Authorities in Charlotte, North
Carolina, braced on Wednesday for a possible second night of rioting
triggered by the police killing of a black man who refused commands to
drop a handgun that officers said he was brandishing.
Sixteen
police were injured overnight on Tuesday and one person was arrested as
officers in riot gear clashed with demonstrators who hurled stones, set
fires and briefly blocked an interstate highway.
Police
and protesters offered widely differing accounts of the shooting.
Officers said Keith Scott, 43, was armed and ignoring orders, while the
victim's family and a witness said he was holding a book. Authorities
have not released any video of the incident, but say they plan to.
The
trouble in Charlotte unfolded as demonstrators in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
demanded the arrest of a police officer seen on video fatally shooting
an unarmed black man who had his hands in clear view at the time.
The
deaths were the latest to raise questions of racial bias in U.S. law
enforcement, and they stoked a national debate on policing ahead of the
presidential election in November.
Police
shootings in cities including New York, Chicago and Ferguson, Missouri,
have sparked more than two years of largely peaceful protests punctuated
by days of rioting and arson and given rise to the Black Lives Matter
civil rights movement.
U.S. Democratic
presidential nominee Hillary Clinton said such killings were unbearable.
Her Republican rival, Donald Trump, questioned what the Tulsa officer
was thinking in shooting a man he said seemed to pose no imminent
threat.
Criminal investigations have been opened
in both cities, and the U.S. Justice Department has started a separate
probe into the Oklahoma incident to see if officers' use of force
amounted to a civil rights violation.
Charlotte's
police chief, Kerr Putney, said Scott was seen on Tuesday afternoon
getting into a vehicle holding a handgun. Police surrounded the car,
Putney said, and Scott was shot by a black police officer after he
exited the car and did not obey orders to drop his weapon.
"I can also tell you we did not find a book," Putney told a news conference. "We did find a weapon."
Local
resident Taheshia Williams said she saw the incident from her balcony
about 100 feet (30 meters) away, and that she watched Scott get out of
his car with his hands raised.
"Hands up. No
gun. When he got out of the car, a book fell off his lap," Williams told
reporters on Wednesday. She said she heard Scott ask police what he had
done wrong, could not hear their reply, but then heard four shots.
"It's a cover-up. They made a mistake and they're doing their best to make sure they cover up that mistake," she said.
'OPEN TO SHOWING VIDEO'
Black
activists and pastors called for an economic boycott of the city, and a
several dozen students held a "lay-in" protest at the University of
North Carolina at Charlotte. The American Civil Liberties Union of North
Carolina urged the body and dash camera footage be released.
Police said Officer Brentley Vinson was in plainclothes when he shot Scott and was not wearing a body camera.
Charlotte Mayor Jennifer Roberts told
CNN she had not seen any video from the scene, but that Putney told her
footage was recorded by cameras worn by other police officers and
mounted on patrol cars.
"The chief is very open to
showing that video ... not just to elected officials, but also to
community leaders," she said. "We have done that in the past. We plan to
do that this time."
In 2013 a white police
officer killed Jonathan Ferrell, an unarmed black man, in Charlotte.
Ferrell's family received $2.25 million from the city in compensation.
North Carolina allows for the open carry of handguns, including having a pistol in a vehicle.
A friend of Vinson, Michael Scurlock, told CNN on Wednesday that the officer on Tuesday night.
"I
know he's torn," Scurlock said. "No matter if it's justified or
unjustified, it's tough when you have to know that you had to take
someone else's life."
Protesters in Oklahoma,
meanwhile, want Tulsa Police Officer Betty Shelby, who is white, to be
arrested for the killing on Friday of Terence Crutcher, 40, whose sport
utility vehicle had broken down and was blocking a road.
Shelby's
lawyer has said she feared for her life, believing Crutcher was
reaching into his vehicle for a weapon. Lawyers for the Crutcher family
released still images from police videos showing the car window was shut
and said the use of force was not justified.
Two
police videos, one taken from a helicopter and one from a patrol car
dashcam, show Shelby following Crutcher as he walked slowly to his
vehicle with his hands up. Shelby shoots him as he puts his hands on the
car, and he falls to the ground.
Speaking in New
York City alongside relatives of Crutcher, civil rights activist Rev. Al
Sharpton urged both presidential candidates to broach the topic of
police shootings on Monday at their first head-to-head debate.
"Any
debate that does not discuss this issue is a bogus debate," Sharpton
told a news conference. "This is a national crisis and it must be
addressed."
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