FERGUSON, Missouri — When James Williams was about 12 years old, a team of St. Louis County police officers stormed his family’s home to serve a warrant and ended up shooting and killing his mother.
Not long after the police arrived at their home in nearby Wellston, Williams says they found his mother standing at the top of the steps. Words were exchanged. They thought she had a gun and opened fire. Turns out, Williams says, she was carrying little more than a telephone.
“They shot my mom four times,” Williams said. “All of this with the police out here just brings that story back.”
For the last several nights, this small suburban town has been under siege by protesters, looters and police armed with assault rifles and paramilitary style uniforms. Police and protesters have collided as protests following the Aug. 9 shooting of unarmed black teen Michael Brown by a white police officer, has devolved into a week’s worth of violent clashes.
Many on the front lines of battles with police are young, African-American men like Williams, now 23, who see the police as untrustworthy adversaries. And the more violent the push-back by police, with a near nightly barrage of tear gas and rubber bullets, the more concentrated and coordinated the violence from some factions of residents gets.
President Obama addressed that very issue in a press conference Monday afternoon:
“In too many communities around the country, a gulf of mistrust exists between local residents and law enforcement,” the president said, urging protesters to remain peaceful. “While I understand the passions and the anger that arise over the death of Michael Brown,” said Obama, “giving into that anger by looting or carrying guns, and even attacking the police only serves to raise tensions and stir chaos. It undermines rather than advancing justice.”
In the wake of a state-imposed curfew, which was removed on Monday, some in the crowds have fired on police and plotted ambushes, according to the Missouri State Highway Patrol, which is in charge of crowd control. The more interaction there is between police and protesters, it seems, the more emboldened those who oppose the police have become. Each night, as the vast majority of protesters fade from the streets, the remaining holders-on are more aggressive. Most of them are young, black men; nearly all of them are angry and some are armed, witnesses and the police say.
Among the most violent clashes came late Sunday night, as police say groups were organized in their attacks, shooting at police and throwing Molotov cocktails. Gov. Jay Nixon has since mobilized the National Guard to come to Ferguson. But many people believe the National Guard would only exacerbate an already volatile situation.
“I hate to say it but depending on how they handle it, it’s going be urban warfare out here,” said Eddie Gramz, 30. “Some people got guns, so if the police flex, you already know what it is.”
%22If%20there%E2%80%99s%20going%20to%20be%20gassing%20in%20the%20streets%20of%20Ferguson%20tonight%2C%20they%E2%80%99re%20not%20going%20to%20be%20gassing%20women%20and%20children.%22′
Malik Shabazz, president of Black Lawyers for Justice, who is one of a handful of community leaders praised by police for helping maintain order and enforcing the previous nights’ curfew, said law enforcement needs to allow more time for homegrown leaders to work with protesters before bringing in the guard.
“We don’t need the people antagonized by the escalation of the National Guard,” Shabazz said on Monday afternoon.
Many have complained that older black leaders have abandoned the area’s young people during their rebellion against authority in the wake of Brown’s death.
“It’s like a pot of boiling water and we’re all just watching it just boil over,” said Tommy Chatman-Bey, who in his 60s and has urged the city’s youth to remain calm. “They’re over there at the church listening to a speech while thousands of young people are in the streets demanding to be heard.”









