Jury finds Michael brown killer policeman not guilty!

Jury finds Michael brown killer policeman not guilty!


There was tons of violence on the streets of LA to New York by thousands as a jury composed of 12 people; six white men, three white women, two black women and one black man,found the police officer who shot Michael Brown to death with 6
bullets,Darren Wilson not guilty. Officer Darren Wilson has been told shooting to death an unarmed 18 year old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri,was a 'lawful' act!
Thousands of people flooded the streets from L.A. to New York late Monday night after a grand jury decided they were not going to indict officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of unarmed 18 year old Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, saying that officer Wilson acted 'lawful'.
The jury met on 25 separate days and heard more than 70 hours of testimony from about 60 witnesses, including three medical examiners and other experts on blood, toxicology and firearms.

After the announcemen by the jury to find Officer Darren Wilson not guiltyt, protesters flooded the streets burning cars, setting buildings on fire, torching police cars, looting shops, flooding highways and causing massive chaos especially in St. Louis and Oakland, California. 
See some pics of the riots after the cut...









Ferguson early Tuesday morning.
Shattered glass from looted stores covered the asphalt. The smoke of tear gas lingered in the cold air. And more than a dozen buildings, including stores owned by local residents, were inexplicably set ablaze.
"This ain't Iraq. This is the United States," Demetric Whitlock yelled to a line of police officers on South Florissant Road, in front of the Ferguson Police Department.
When a grand jury decided Monday not to indict Ferguson police Officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown, the act triggered fresh confrontations between protesters and police in the tense Missouri city.

This was Ferguson early Tuesday morning.
Shattered glass from looted stores covered the asphalt. The smoke of tear gas lingered in the cold air. And more than a dozen buildings, including stores owned by local residents, were inexplicably set ablaze.
"This ain't Iraq. This is the United States," Demetric Whitlock yelled to a line of police officers on South Florissant Road, in front of the Ferguson Police Department.
When a grand jury decided Monday not to indict Ferguson police Officer Darren Wilson in the shooting death of Michael Brown, the act triggered fresh confrontations between protesters and police in the tense Missouri city.An entire row of businesses were set ablaze on West Florissant Avenue, a major street -- so many that firefighters weren't able to reach all of them.

Amid the looting and arson, some protesters demanded the media stop reporting on the events. A CNN reporter was struck in the head with a rock.
Protesters shut down Interstate 44. They set a row of cars on fire in nearby Dellwood and torched buildings in the city.
Some protesters told the agitators to stop throwing bottles, but their urgings fell on deaf ears.
Police responded by lobbing tear gas, further agitating the crowd. Officers made 29 arrests. And Gov. Jay Nixon ordered more Missouri National Guard members to Ferguson.
Looters broke windows and doors of a beauty supply store and stole hair weaves and wigs and left the heads of mannequins strewn in the middle of the road.

"People here have a real grudge against the police. It's not going away," Whitlock said.
The anger and dismay spread far beyond the borders of the St. Louis suburb. Crowds marched in New York, Los Angeles and Seattle. Protesters laid down outside the White House in Washington D.C.
More than 120 vigils and gatherings, both immediate and for Tuesday, were organized in cities large and small -- from Toledo, Ohio, and Bangor, Maine, to Los Angeles, Philadelphia and Detroit.
'Not the answer'
This was exactly the reaction that Michael Brown's father feared. Before the grand jury decision was announced Monday night, he had urged demonstrators earlier to remain calm no matter what the grand jury decided.
"Hurting others or destroying property is not the answer," Michael Brown Sr. said. "No matter what the grand jury decides, I do not want my son's death to be in vain. I want it to lead to incredible change, positive change. Change that makes the St. Louis region better for everyone."
Brown Sr.'s words were echoed by President Barack Obama, who also called for calm.







CNN Contributed to this report
Previous Post Next Post