For the sixth night in a row, protesters took to the streets nationwide to take a stand against recent grand jury decisions not to indict two police officers who killed two unarmed black men.
The protests ranged from the whimsical—in New York, activist sang modified Christmas carols, such as “Oh Little Town of Ferguson” and “All I Want For Christmas Is an Indictment”—to the more combative, like in California, where officials reported that protesters blocked lanes of traffic on Highway 24 in Oakland and looted and vandalized stores in the Berkeley area. One BART station was temporarily shut down. Police deployed tear gas on the protesters for the second night in a row, and arrests continued. One firework was thrown at officers.
'Hands up, don't shoot,' crowd of #Berkeley protester chant. Now joined by onlookers, students after teargassing pic.twitter.com/c7dqsHdKM3
— Evan Sernoffsky (@EvanSernoffsky) December 7, 2014
The continued protests are the latest symptom of brewing racial tension and mistrust in police that’s gripped the country since August, when 18-year-old, unarmed Michael Brown was shot dead by police officer Darren Wilson, prompting weeks of protests and subsequent police crackdowns that only encouraged more protests. More protests are planned in New York on Monday, too, signaling that the movement isn’t slowing down any time soon.
Related: After Ferguson, some see a movement taking shape
In Seattle, some were arrested after rocks were thrown at police officers who kept protesters from demonstrating on a public roadway.
In New York’s Union Square—the site of the first protests after a jury decided not to indict the officer who killed Eric Garner in Staten Island, despite a video showing the officer using an apparent chokehold on the man—hundreds gathered, disrupting traffic and chanting “hands up, don’t shoot,” a common protest chant from the Ferguson protests.
Downtown #Seattle as we speak. #EricGarner #ICantBreathe pic.twitter.com/xnw3VFvEaF









