FERGUSON, Missouri — Law enforcement officials scrambled late Thursday to locate the gunman responsible for shooting two police officers here before dawn. A group of about 100, meanwhile, gathered for a candlelight prayer vigil beginning at 8 p.m. local time, as the Missouri Highway Patrol and St. Louis County Police assumed command of security detail for potential overnight protests. By midnight, the streets of Ferguson were all but empty.
A prayer vigil in Ferguson. A call to end violence. pic.twitter.com/G1EZb0iT8B
— Trymaine Lee (@trymainelee) March 13, 2015
Earlier Thursday, tactical SWAT teams stormed a home located just over a mile away from the police station, where officers took three people into custody for questioning. They were later released Thursday afternoon, the St. Louis County police told NBC News. And according to local activists, police spent Thursday questioning protest leaders about the shootings, but did not take any into custody.
Both of the police officers who were shot — one in the shoulder, the other in the cheek — were released from the hospital Thursday after sustaining serious injuries in what St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar described as an “ambush” attack. Despite numerous videos circulating online showing the scene’s immediate aftermath, as of late Thursday, police were unaware of any footage showing the actual gunfire.
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“I ask Missourians to join me in calling for calm in the wake of the cowardly and reprehensible ambush of two police officers who were acting to protect the public,” Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon said in a Thursday statement. “I also thank all the brave law enforcement officers who selflessly risk their lives each day to keep communities safe.” Members of the NAACP met with community leaders Thursday afternoon to discuss a strategy for diffusing tensions.
Residents wearing blue ribbons in support of police at a Ferguson city council candidate forum pic.twitter.com/BDytKONHkA
— Amanda M. Sakuma (@iamsakuma) March 12, 2015
Protests began with a peaceful tone Wednesday as groups gathered before the Ferguson Police Department to mark Police Chief Thomas Jackson’s resignation, announced earlier that day. But shortly after midnight, as demonstrators said the rally was dying down, gunshots quickly prompted the crowd to disperse. Belmar said police heard “three or four” shots ring out and saw muzzle flashes from roughly 125 yards away from where the two officers were struck. Both officers were rushed to the hospital in serious condition.








