The Department of Justice has officially requested that Ferguson police crack down on officers who wear “I am Darren Wilson” bracelets. The strongly-worded plea comes after photos of local law enforcement sporting them amid pro-Michael Brown protests in the community went viral this week.
#Ferguson Police with a bracelet on that reads I am #DarrenWilson. #MediaBlackOutUSA pic.twitter.com/DgRKvAE8xp
— MediaBlackoutUSA (@MediaBlackoutUS) September 24, 2014
“We are keenly aware of the importance of individual expression of opinions, even those that some find offensive, insensitive, or harmful,” Christy Lopez, a deputy chief in the Civil Rights Division, said in a letter to Ferguson Police Chief Tom Jackson on Friday. Still, she said, “these bracelets reinforce the very ‘us versus them’ mentality that many residents of Ferguson believe exists.”
DOJ wrote to the #Ferguson PD chief requesting that officers stop wearing 'I am #DarrenWilson' bracelets on-duty. pic.twitter.com/tuNe1SPLqB
— Andrew Peng (@TheAPJournalist) September 27, 2014
The DOJ also called out some Ferguson police officers for wearing blacked out name plates or no identification at all. The “lack of name plates make it difficult for members of the public to identity officers if they engage in misconduct, or for police departments to hold them accountable,” they wrote in a separate letter to Jackson.
Meanwhile, police in Ferguson shut down a long-standing protest campsite in a parking lot of a vacant Ponderosa restaurant located near the site of Brown’s death. The activist group Lost Voices told the Associated Press that two of its members were arrested Friday afternoon in connection to the campsite closing.
This news comes on the heels of another tumultuous night in Ferguson, capping a week in which a memorial to Brown burned to the ground and the city’s spokesman was fired after revelations he once killed an unarmed man.
A melee erupted Thursday night outside Ferguson police headquarters after Chief Jackson waded into a crowd of protesters in an attempt to show unity. Instead, tussles between police and protesters broke out and several people were hauled off in plastic cuffs.
Brown was the unarmed black teenager shot dead Aug. 9 by Wilson, a white Ferguson police officer, prompting days of community protests that met with an aggressive crackdown by local law enforcement. The city released a videotaped apology on Thursdayfrom Jackson to Brown’s family, and to the peaceful protesters who’d been caught in the crossfire of rubber bullets and tear gas.
Jackson’s apology didn’t satisfy everyone. According to witnesses, a group of protesters assembled outside the police headquarters Thursday evening and began yelling that they didn’t believe it was sincere. They also called it too little, too late — coming more than seven weeks after Brown’s death.
As the chanting reached an apex, Jackson emerged from police headquarters and stood face-to-face with demonstrators.
“He asked, ‘what can I do to make this better, what can I do to build trust,’” said Patricia Bynes, a Democratic Committeewoman representing Ferguson Township.
Bynes, who said she was standing just feet away from the chief, said protesters asked Jackson to march with them as a show of unity. He agreed.
Video captured at the scene and posted on social media shows the gray-haired chief amid a gaggle of demonstrators stepping slowly up the block. Some spread their arms to create a boundary around the chief, calling out to others to back up. Chants of “We are Mike Brown!” began to rise.
Moments later came commotion, followed by shouts of “Stop pushing me!”
Witnesses say an unidentified black Ferguson police officer started barreling from the back of the crowd toward the chief, pushing people and even knocking one woman to the ground. The woman had been carrying a large American flag and was standing next to the chief when she was pushed.
In photos and video from the scene, one woman is seen being tackled to the ground by a burly police officer as she screams for them to stop.
Best video of last night showing that nobody touched the Chief of Police before the officers got out of control :: http://t.co/pBl7jFqdYP
— Shaun King (@ShaunKing) September 26, 2014
“You’ve got to stop this, chief!” Pastor Renita Lamkin is seen and heard pleading.
“Please stop it! Please stop it! I was walking next to the chief and he knocked me down. I wasn’t doing anything. Please! Please! Please! You’re not listening to me!” the woman is heard yelling. “Why is he doing this? This is not right. This is not right. We was trying to get unity and this is what you do? This is unity?”
That was the spark that set off a standoff between police and protesters that lasted well into the early hours of Friday morning.
“It turned into a melee,” Bynes said.








