FERGUSON, Missouri— By early Saturday morning a day of peaceful protests gave way to tear gas and sporadic bouts of looting.
Police officers in riot gear blocked off a section of West Florissant Avenue as the protests over the death of 18-year-old Michael Brown unraveled into bedlam. Some crashed through businesses while others formed human barriers along the storefronts to ward off looters.
“There were 300 protesters last night, but the protesters went home and the looters came out,” said Highway Patrol Captain Ron Johnson, who took over security efforts in Ferguson on Thursday.
Lines of armored cars stood by, parked just yards away from a broken-in liquor store, as officers told protesters over loudspeakers that they must clear the streets and go home for the night.
“When the people are peaceful, the police throw the tear gas,” said Steven Roach, “When there’s a riot, they just sit back.”
After days of turmoil, the Ferguson community woke up Friday expecting police to finally reveal the identity of the officer who shot and killed Brown. What they got was a police report — including video surveillance — captured in the last hour of Brown’s life from a convenience store camera, showing he and a friend allegedly stealing cigars.
Police Chief Thomas Jackson framed the new information in a way that suggested the officer who shot Brown had been on the hunt for a robbery suspect.
The Brown family was enraged, as was the community. And then it got worse.
Early on Friday morning Jackson held a press conference in which he named Darren Wilson as the officer that killed the unarmed teen. But overshadowing the long awaited release of the officer’s identity was the packet on Brown.
And at a later news conference, Jackson said the officer hadn’t stopped Brown in connection with the robbery at all.
“Everyone out here, we’re mad and frustrated for a reason. Because we are not getting the truth,” said Gerald McNary. “They gave us a name. But we have a lot more questions. We are Ferguson citizens and we don’t know what he’s doing about any of this or how he plans on making us feel safe. Because I don’t feel safe in this neighborhood full of cops with guns.”
Jackson has also presented yet another version of the Saturday afternoon encounter between Brown and Wilson, telling NBC News that the officer “at some point” noticed that Brown had stolen cigars in his possession.
A wave of confusion and anger swept through those gathered at the press conferences and others who listened over loud speakers near the scene of the shooting.
“Whatever he did or they say he did has nothing to do with him getting executed in the street by that officer,” said Baron Allen. “It’s a smear campaign.”
During a hastily called press conference on Friday afternoon, the family’s attorney called the release strategically planned “smoke and mirrors.”
“We must always not lose sight of what happened here, that Michael Brown was killed execution style in the middle of Canfield on that dreadful day last Saturday,” said Daryl Parks, one of the family’s lawyers. “There’s a lot of other side things that are taking place that have nothing to do with his death at that very moment and what that officer did. So let’s not lose sight of that.”
Earlier in the week, riot police stormed protestors who gathered after nightfall, firing off rounds of tear gas, wooden pellets and stun grenades to disperse the crowds. Once the clouds cleared, local and national officials came forward Thursday to condemn the aggressive police presence. To diffuse the rising tensions, Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon dispatched Highway Patrol Capt. Ron Johnson, an African-American, to head the security efforts as protestors grew weary of the many gaps in Brown’s case.
Eyewitness testimony and police accounts piece together a hazy timeline of events both before and after Brown was gunned down. The police chief said Friday that officers caught Brown jaywalking and blocking traffic on the typically quiet, residential street. Dorian Johnson, Brown’s friend who said he was with him during the altercation, recounted being told by the police to get on the sidewalk.









