sad. His face somber.

    Casson tried to explain to him that the people who rioted had not learned a better way to express themselves. That they were angry and lashing out in the wrong way.

    It seems like the police and the people are about to go to war, Randy Jr. said.

    I couldnt help my immediate response.Oh, baby, no. Thats not going to hap-

    pen. Why do you think that?I heard there are tanks coming down. This is not Gaza. This is not Iraq. This is the heartland of America.

    By dAvid [email protected]

    FERGUSON The Internet crashed at City Hall here on Tuesday morning. Fer-gusons website went dark. The phones died.

    City officials didnt say what happened only that a flood of traffic aimed at the City Hall website just kept coming.

    But an international group of unnamed computer hackers had warned it would happen. In the hours after 18-year-old Michael Brown was shot and killed by a Ferguson police officer, the group, Anon-ymous, urged residents to the streets.

    And the hackers vowed retribution if police harmed protesters.

    We are watching you very closely, Anonymous distinctive electronic voice rasped in a video posted Monday on Twitter. If you abuse, harass or harm the protesters in Ferguson we will take every Web-based asset of your departments and federal agencies offline.

    The hackers would also, the video con-tinued, begin publicly releasing police of-ficers personal information.

    Then they did. Early Tuesday morning, someone posted the home address and phone number of Jon Belmar, the rela-tively new chief of St. Louis County po-lice. And that was just the beginning.

    The Ferguson protests have been in-

    formed, if not fueled, by a stream of moment-by-moment posts, largely on Twitter. Published instantaneously via cellphones by residents at the scene, the messages have told the world when crowds amass, when police line up, when tear gas flies.

    But Anonymous hackers have reached beyond the Web.

    Anonymous has been operating for nearly a decade. Its hard to even call it a group those insiders who have spoken publicly about the organization describe it more in terms of each individual mis-sion.

    It is an anarchist collective of autono-mous individuals, wrote one hacker who responded to an email from the Post-Dispatch. Most of us are friends and work together, but we are not responsible for anything anyone else in the global collective does.

    That team member, who declined to be identified but said he was out of the country, said the core Ferguson operation is run by about a half-dozen Anonymous operatives, invited by St. Louis activists, with thousands of Anons from about 75 different countries joining in to help.

    And in the wee hours of Tuesday morning, at least one of those hackers began following standard Anonymous protocol: He began scouring the Internet for personal documents regarding Chief Belmar doxxing the man Anony-

    mous estimated was keeping the shoot-ers name secret.

    Just after midnight, someone posting as @TheAnonMessage linked to a Web page listing Belmars address, phone number and the names of his wife and kids.

    At 12:36 a.m., TheAnonMessage posted a photo of Belmars house; at 12:41, his phone number and address, and at 12:46, another missive: ... you said our threats were just hollow. See, that makes us mad.

    Then came the photos, all allegedly portraying his family: His son, asleep on a couch. His wife and daughter, arm-in-arm. He and his wife, together. Nice photo, Jon, TheAnonMessage added. Your wife actually looks good for her age.

    Have you had enough?Finally, at 1:34 p.m. on Tuesday, TheAnonMessage leveled an ultimatum: Jon Belmar, if you dont release the officers name, were releasing your daughters info. You have one hour.

    Then Anonymous gave up.We recognize that Jon Belmar has had

    enough damage done to him, TheAnon-Message wrote at 12:46 p.m. We will save the rest of our energy for the true perpetrator.

    Belmar declined to comment for this story.

    Joel Currier of the Post-Dispatch contributed to this report.

    chiLdren exposed to unrest feeL purpose, fearAisHA sultAn [email protected] > 314-340-8300

    al sharpton in st. louis

    Photos by J.b. Forbes [email protected] Rev. Al Sharpton addresses reporters Tuesday on the steps of the Old Courthouse downtown about the shooting in Ferguson of Michael Brown. Behind Sharpton (from left) is Michael Brown Sr., attorney Benjamin Crump, and Lesley McSpadden, Browns mother.

    hacker activists target ferguson, poLice chief

    under spotLights gLare

  • 08.13.2014 Wednesday M 2 sT. LOUIs POsT-dIsPaTCH A9

    Ferguson Police shooting

    Stay updated Get text alerts, photo galleries and more with the Post-dispatch news appstltodAy.com/Apps

    By ElisA [email protected]

    FERGUSON They sat under a shade tree, putting marker to poster board in the parking lot of a strip mall.

    As the Rev. Al Sharpton held the medias attention in down-town St. Louis on Tuesday, an Il-linois pastor and a Missouri state senator were across the street from the Ferguson Fire Station organizing their own rally to pro-test Saturdays police shooting of Michael Brown.

    The young people arent go-ing to listen to Al Sharpton, said Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal, D-University City They do not lis-ten to older people. They do not listen to pretentious people.

    So instead, she and the Rev.

    Derrick Robinson, who pas-tors a church in East St. Louis, organized a rally hoping to at-tract anyone young people especially who wanted to join them, as long as it was in peace.

    Its our generation thats be-ing affected, said Jerika Tyler, 21, a student at Harris-Stowe State University. I have a 15-year-old brother. He could have been Mi-chael Brown.

    Small rallies and vigils like this one have popped up daily since Brown was shot and killed by a Ferguson police officer on a street outside Canfield Apartments.

    But they have been overshad-owed by whats taken place af-ter sunset, when crowds have become violent, and police have deployed tear gas, rubber bullets and riot gear. Their prayer vigils, they feel, have gone unnoticed.

    The looting, Stefan Horna-day, 21, said, sickens me. But so does police brutality, he said.

    For hours protesters came and went, standing along the strip of grass separating the parking lot from the curb. Some drove in from St. Louis. Many lived in Ferguson. The conversations they held tapped into the under-current of the fear and frustra-tion theyve felt for years with police in and around this north St. Louis County community.

    Tamika McClain, of Breck-enridge, said shes been pulled over numerous times, ticketed for such things as having a non-working taillight or a broken blinker allegations she said were false. Anthony Walsh said he isnt sure how to tell his chil-dren how to avoid being arrested. Its one thing to understand not

    to break the law, he said. But how to tell him how to deal with an ignorant cop?

    In many ways, the death of 18-year-old Brown ignited anger that had been building for some time.

    Poverty in the area is rising, with the highest concentrations in African-American neighbor-hoods. In several school dis-tricts, the quality of education is declining. A disproportion-ate number of foreclosures has taken its toll, and property values havent recovered.

    But the anger on Tuesday con-cerned the police and skepti-cism that the investigation into what led to the shooting will bring justice.

    Were fed up, McClain said. Were tired. We want answers.

    She stood beside a friend who

    choked back emotion as she thought of her own children. They walk up and down that street all the time, Nicole Chis-sem said.

    Her family lives near Can-field Avenue, the street on which Brown was shot. That could have been me on TV saying how I need justice for my child.

    For the next several hours, pro-testers of various ages and races came and went from the rally, stopping by during lunch breaks. They denounced the looting and the violence.

    If youre out here fighting for something and the other messes up what youre fighting for, you dont get anywhere, said Dante Taylor, 22, of St. Louis.

    He held the marker and white poster board, trying to figure out what his sign should say.

    Protesters Pressing for Peace struggle to be heard

    Chief Thomas Jackson, who told them, I want what you want. I want the truth and I want justice and I want it as soon as possible.

    The other assembly at Greater St. Mark Missionary Baptist Church on Chambers Road east of Ferguson also was stand-ing-room. It also was much louder and less formal rock-ing at times and the audience chanted and cheered as they waited for the Rev. Al Sharpton to speak.

    When he took the pulpit, he led them in a thunderous chant, No justice, no peace. He noted that Ferguson has only a few black police officers and that most of the arrests are of black people.

    Youve got issues in this city, Sharpton said. People jumped to their feet when he spoke of seek-ing the truth and said, As soon as you turn on the lights, the roaches start running.

    Outside the church on Cham-bers, several hundred people marched back and forth, their leaders urging everyone to be peaceful. A man yelled into a bullhorn, The whole world is watching... We are going to do this the right way. No violence, just justice.

    At the church in Florissant, other speakers included Ferguson Mayor James Knowles III and the pastor, the Rev. Traci Blackmon, who said, We are here because we will not rest until we have justice. Also attending were St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay and Po-lice Chief Sam Dotson.

    After the speeches, members of the audience asked ques-tions. Someone asked why the Ferguson officers name hasnt been released. St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch re-sponded, Its a matter of proto-col. We dont release names until charges are filed.

    still tENsEAcross the area Tuesday,

    events remained peaceful, if oc-casionally tense.

    Shortly after 6 p.m., more than 100 protesters gathered near the hulk of the QuikTrip at 9240 West Florissant Avenue, which was looted and burned during violence Sunday night and has been ground zero for the protests ever since. It also was where po-lice in riot gear formed in sturdy formations and fired tear gas into a crowd Monday evening, scat-tering that nights protest.

    On Tuesday evening, protest-ers again chanted, Hands up, dont shoot a rallying cry of the string of protests since Sat-urday. Riot police, backed by SWAT armored vehicles, blocked West Florissant. The crowd then marched toward the church where Sharpton was to speak.

    Dominque Bishop, 22, of Flo-rissant, said she was marching for her two brothers. It could have been one of my siblings, Bishop said.

    Later in the evening, another crowd had again gathered at the QuikTrip but by about 11:30 p.m. it had mostly dispersed.

    There has been no violence since the looting rampage over-night Sunday.

    For the most part, the talk Tuesday was more redress, less outrage. From the Old Court-house downtown to the White House in Washington, the calls were for nonviolence. President

    Barack Obama issued a state-ment urging Americans to re-member Brown through reflec-tion and understanding.

    We should comfort each other and talk with one an-other in a way that heals, not in a way that wounds, Obama said. Along with our prayers, thats what Michael and his family, and our broader American commu-nity, deserve.

    On the steps of the Old Court-house on Tuesday morning, Sharpton stood with Browns family and their lawyer and said people want answers, but should pursue them peacefully.

    I know you are angry, he told the gathering on the courthouse steps. I know this is outrageous ... But we cannot be more out-raged than his mom and dad. If they can hold their heads in dig-nity, then we can hold our heads up in dignity.

    U.S. Rep. William Lacy Clay,

    D-Mo., whose dis-trict includes Fer-guson, called for an expanded federal investigation to spe-cifically explore the potential for any pat-tern or practice of police misconduct by the Ferguson Police Department.

    At the place where Brown was killed in the 2900 block of Canfield Drive, his parents and other relatives gathered briefly Tuesday af-ternoon and released about a dozen red balloons. Then they walked to his grand-mothers apartment, which they said had been his destination when he was shot Saturday afternoon.

    I n C l ay to n o n Tuesday morning, police closed Caron-delet Avenue near the county Justice Cen-ter during a march by about 250 people.

    Hey hey, ho ho, racist cops have got to go, some in the crowd chanted. They also com-plained that there arent enough African-Americans working as police officers and in the pros-ecutors office.

    Clayton police cars were inch-ing along, trailing protesters as they snaked through the streets that surround the county police headquarters and courthouse. March leaders demanded that authorities release the name of the Ferguson officer, fire and charge him.

    County police officials said Tuesday they had not fired rub-ber bullets Monday, as some protesters had claimed. Neither did assisting St. Louis officers, a spokeswoman said. Five people were treated for minor injuries at DePaul Health Center after the demonstrations Monday eve-ning, a spokeswoman said.

    Also Tuesday, McCulloch an-

    nounced that nine people were charged with felony burglary, ac-cused of looting Sunday night at three Ferguson stores along West Florissant the Princess Beauty Supply, the Footlocker and the Nu Fashion Beauty Supply.

    Charged were Beonca Mc-Grath, 19, of the 4400 block of Jennings Station Road in Pine Lawn; Michael L. Davis, 27,of the 8300 block of Wabash Avenue in Berkeley; Robert Lee Stephen-son, 28, of the 9500 block of Guthrie Avenue in Woodson Ter-race; Trey T. Brewer, 18, of Dallas; Nikko Fiertag, 23, of the 9300 block of Clarion Drive in Fergu-son; Andrew Henry, 30, of the 4100 block of Appleberry Lane in Berkeley; Steven C. Martin, 27, of the 8800 block of Maya Lane in Ferguson; Stephon D. Thomp-son, 19, of 5700 block of Good-fellow Boulevard in St. Louis; and DeMarco Harris, 38, of the 1200 block of Gimblin Avenue in St. Louis.

    McGrath and Harris also were charged with misdemeanor pos-session of a stolen hair weave, and Fiertag was charged with misdemeanor stealing of a pair of sneakers.

    The felony charges carry a maximum sentence of seven years.

    BusiNEssEs rEopENRepairs continued along the looted district, and some busi-nesses in Ferguson reopened Tuesday, including both loca-tions that had been damaged and those that were closed as precau-tion. Zisser Tire & Auto, which was ransacked, reopened. So did a Taco Bell nearby. But others, including Shoe Carnival and Au-toZone, remained closed.

    Looting occurred Sunday night along West Florissant and at some stores to the north near Interstate 270, including the Walmart. Fear of fast-traveling replays caused some stores in Brentwood to close early Monday evening.

    Ferguson City Hall was closed Tuesday morning due to safety concerns, but classes began in

    the Jennings School District, just east of Ferguson. The Jennings district had canceled classes on Monday.

    The Federal Aviation Admin-istration barred private aircraft, including news helicopters, from the airspace over Ferguson for the next week. Commercial aircraft are exempt. The county police department made the re-quest.

    Shortly before midnight Mon-day, a group of 30 to 40 people in a caravan of vehicles attacked and looted a Shoe Carnival store near Gravois Avenue in south St. Louis, far from Ferguson, St. Louis police said. Covering their faces with shirts, they smashed windows and stole shoes and other merchandise.

    The group also tried to break into a nearby Radio Shack also in Gravois Plaza, in the 3500 block of Bamberger Avenue. An un-armed security guard saw the at-tacks and called police.

    A police spokesman said it wasnt known whether the at-tack was related to Ferguson, but called the tactics of mass bur-glary unusual. Mayor Francis Slay said city police were closely watching incidents for any con-nections.

    Spokesmen at several area gun shops said sales had jumped, and they attributed the change to the violence in Ferguson.

    At Metro Shooting Supplies in Bridgeton, Sales have been ab-solutely amazing for three days, said general manager John Ste-phenson.

    Al Rothweiler, an owner of Mid America Arms at 8205 Gravois Road in South County, said sales were up about 50 percent. The things that have gone on have made people act, Rothweiler said, although he added, I dont like selling on fear.

    Koran Addo, Tim Barker, Kim Bell, Jesse Bogan, Nancy Cambria, Joel Currier, Stephen Deere, Lilly Fowler, Ian Froeb, Jim Gallagher, Steve Giegerich, Valerie Schremp Hahn, Joe Holleman, Jeremy Kohler, Ken Leiser, Samantha Liss, Chuck Raasch and Michael Sorkin, all of the Post-Dispatch, contributed to this report.

    Laurie Skrivan [email protected] I am out here because I am part of the masses of people in St. Louis and soon to be in the nation that are exhausted and fatigued with the progression of police genocide. Its not police brutality anymore, its genocide against young black Americans, said Sunny Ford during a rally on Tuesday in Clayton, protesting the fatal shooting of Michael Brown by a Ferguson police officer.

    robert Cohen [email protected]. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar (center) joins other officials for a prayer to open a community forum on the death of Michael Brown held Tuesday at Christ the King United Church of Christ near Black Jack.

    the whole world is watchingBrowN from A1

  • 08.13.2014 Wednesday M 1 sT. LOUIs POsT-dIsPaTCH A13

    Whats up From events.stltoday.com

    08.23

    08.24

    08.28

    heads up

    Supply drive for troops To show appreciation for U.S. troops deployed overseas, donations of other useful supplies are being collected through the OFallon, Mo., Support Our Troops Supply Drive. The drive is continuing through Sept. 11, with donation sites throughout the city of OFallon. The donations will be shipped overseas as part of the National Day of Service and Remembrance projects coordinated by Volunteer OFallon. People are also encouraged to contribute signed thank-you notes and cards for the troops. The items that troops most often request include: beef jerky, Vienna sausages, canned tuna and packages of sunflower seeds, nuts, trail mix, deodorant, disposable razors, tweezers, hair brushes, combs, fingernail clippers, nail files, lip balm, Band-Aids, foot powder, baby powder, markers (highlighters or permanent), batteries (AA and AAA) and small flashlights. For a map and list of donation sites, visit ofallon.mo.us/volunteer. For more information about the supply drive and other local volunteer opportunities, call Volunteer OFallon at 636-379-5417.

    To submit items, email them to [email protected] or fax them to 314-340-3050.

    Stl WedneSdayInside this sectionA13 Heads Up A14 Opinion A15 Other views A16 Funeral notices A18 Weather

    Disc golf tournament Participants will compete for cash and prizes at the annual Disc Golf Glow Tournament at Quail Ridge Park, 5501 Quail Ridge Parkway in Wentzville, beginning at 8 p.m. Aug. 23. In partnership with the St. Charles County Disc Golf Club, the St. Charles County Parks Department has devised a disc-tossing tournament. Using baskets lined with more than 100 glow sticks to mark the course, a shotgun start will begin the 18-hole contest. Participants will compete individually, and LED lights for discs will be available during the event, 2 for $3 or 4 for $5. Cash prizes will be awarded to top finishers in each flight. The entry fee is $10 per player, but registration is limited to the first 72 players. Registration will be accepted from 7-7:45 p.m. the day of the tournament at shelter No. 1 inside the park; but pre-registration is recommended. For more information or to register, call 314-413-4773 or send email to [email protected].

    Used book sale The Jewish Community Center will hold its annual used book sale from Aug. 24-28 at the Staenberg Family Complex, Arts and Education Building, 2 Millstone Campus Drive, Creve Coeur. The sale will feature thousands of books for all interests and ages. Aug. 24 is Preview Day, from 10 a.m.-4 p.m., with an admission charge of $10 at the door. There is free admission from Aug. 25-28. The event runs from 10 a.m.-7 p.m. Aug. 25-27, and from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Aug. 28. The last day is Bag Day, where buyers can fill a bag with books for just $5. Thousands of titles will include mystery and intrigue, novels, biographies, politics, religion, sports, cookbooks, history and more. There will also be miscellaneous videos, books on tape, CDs and DVDs. jccstl.com/programs/arts-culture/used-book-sale

    Benefit for Pony Bird Pony Bird home for severely disabled people is partnering with the Tenderloin Room restaurant in a benefit event to help the home, which is in Mapaville in Jefferson County. The benefit dinner and program will be from 6:30-10 p.m. Aug. 28 at the Tenderloin Room, 232 North Kingshighway. Tickets are $125, with proceeds to help Pony Bird build two new residential buildings. The price includes a four-course dinner, cocktails, a presentation by the founder of Pony Bird and a special gift bag for all attendees. A live auction will top off the evening. For tickets and more information, visit ponybird.org or facebook.com/thetenderloinroom.

    To list a community event or meeting, submit it online at events.stltoday.com.

    COLUMNIST SCHEDULE Sunday Bill McClellan Monday Bill McClellan Wednesday Bill McClellan Friday Bill McClellan Saturday Joe Hollemans Joes St. Louis

    JoIn stltoday on FaceBooKBecome a fan of STLtoday on Facebook and get the early

    word on news scoops.facebook.com/STLPD

    I was in Michigan last week, and the lead story in the Detroit papers was the trial of a 55-year-old man who was awakened at 4:30 in the morning last November by somebody pounding on his door and walls.

    He didnt have a land line, and said he couldnt find his cellphone, so he grabbed a shotgun from his closet. He opened his front door and saw a person on his porch. He shot through the screen door.

    The person on his porch was a 19-year-old woman. She was intoxi-cated. She had been in an accident three hours earlier and had wandered away. She was killed by the shotgun blast.

    The man was white and the woman was black. The man was convicted of second-degree murder last week, and the headline in one of the papers was a quote from the womans mother. Her Life Mattered.

    From the coverage in the papers, youd have thought this was the first fatal shooting in Detroit in years.

    But, of course, it wasnt. Detroit is like St. Louis. Murders are commonplace. What made this one so sensational was the racial angle. Still, why did this vic-tims life matter more than the lives of all the other victims?

    I thought of a column Donnybrook panelist Alvin Reid wrote a couple of weeks ago. This newspaper had just pub-lished a cartoon of St. Louis County Ex-ecutive Charlie Dooley sitting at his desk with Harry Trumans famous slogan in front of him The buck stops here. In the cartoon, Dooley had scratched off the final word.

    Some of Dooleys supporters claimed the cartoon was racist, and that Dooley was being called a buck. I thought their contentions were ridiculous.

    Reid wrote that as soon as he saw the cartoon, he thought the paper should not have published it. He compared it to an autostereogram. That is an illustra-tion that has a hidden image in it. Not everybody can see it, he wrote. Maybe because I miss a lot of things, I liked that analogy.

    I thought about it again when I re-turned from vacation and Ferguson was on fire.

    I can readily understand the black communitys anger in the wake of the shooting of 18-year-old Michael Brown. I like to give cops the benefit of the doubt, but I have a very hard time try-ing to figure out a justification for this shooting. Even if you accept the police version of events, the officer got out of

    his car and fired at an unarmed person. Maybe you shoot Carlos the Jackal if you think he might escape, but Michael Brown doesnt appear to have been an international terrorist.

    Then, too, there is the notion of be-ing shot to death by the people who are supposed to protect us. Plus, of course, you have to factor in the long-standing animosity between law enforcement and young black males.

    So, yes, I understand the anger and consider it justifiable. (Not the loot-ing, though. I heard St. Louis Alderman Antonio French on the radio saying that the white community would be wrong to consider it thuggery and leave it at that. French is smart and thoughtful, and all things are complicated, but looting as a form of righteous protest is beyond me. Maybe its an autostereogram.)

    But here is where I really get lost: Why not get angry at all the other killings?

    When a community gets together and rises up, it has power. In this case, the authorities are not going to be able to sweep this shooting under the rug. No way. Authorities in Detroit were not able to ignore the shooting of that 19-year-old woman.

    And yet, had that young woman been shot a couple of hours earlier by a young black man, it would not have been big news.

    Had Michael Brown been shot a couple of hours later by a young black man, his killing would have been scarcely noted. Not by the media, and not by the black community. No marches, no protests, no nothing.

    It is not condoning police shootings to point out that they constitute a minus-cule fraction of the shootings that ravage black neighborhoods. Its not the cops, and its not the Klan. Its the residents themselves.

    If the black community would come together on those shootings and say, No more, there would be no more. Where was the outrage when 11-year-old An-tonio Johnson was shot to death as he sat in his apartment doing homework in March? The gunman climbed to the win-dow ledge and fired into the apartment. There were three teens in that apart-ment. Presumably, one was the intended target. I say presumably because the family did not cooperate with the police.

    No celebrities came to town to demand justice for Antonio. In fact, nobody said much.

    Its another autostereogram. I cant see the picture.

    Bill Mcclellan [email protected] > 314-340-8143

    All killings should spark outrage

    Russell W. Pickett, Au.D, CCC-A/FAAADoctor of Audiology

    Nancy M. Richman, Au.D, CCC-ADoctor of Audiology

    "Hear the Difference a Doctor of Audiology Can Make"

    314-835-999610900 Manchester Rd., Suite #202Kirkwood, MO 63122www.greentreeaudiology.com

    314-647-EARS (3277)6651 Chippewa, Ste. 217St. Louis, MO 63109www.southcityhearing.com

    "The Way Hearing Care Should Be"

    CALL TO SEE IF YOU ARE A CANDIDATE FOR THIS AMAZING NEW TECHNOLOGY!

    Appointment times are limited - CALL TODAY!Most insurances are accepted and patient financing is available.

    Our patients are saying that ReSound Verso issimply the best hearing aid available. Period.I truly think these hearing aids are amazing. I have always appreciatedbeing able to hear better, but, until these hearing aids, I didnt remembertruly what that was like. So easy to use - ReSound Verso user, St. Louis, MO Compatible with smartphone technology Supports how the ear works naturally

    36th Annual YMCA BookfairAugust 15 - August 20, 2014Kennedy Recreation Complex6050Wells Road

    $10PreviewNightFriday, August 154pm - 9pm

    314.353.4960www.YMCAbookfair.orgwww.Facebook.com/YMCABookfair

    BOOKSNEVERGOOUTOFSTYLE

    Free AdmissionAugust 16 - 209 am - 9pm1/2 Price Day: August 19$10 Box Day: August 20

  • WE WELCOME YOUR LETTERS AND E-MAILLetters should be 250 words or fewer. Please include your name, address and phone number. All letters are subject to editing. Writers usually will not be published more than once every 60 days. Additional letters are posted online at STLtoday.com/letters.

    MAILLetters to the editorSt. Louis Post-Dispatch,900 N. Tucker Blvd.St. Louis, MO 63101

    [email protected]

    FAX314-340-3139

    TONY [email protected] Editorial Page Editor 314-340-8382KEVIN [email protected] Deputy Editorial Page Editor 314-340-8135FRANK [email protected] Editor 314-340-8356DEBORAH [email protected] writer 314-340-8276

    PLATFORM I know that my retirement will make no di erence in its cardinal principles, that it will always fi ght

    for progress and reform, never tolerate injustice or corruption, always fi ght demagogues of all parties, never belong to any party, always oppose privileged classes and public plunderers, never lack sympathy with the poor, always remain devoted to the public welfare, never be satisfi ed with merely printing news, always be drastically independent, never be afraid to attack wrong, whether by predatory plutocracy or predatory poverty JOSEPH PULITZER APRIL 10, 1907

    WEDNESDAY 08.13.2014 A14

    A L E E E N T E R P R I S E S N E W S PA P E R F O U N D E D B Y J O S E P H P U L I T Z E R D E C . 1 2 , 1 8 7 8

    THE PLATFORM TM

    RAY FARRIS PRESIDENT & PUBLISHER GILBERT BAILON EDITOR TONY MESSENGER EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR

    STLtoday.com/ThePlatform Find us at facebook/PDPlatform Follow us on twitter @PDEditorial

    As soon as the unrest in Ferguson is over and let it be soon there must be a thorough, independent and timely investigation into how and why it happened and the police response to it. This inquiry would go beyond the parallel crim-inal investigations and get into the root causes of this madness.

    Yes, the immediate cause the tipping point they call it in the literature of civil unrest was the fatal shooting Saturday of 18-year-old Michael Brown by a still-unidentified Ferguson police officer.

    (By the way, the failure to identify the officer violates every principle of transparency recom-mended by law enforcement experts. Society grants police offi-cers the right to use deadly force. That right carries special obliga-tions, one of which is strict public accountability. The longer the officer stays anonymous, the more public confidence is undermined.)

    When the independent investi-gation deconstructs the Ferguson incident, as it must, it should explore the history and conditions that may have helped precipitate Saturdays shooting and the subsequent public protests. That includes racial segregation. That includes the training and qualifi-cations of Ferguson police officers. It includes command-and-control decisions by the Ferguson and St. Louis County police forces and the Missouri Highway Patrol.

    One big problem with convening such an investigative panel is that its not clear who has jurisdiction. The same problem plagues the entire response in Ferguson: Who has command authority? Who is accountable for the decisions that are being made?

    The fragmentation may be deliberate; it certainly mirrors the fragmentation that is the bane of the entire region. But the first rule of restoring public confidence is to earn it. Someone must step forward and take responsibility both for the law enforcement effort thats currently underway and then for the investigation that must follow.

    It will have to be Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon, a man whose every instinct is to dodge bad news whenever possible. Sorry, gover-nor. But you asked for the job.

    By law, cities and counties are political subdivisions of the state. The state patrol already appears to be taking a lead role in crowd

    control efforts, though no one is saying so officially.

    It cant be the city of Ferguson. It is one of 90 municipalities in St. Louis County. It has 21,000 residents, two-thirds of whom are black, and a police force of 53 com-missioned officers, 90 percent of whom are white.

    Nor can it be St. Louis County. The county has more than 800

    police officers but no formal juris-diction over law enforcement in Ferguson. At Fergusons request, the county police force is helping out through mutual aid agree-ments, as are the state patrol and other municipal police forces.

    Mr. Nixon is the only public official with the authority to cre-ate an independent investigative commission. Public confidence

    demands that he announce plans to do so immediately. Its membership should be diverse and of unquestioned integrity. Its members should come from law enforcement, civil rights, academia and civic leadership. Its time to step up.

    The police agencies may know whos in charge, but the public deserves to know, too. At whose

    order were police dogs brought in? Who authorized the use of tear gas and non-lethal baton rounds?

    What central command author-ity is making sure that officers from multiple jurisdictions are singing from the same hymnal? Is anyone up to speed on the latest thinking in law enforcement about dealing with mass protests?

    There is a lot of literature on that subject, dating back to the police riot at the 1968 Democratic convention in Chicago and for-ward to the 2011 London riots and Occupy Wall Street protests.

    A best practices study pub-lished in the FBI Law Enforcement Bulletin two years ago says its generally accepted that crowd violence escalates if people think police offers treat them unfairly.

    Furthermore, the study says, when a crowd perceives that officers act with justice and legitimacy, disorder becomes less likely.

    Cops are human beings, and human beings get scared. Their first impulse is to gear-up as if they were patrolling outside Baghdads Assassins Gate. As in foreign policy, the academic types may say that dialogue and soft power are better, but that defies the averages cops attitudes.

    What the public generally regards as riot gear helmets, shields, Kevlar vests is known in police circles as hard gear. Heres what the FBI bulletin says about that:

    Officers must avoid donning their hard gear as a first step. They should remember the lessons learned from the 1960s civil rights movement and Vietnam War pro-tests. Police should not rely solely on their equipment and tools.

    What weve seen in Ferguson is skirmish lines of officers in hard gear and videos of tear gas canis-ters lobbed onto roofs.

    Individual officers generally have shown great restraint. But those images are doing incalcu-lable harm, and not just to com-munity relations in Ferguson. The nation and the world have seen horrible images from St. Louis that suggest that race relations here have a long way to go.

    Theyre not wrong.There are people of good will on

    all sides who want better. Ferguson should be the place where bet-ter begins. Mr. Nixon must get it started.

    WHERE BETTER BEGINSOur view Gov. Nixon should start planning the Ferguson Commission.

    THE KILLING OF MICHAEL BROWN: ST. LOUIS REACTS

    Monday, Aug. 11, marked the 39th anniversary of the beginning of the Watts Riots (Revolt), which took place in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles in 1965. This upris-ing was incited by a set of events, one of them being police violence against a young black man and a young black pregnant woman.

    Today, we see a similar revolt taking place in Ferguson, right outside of St. Louis, where young, unarmed Michael Brown was shot and killed by an officer on his way to his grandmothers home. Michael Browns killing and the ensuing outrage, at the same time of this historic event, ironically pivots the question, How can we best demonstrate our outrage about a historic violent tradi-tion which leaves the blood of our children young black men and women repeatedly on the ground? If America has not fixed its problem with the negro, what must African-Americans do to demand a cease-fire across the nation and a new lens through

    which to see black bodies as more than indicators of the propensity toward crime and violence? It requires that we do more than pray.

    On Sunday, I attended an interfaith, interracial prayer vigil in front of the Ferguson Police Department, the occupational home of the officer who shot 18-year-old Michael Brown. As the ministers prayed and I reflected on how many I had attended over the last two years this constant refrain for peace and justice was starting to feel like a way to shut up the scream-ing parents and loved ones of those afflicted, silence the radical youth most directly impacted by these violences, and to privilege white desires for black people to always appear civil while reacting to uncivil manner. The latter is perhaps the ugliest requirement of those who suffer often at the hands of white racist attack and criminalization.

    As I stood in front of the big

    brick police building, I found myself asking how such national peace-vigil moments activate anything more than a quick fix, or an anesthetic for this murder and the many violences which people of similar communities experi-ence too frequently? In such a race-antagonistic America, can peace be the instrument of change, especially when the policies, employment of the law, and dis-tribution of freedoms continue to disregard the demands and desires of those furthest down below?

    As I was having these thoughts, I hear a minister say Amen, concluding a powerful prayer that moved from peace talk to that of war. She is invested in addressing spiritual war: the heartache, pain and tears produced at the site of violence. My mind was moving to the more literal: a scene of rage, verbal exchange that produces powerful policy, and maybe even some threats to police power by the legislature. A group of young men and women, marching came

    to the center of Ferguson Road, parallel to the police department, first putting their hands in the air (a gesture which Michael Brown reportedly made to the police offer in order to show he was unarmed), then proceeded to sit in the street. Ironically, the ministers had began their vigil singing, We shall not be moved. The main organizer of the vigil discouraged this moment of outrage and sitting over her microphone, deeming it as having the potential to distract from the peaceful work we were doing as we gathered in prayer.

    This attitude that the extreme rhetoric, sitting demonstrations and subsequent resistance of these grief-stricken, justifiably angered, and frustrated young is misplaced, inadvertently suggests that there is only one way to seek justice. For me, these young people are not simply saying ignore law enforcement, or disregard the law, but rather they voice a disinter-est in the application of the law and the law enforcement we have

    come to know. Historically, the neighborhood where Michael Brown was killed has been ridden with racial tension, a police force which has rarely if ever understood itself as having a race problem. Constantly, young black men and women are subjected to verbal, if not physical violence and harass-ment from officers and those in the surrounding communities who so often refer to this commu-nity as having a bad element.

    Most of us, standing at the vigil in our clergy uniforms adorned with our varying degrees, were not subjected to these violences daily. Therefore, our call for peace and reconciliation is much easier. Most of us are not living in poverty-stricken communities, where the constant entitlement to our space, our property, and even our bodies angers us so, to claim entitlement to resources and material goods denied us historically (i.e. looting). Most of us, reading this post, have

    JEFFREY Q. MCCUNE JR.

    Outrage over shooting Response is a scene of public disgust a lawless reaction to a lawless white terrorizing history and present.

    A revolt against violence

    ROBERT COHEN [email protected] o cers from the Missouri State Highway Patrol man the burned QuikTrip on West Florissant Rd.

    J.B. FORBES [email protected] police o cer holds his dog in check while protesters march past the Ferguson police station protesting the police shooting.

    see REVOLT page A15

  • 08.13.2014 Wednesday M 1 sT. LOUIs POsT-dIsPaTCH A15

    Honor Michael Browns memory in a positive way

    The tragic death of a young man, who was eager to continue his education and make a better life for himself, should not be tarnished by a small number of hooligans who take out their frustrations by looting, burning and rioting. Those actions only serve to compound the grief felt by the members of Michael Browns family. For those who wish to honor Michaels memory in a positive way, I suggest these alternatives:

    Collect donations at intersec-tions in your community to help the family pay for funeral expenses.

    Go to a local bank and establish a scholarship fund that will allow other high school graduates in the community to continue their educa-

    tion at colleges and technical schools.

    Line the streets to en-sure childrens safety as they walk to and from school this week. Jen-nings School District felt it necessary to cancel school Monday in the aftermath of Sunday nights violence.

    Once the investiga-tion into this

    shooting has been completed, the citizens of Ferguson can decide what is needed to resolve the problems confronting their community.Barbara Blacksher Florissant

    Looting, burning do nothing to settle differencesSomeone once wrote: Violence is the last refuge of the incompetent. Violence certainly does nothing to settle differences or resolve issues. The actions of the crowd in the wake of the tragic death of the young man in Ferguson will, if anything, have effects oppo-site of what is desired. They certainly will not bring back the young man.

    The business that was looted and burned did not cause the death. What is accomplished by this burn-ing and looting? It certainly does not give incentive for this business to rebuild, or for other businesses to come into this neighborhood. The people who worked there did not cause the young mans death, but they are certainly out of a job as a result.

    What has been gained by this activity? Not much. It does nothing to bring much needed improvement in relations between people.Jon Marx Oakville

    Ferguson residents dont want to realize they have a race problemMy city of Ferguson is in denial. We dont want to realize that we have a race problem. No, not a huge one, but one that festers and gets worse and sicker as it is ignored by those who cling to what was before.

    I first noticed it in a big way when my fellow Ferguson residents in-sisted that the Ferguson-Florissant School District go back to the draw-ing board when the board kept its promise to the city of Berkeley to keep the name Berkeley on the re-placement high school. This was a little over 10 years ago.

    Last year was another big mo-ment, when the all-white school board tripped all over themselves to suspend and dismiss a well-qualified superintendent who was African-American, first saying there was no

    wrongdoing just philosophical difference. They were actually sur-prised to learn that African-Ameri-cans do pay attention to what deci-sions are made that may impact their childs education. What should have been outrage by the entire commu-nity was only experienced by many African-Americans, as most whites sat it out waiting for the board to reveal its real reason, as the board kept hiding behind personnel confi-dentiality struggling to find a legiti-

    mate reason. Meanwhile, many white voters elected two of the in-cumbents back to the board.

    And now, our mayor

    says during Sunday and Monday interviews that our community is a close-knit one, and the looters are outsiders. Mr. Mayor, although you may consider the looters as outsid-ers, I assure you that some of them are Ferguson residents. I dont think they feel part of the close-knit community. In fact, I dont think that most of the African-Americans who attended the School Board meetings are feeling the love of a close-knit community either.

    My fellow Ferguson residents, its time. Lets talk about race.Cassandra Butler Ferguson

    Media should think twice before further stoking the firesWas it justified? That is the one question to be answered in the shooting death of Michael Brown. If the answer is no, the courts will deal with the crime. If the answer is yes, then the police officer goes back to work.

    Yet, before the investigation is complete, the St. Louis Post-Dis-patch editorial board has rendered its verdict on the editorial page (Aug. 11): Michael Brown didnt get due process.

    An important area of North County is in tatters, caused by riot-ers determined to take other peoples stuff, and the Post-Dispatch decides this is the time to further stoke the fires.

    Already there is talk on St. Louis media that while the rioting is not justified, it is understandable. Un-derstandable? What has taking other

    peoples stuff got to do with the death of an 18-year-old? What is it about social and economic condi-tions that can justify the looting and the burning a QuikTrip gas station?

    The next morning after the QT was burned, some said the riots are symptoms of hopelessness brought on by a lack of economic oppor-tunity. When adults show any ac-ceptance of rioters, that acceptance becomes an invitation to the next round of rioting.

    The St. Louis media, St. Louis commentators and politicians must think twice before talking once.Lee A. Presser Manchester

    Argument that Brown was unarmed doesnt workThe argument that Michael Brown was unarmed no longer works for me because of the rioting and looting, and how is that good for his case? I am a little older and will need hip surgery sometime soon, but I am confident that I could make an officer fear for his/her life. And if I am really deter-mined, it would be within the officers interests to shoot me while I am out of arms reach. The rioting gave me a chance to think from a different perspective that I otherwise might not have.

    I would like to see justice and mercy, but rioting and looting are neither. The target of the anger is not harmed, but some of your neighbors and friends and brothers and sisters are now jobless.Dean Fry St. Ann

    Death of Brown gets more coverage than anotherI am wondering why you have given such an inordinate amount of sympathy to the fracas surround-ing the death of Michael Brown and why, in comparison, you gave so little space to the equally sense-less death of Megan Boken. Why was her life so much less important than his? She had gone to college (she was employed) and was here to benefit the school from which she

    graduated.What, in his lifetime, had Michael

    Brown done to capture your sym-pathy and your incredible unending belief that those in/of his sur-roundings are deserving of the life Ms. Boken was living because of a dedication to hard work and extra effort she made to secure that life. Can we assume that there is a phenomenal component of jealousy that made Ms. Boken, in your eyes and the actions of the protesters, a less important human being?Ruth Karraker St. Louis County

    No need for police to carry deadly weapon on routine patrolWhy? In 2014 and the age of the Taser, why should any police officer on routine patrol need to carry a deadly weapon?Anthony Wippold Clayton

    Little outrage over other senseless murdersMy heart goes out to the family of the Ferguson teen who was shot down by a police officer, but I cant help thinking of the many other senseless murders of young men and children that occur every day. Unlike the tragic case of Michael Brown, these receive hardly any attention from media and organizations.

    Consider, the same thing happens every night in Chicago, with multiple deaths at the hands of other black men; and then theres north St. Louis and St. Louis City. Wheres the na-tional spotlight then? Where is the NAACP then? Yes, outrage is pour-ing out onto the streets in Ferguson, but how often, when its black on black crime, does the community re-fuse to snitch on the suspect or those involved?

    And then there are the savage murders of Iraqi Christian children by the invading militant ISIS group thats currently in the news. People are rightly outraged, but the same grisly murders have been going on for over 40 years behind the purple doors of the abortion mill in Gran-

    ite City. Where is the outrage for the slaughter of these innocents? And, sadly, of the mul-tiplied thousands who have perished, over 70 percent are black children.

    When it comes right down to it, it seems to me that some of these out-raged people need to do some soul-searching before they beat their chests and point

    fingers. Different weapons; same results.Angela Michael Highland

    NAACP makes inflammatory statementI would like to call to task the NAACP for the irresponsible and inflammatory statement that they released after the shooting death of Michael Brown by a Ferguson police officer.

    To characterize that shooting as a slaughter without knowing all the facts of the case, besides being irresponsible, is harmful and inciteful. It helps nothing! Instead of calling for calm and order, it had the opposite effect. In the future, I would urge the NAACP to consider its words more carefully before issuing such acrimonious state-ments.Steve Cummings Maryville

    Richard A. Murray of St. Louis County says Mondays editorial is filled with venom and self-righteous indignation against the police officer involved and drawing a most damning conclusion. Could this alleged newspaper share with us the facts that led to your editorial? Is there something the Post-Dispatch knows that is not being shared with your readers?

    More letters online

    Read and talk about this letter and more letters online at STLtoday.com/letters

    Other views

    MiCHAel BroWn

    not felt without voice for many years and had an opportunity to speak publicly about the deep-est terror we face at the hands of those who are supposed to pro-tect us. This is not an indictment on those who stand where they stand, but rather commentary on the driving impulse of a dif-ferent approach to the urgent

    hour. Indeed, if violence is ap-proaching ones neighborhood, one can wait for gradual peace and justice; but when violence has arrived, ones actions can be strategically impulsive to de-mand urgent action.

    Knowing this, I cannot see the responses to the killing of Michael Brown as anything but a

    scene of public disgust a law-less reaction to a lawless white terrorizing history and present. Unfortunately, peace marches and demonstration have not been able to powerfully capture, or shift, this ugly reality. Indeed, Dr. King was very right in his framing, A riot is the language of the unheard! And these

    revolts must not be stopped by government, tear gas, or the guilt of the respectable others who are embarrassed by public expres-sions of pain and rage. May we allow this moment of revolt to remind us of the necessity of prayer and its companion we can call resistant, radical and incon-venient work! May this shaking

    of the streets remind the nation that the Michael Browning of our young men and women must stop!

    Jeffrey Q. McCune Jr. is an associate professor of Women, Gender and Sexuality Studies and Performance Studies at Washington University in St. Louis. McCune has written extensively on masculinity, race and cultural politics. He is the author of Sexual Discretion: Black Masculinity and the Politics of Passing.

    revolt froM A14Peace marches and demonstrations often are not enough

    st. loUis reACts

    the killing of

    Umar Lee (@ STLAbuBadu) said at 6:55 p.m. Aug. 10:

    We all want a positive future. Not one where unarmed kids or police officers are killed.

    James Birmingham wrote:

    It just kills me how the new media turns this and spins it into a race issue. I dont see it as a race issue. I see it as a police officer and suspect issue. I hate how society jumps the gun and makes up their mind on an issue without the full facts in the case. Just as any witness you will not and cannot issue the whole picture.

    Diane Horning wrote: Im

    not trying to start more controversy, but just as Mike Brown was not given a chance to be proven innocent of anything, nei-ther has the police officer. Lets not judge either of them and leave judgment where it belongs in the courts.

    Patricia Bynes (@Patricialicious)

    said at 9:56 p.m. Aug. 10: Watching them break into these businesses is HEART-BREAKING. THIS IS NOT #MikeBrown.

    Michael Brown1996-2014

    DM 14