FERGUSON, Mo. — Businesses here are preparing for the worst, now that Gov. Jay Nixon has declared a state of emergency and protesters are planning action ahead of a looming grand jury decision in the case of the police shooting death of Michael Brown.
Despite the frigid temperatures, some workers are expecting violence even worse than the looting and isolated rioting last summer if prosecutors don’t indict Darren Wilson, the local police officer who shot and killed the unarmed teen in August. Store employees have described an atmosphere of increased tension and stress as they wait for the impending announcement and what it could bring.
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“I’m thinking it’s going to be on the level of Rodney King,” said Antoine Harrison, who works at a T-Mobile store on West Florissant Avenue. He was referring to the violent 1992 riots sparked by a jury’s acquittal of a group of Los Angeles police officers caught on camera viciously beating an unarmed black man.
“You’re going to have more looting, probably some buildings burning down, probably some people vandalizing buildings and wrecking people’s homes,” Harrison said.
Harrison said he is afraid of a “race war,” adding, “It’s going to be more than just justice for Mike Brown.”
Those fears are why the store where Harrison works, and most of the others on the Florissant strip, have been pre-emptively boarded up, despite remaining open, creating an eerie, almost siege-like work environment.
Among those is the Sprint store a few doors down, which has been broken into several times since August. Employee Shanda Jackson said the store plans to install metal gates inside its windows, in case looters somehow get through the boarded windows. “People just don’t know what to think,” she said.
Seretha Billups, who works at the Feel Beauty Supply store, said her employer’s insurance company insisted on boarding the windows. Like Harrison, she expects an explosion of rage if there’s no indictment. “These people are very serious about what’s going on, and they’re very hurt as well. So they’re really trying to go out and send a message,” she said.
Billups said isolated but ongoing incidents of violence and crime in the area since Brown was killed had already put the community on edge. “You’re waking up, what’s going to happen today, what’s going to happen tomorrow?” she said. “It’s just very, very stressful. And it’s going to make things worse when the (decision) comes out.”
St. Louis County prosecutors have said an announcement on whether Wilson will face charges in connection with Brown’s shooting is likely to be announced soon. Gov. Nixon announced Monday that he was pre-emptively declaring a state of emergency and activating the National Guard in order to prepare for any violence. Other local and state law enforcement agencies are also making elaborate plans for how to respond.
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“I have a responsibility to plan for any contingencies that might arise,” Nixon told reporters Monday night. “I hope there’s no violence.”
Police and witnesses say Brown and Wilson engaged in a physical struggle through the window of the officer’s SUV shortly before the teen’s death on Aug. 9. Law enforcement officials say Brown attempted to take Wilson’s gun when the police officer fired the first shot. A half-dozen eyewitnesses have said they saw Brown flee the vehicle as Wilson open fire with the fatal shots as the teen stopped, turned and raised his arms in surrender. But a government official who spoke on the condition of anonymity told NBC News’ Pete Williams Wilson had said he feared for his safety when the teen turned and charged back toward him after running from the vehicle.









