FERGUSON 2.0

Via The Washington Post

Video captures white Baton Rouge police officer fatally shooting a black man, sparking outrage

By Travis M. Andrews and Michael E. Miller July 6 at 1:22 PM
Video captures white Baton Rouge police officer fatally shooting black man

On July 5, two white Baton Rouge police officers were involved in a deadly altercation with 37-year-old black man Alton Sterling. Sterling was pinned down by the officers and fatally shot. His death has sparked protests and anger. (BatonRougeCrime.com)

A video showing two white police officers involved in a deadly altercation with a 37-year-old black man in Baton Rouge circulated across the Internet early Wednesday morning, prompting peaceful street protests in the city and anger elsewhere.

The video showed two Baton Rouge police officers attempting to detain Alton Sterling after the officers responded to a call “from a complainant who stated that a black male who was selling music cd’s and wearing a red shirt threatened him with a gun” outside the Triple S Food Mart, a convenience store, a Facebook post by Baton Rouge Police Department said. Police said they responded about 12:35 a.m. Tuesday.

Sterling was shot and killed while pinned down by the officers.

His killing is the latest in a nationwide string of fatal police-involved arrests captured on video. Like many others, the first versions of what happened are coming more from a video showing a fragment of the incident than from police, who have had relatively little to say so far. Thus no clear picture has yet to emerge of the full sequence of events that led to the death.

The cellphone video of the incident surfaced on social media. The footage began with police standing a few feet from Sterling. A loud pop — like that of a stun gun — can be heard.

“Get on the ground,” a police officer yelled.

“Get on the ground,” the voice yelled again, followed by a second pop.

Sterling, a large man, remained on his feet.

A police officer tackled him over the hood of a silver car, then onto the ground.

Meanwhile, another restrained his left arm behind his back and knelt on it.

“He’s got a gun,” someone yelled.

“Gun. Gun.”

Both officers drew their pistols from their holsters. In the video, Sterling appeared to be fairly immobile.

Then, the officers shouted something unintelligible, which seemed to include the phrase “going for the gun.”

Two noises that sounded like shots rang out immediately after.

Whoever filmed the video then dropped the cellphone.

“Oh, s—,” someone said.

Three more shot-like sounds rang out.

“They shot him?”

“Yes.”

“Oh, my f—ing goodness.”

Sterling was pronounced dead on the scene when an ambulance arrived at 12:46 a.m.

East Baton Rouge Parish Coroner William “Beau” Clark said the initial autopsy reports show Sterling suffered more than two gunshot wounds to his chest and back and that he died from a a homicide, the Advocate reported.

In a statement, Baton Rouge Police Cpl. L’Jean McKneely Jr. said two officers “have been placed on administrative leave per standard procedure,” though it is believed that only one officer fired shots.

The officers have not been named.

“Our guys will most likely review the video tomorrow,” McKneely told The Washington Post in an email Tuesday night.

“We give officers normally a day or so to go home and think about it” before being interviewed, McKneely told the Advocate.

Police had released no further details as of early Wednesday morning.

Baton Rouge Mayor-President Kip Holden told WBRZ that a full investigation will be conducted.

“This is not going to be a coverup,” Holden said.

Family members, though, were outraged at what they said was a deadly instance of racial profiling.

The 15-year-old son of Alton Sterling, who was shot and killed by Baton Rouge police officers, broke down in tears, crying out, “I want Daddy,” as his mother, Quinyetta MacMillan, spoke at a news conference on July 6. (AP)

Sandra Sterling, an aunt who said she had raised Alton as her own son after his mother died, compared Tuesday’s killing to the fatal police-involved shooting of a white 6-year-old in November in Marksville, La., after which two Louisiana officers were arrested and charged with murder.

“All I want is justice for my child,” Sterling told The Post over the phone Tuesday night, her voice shredded by shouting and grief. “I want the same treatment y’all are giving that person in Marksville that killed that little white baby. I want that same kind of justice.”

“I don’t think they would have did that to a white person,” added Neco Sterling, one of Alton’s cousins.

Abdullah Muflahi, the shop’s owner, said he witnessed the event and offered his account to various local outlets.

“[Police] were really aggressive with him from the start,” Muflahi told the Advocate.

Muflahi said that police shot Sterling with a stun gun — as the video suggested — but that the suspect remained standing. Police then tackled him and pinned him down. One yelled “gun,” then one fired four to six shots into Sterling.

Muflahi told the Advocate, “His hand was nowhere [near] his pocket,” and that Sterling was not holding a weapon.

Then, Muflahi said that the officer who fired the shots began cursing and that both seemed to be “freaking out.”

Finally, the store owner said he heard one of the officers say, “Just leave him.”

Muflahi said he saw police retrieve a gun from Sterling’s pocket after the shooting.

“God bless his soul. It could’ve, it could have, it could have been handled differently. Much differently. On both sides it could have been handled differently,” Muflahi told WLBT.

The video has sparked outrage both in Louisiana and across the country.

Crowds began gathering outside the Triple S Food Mart about 4:30 p.m. Tuesday — swelling to more than 200 people at one point — and it didn’t dissipate until well after 2 a.m. Wednesday.

After two Baton Rouge, La., police officers fatally shot 37-year-old Alton Sterling, more than 100 people gathered to protest the incident outside the Triple S Food Mart where it occurred. (The Washington Post)

The crowd held signs with phrases such as “Justice for Alton” and “#NoJusticeNoPeace” scrawled on them in black sharpie and chanted familiar phrases.

“Hands up, don’t shoot.” “Black lives matter.”

Twenty-three-year-old Nicholas Belson, a recent graduate of Louisiana State University’s main campus, which is housed in Baton Rouge, was one of the protesters.

“I came out because I felt frustrated. You just feel like you have to do something. I live here,” Belson told the Advocate. “Once it starts hitting where you live, you start feeling the fear.”

Throughout the night, protesters set off fireworks and cars spun their tires, creating clouds of smoke. Passing drivers honked their cars’ horns, seemingly in solidarity. Meanwhile, Muflahi brought bottles of water and sodas to the crowds protesting outside his store.

On a table in front of the convenience store sat a wreath of flowers, a stuffed dog and several burned CDs. Above it hung a sign stating “RIP Big Alton.”

Local politicians called on state or federal officials to take over the investigation, which was still in the hands of Baton Rouge Police as of Tuesday night.

“The video footage released today of the shooting of Alton Sterling by officers of the Baton Rouge Police Department was deeply troubling and has understandably evoked strong emotion and anger in our community,” Rep. Cedric Richmond (D-La.) said in a statement. “There are a number of unanswered questions surrounding Mr. Sterling’s death. Including questions about the initial calls for police presence, the level of force used by officers, the verbal and physical altercation, and the response of the officers after he was shot. I call on the U.S. Department of Justice to conduct a full and transparent investigation into this incident.”

Alton Sterling’s name was trending on Twitter on Tuesday night, with many users saying the video called to mind Eric Garner, the black man who was placed in choke-hold by New York Police in July 2014 and subsequently died. “Black Lives Matter” became a trending search on Tumblr. Celebrities took to Twitter to express their feelings, including Andy Richter, MC Hammer and Amy Schumer.

Sandra Sterling said the viral video of her nephew’s killing was excruciating to watch.

“That video is everywhere now,” she said. “It hurts me to see it. I can see the picture but I don’t want to hear the sound. The sound gets me. It gives me an anxiety attack when I hear the sound.”

At the same time, however, she said she was glad the video emerged.

Before it was posted online, police and news media “twisted” the story to make Alton “seem like the bad guy,” she said.

“They had already prosecuted him,” she said. “Now their attitude has changed.”

Sterling said she learned of her nephew’s death minutes after it happened, when a neighbor who witnessed the shooting called her. She raced to the convenience store, where she could see a pair of legs sticking out from behind a car.

“Is that my son?” she asked police officers. “Is he dead?”

When the officers refused to answer, she pressed closer in an attempt to see whether it was Alton.

“They said, ‘Get back,’ or they were going to Tase me,” she told The Post. “They pulled their Tasers out.”

She then backed away and went around to the other side of the building to get a better look. By then, however, police had moved Alton’s body, she said.

“It was terrible,” she said. “I didn’t know if he was dead.”

Eventually, another officer arrived and told her that the body did belong to her nephew.

According to the Advocate, Alton Sterling had a criminal record dating back to 1996 that included aggravated battery, domestic abuse, possessing marijuana with the intent to distribute and illegally carrying a weapon with a controlled dangerous substance.

Sandra Sterling acknowledged that her nephew had a rap sheet but said he had “paid his debt to society.”

She described him as a “generous” giant. At 6-foot-4 and more than 300 pounds, Alton had only recently gotten out of jail and was living in Living Waters Outreach Ministry, a Christian transitional living center. Though he was struggling to get his life back on track, he still “gave away more CDs than he sold.”

“When Alton ate, everybody ate,” she said.

Sandra’s son, Elliott Sterling, said his cousin Alton was well known in Baton Rouge for being a silver-tongued salesman. On holidays such as the Fourth of July, Alton stayed outside the Triple S hawking his CDs and DVDs until 2 or 3 in the morning.

“He was really good at selling those CDs,” Elliott Sterling recalled. “If somebody asked for blues or country music, he’d know it all. He couldn’t make it in a regular job, but he could make it selling CDs. He could converse with everybody.”

He said Alton had four boys who, like him, will now grow up without a father.

“He had a hard life. He didn’t have no mama, no daddy,” Elliott said. “He wasn’t stable at all. He lived day to day based on what he made.”

He and his mother both doubted that Alton tried to pull a weapon on police, as the officers appear to shout in the video. Elliott said his cousin had been robbed at least once outside the convenience store and could have been carrying a gun “for protection,” but would never have pulled it on officers.

“He had his hands up when the officer tackled him,” Elliott said. “Even if he did have a gun [in his pocket], he couldn’t get it out with them holding him down like that.”

Sandra Sterling, a bail bond recovery agent in Baton Rouge, went further.

“Alton never had a gun. I know my child,” she claimed. “My take is that when they moved him, when they pulled him up so the public could no longer see him, that gun was put in his pocket.”

Baton Rouge Police have not said whether a gun was found on Sterling. Officials are expected to hold a news conference Wednesday morning with more details on the incident.

The Sterlings say they will be arriving early to protest.

Like Richmond, Alton’s family members have called on state or federal authorities to take over the investigation.

“You’re not going to go against your people,” Sandra Sterling said, arguing that Baton Rouge Police should not investigate its own officers for the shooting.

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Alton Sterling is one of 122 black Americans shot and killed by police so far in 2016, according to a Washington Post database of fatal police shootings. About 10 percent of the black Americans shot and killed were unarmed at the time of the shooting, while about 61 percent were armed with a gun.

Sterling is the second person fatally shot by Baton Rouge Police this year. The first was Calvin Smith, a 22-year-old black man who police say led them on a short car chase before opening fire at them, wounding two officers Feb. 13.

Sandra Sterling compared her nephew’s case to that of Jeremy Mardis, a white 6-year-old boy who was fatally shot in Marksville, La., in November by two officers working second jobs as city marshals. The officers, both of whom are black, were trying to serve a warrant on Mardis’s father when they chased him down a dead-end street and opened fire, killing the boy. Body cameras recorded the incident.

“They went to jail and it was all over the world,” she said. “I want my son to be the same way because he was important, too.”

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34 Comments
Wip
Wip
July 6, 2016 2:02 pm

I am completely torn about these types of incidents. Bad guy with a rap sheet. Ghetto people are no good. Baby daddy this and baby daddy that. A conviction for domestic abuse is real easy. All that’s needed is her word against yours. Lots of people in jail over he said, she said. Drug offense? What business is it of anyone’s?

If you had this type of background and a rap sheet, paid your debt to society and can’t get a job because of it, WTF are you going to do to support yourself? Something’s are totally fucked up.

NO, I am not taking sides on this. Not yet anyway.

Specie
Specie
July 6, 2016 2:10 pm

what? wtf is wrong with you people.

as long as you wear a uniform it’s okay to kill anybody.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 6, 2016 2:10 pm

A lot of people who get shot by cops are crazy. When they’re getting arrested they freak out because they think the cops are going to kill them. So maybe they’re not crazy after all.

harry p.
harry p.
July 6, 2016 2:12 pm

from watching that video, looks pretty bad.
more fuel for the fire for this 4th T.

baton rouge, another city i won’t plan on visiting any fucking time soon…

starfcker
starfcker
  harry p.
July 6, 2016 7:23 pm

This one didn’t work. One further down did. Here’s a better angle. Good shoothttp://hotair.com/archives/2016/07/06/video-new-footage-of-the-alton-sterling-shooting-emerges/http://hotair.com/archives/2016/07/06/video-new-footage-of-the-alton-sterling-shooting-emerges/

Buckhed
Buckhed
July 6, 2016 2:15 pm

The best thing that cops can do is stay away from predominantly black neighborhoods. Unless the call is for a shooting…just stay away. The folks there don’t like the cops regardless the skin tone of the officer.

Eventually they’ll kill each other on the level that they do on Chicago. This will take care of some of the problem.

Wip
Wip
  Buckhed
July 6, 2016 2:25 pm

You’re probably right.

kokoda
kokoda
July 6, 2016 2:16 pm

Regardless of what some of you think, this was outright sanctioned murder by government officials (Democide). Even the Gestapo would be jealous.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 6, 2016 2:20 pm

kokoda,

You might be right. You might be wrong. I couldn’t make out shit from that video. Was he going for the gun in his pocket or not?

Wip
Wip
  Iska Waran
July 6, 2016 2:24 pm

The guy who called the cops said he was not going for his gun.

kokoda
kokoda
  Iska Waran
July 6, 2016 2:33 pm

Iska….He certainly wasn’t going for a gun with his left hand – his arm was pinned down by the CopFuck by his head. Can’t see his right arm or the other cop – But, right before the shooting, there was no struggle.

Don’t automatically believe he had a gun. It could have been planted. And with someone shouting ‘gun, gun’, what a nice excuse to kill a defenseless (at that point) human.

It is just like abortion.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
  kokoda
July 6, 2016 4:27 pm

The gun could have been planted. if the dead guy’s fingerprints are on the loaded rounds, I’ll assume he had a gun, not that the Louisiana Bureau of Criminal Apprehension phonied up the evidence. We’ll see. I trust the forensics more than witnesses. Ferguson started out as an innocent guy getting shot with his hands up. It ended up as a guy who punched a cop and tried to wrestle his pistol away got shot while charging the cop.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  kokoda
July 6, 2016 5:29 pm

From what I understand the cops were called after he threatened someone with his gun.

That sort of goes against it being planted afterward.

starfcker
starfcker
  kokoda
July 6, 2016 7:25 pm

No planted gun. Watch the angle i posted above

Hollow man
Hollow man
July 6, 2016 2:23 pm

Right or wrong here we go again

Rise Up
Rise Up
July 6, 2016 2:49 pm

“We give officers normally a day or so to go home and think about it” before being interviewed, McKneely told the Advocate.
———–
Translation: “We give the officers time to get their alibis in sync.”

Gator
Gator
  Rise Up
July 7, 2016 10:21 am

I know, what a crock of shit. They don’t give anyone else that opportunity. Equal treatment under the law. They should be treated the same as they treat others in similar circumstances and hahahahaha i can’t type it anymore with a straight face.

I don’t much care for cops or dindus with a mile long rap sheet. Reserving judgement here. We all know how most of these things turn out.

javelin
javelin
July 6, 2016 2:57 pm

I usually am torn on these issues–between an ever growing brutal police state and a need for societal order.
Having said that, this looks like an execution style murder–pull out a gun, place it against the head of a man on his back being restrained by your knee on 1 arm and a 250 lb cop on the other arm and then–bam, bam…lights out

Ticky Toc
Ticky Toc
July 6, 2016 3:44 pm

Does anyone actually know a cop that is not a loser in normal life and an extreme control freak?

They are not going to fair well when TSHTF.

JIMSKI
JIMSKI
  Ticky Toc
July 6, 2016 4:52 pm

Yes I do my brother

Police officer in Toledo Ohio. 22 year veteran and a member of the reserve MP army battalion who went to the giant sandbox 2 times.

About 5 years in he was involved in a worst case situation. Dark house no power someone saw a crack head bla bla bla.

A shadow appears out of the dark bedroom and the silhouette of a gun appears. My brother choose not to shoot based on the height of the gun and the finish of the ” weapon . Also the kids clothes and the holster laying a chair.

It was an 8 year old kid left alone. Crisis averted?

Later that night his partner told him he would no longer be his partner. He said that not shooting the kid was the wrong call as the gun had been pointing at the partners back and not my brother. Several other officers had the same opinion and when my brother went into swat 2 members quit the unit.
I have told this story here before. You are correct in that 90% of all cops make the good 10% look bad but there are good cops.

Warrio
Warrio
  Ticky Toc
July 6, 2016 10:16 pm

Wait until YOU need a cop pally! What the protesters fail to tell you,is, the suspect was armed with a gun and was going for it to kill the cops! Now how to end this? By talking nice and using reason with this savage? No way! They terminated the suspect who would have killed them unless they took decisive action! If this black criminal had not been involved in criminal behavior, he would have had NO encounter with the police. Your a cop hater I see, like I said, “Wait until YOU need a cop!”!

Peaceout
Peaceout
July 6, 2016 3:49 pm

Only been mugged once in my life and that was at a restaurant parking lot in Baton Rouge, LA. After taking my money at gun point he printed across a main intersection through traffic and ran up the concrete incline of a freeway over pass. Seconds later you could see the glow of a lighter in the darkness of the over pass. The police had no interest I coming to the scene even after telling them I had the perp in my sights. I could come down to the station and file a complaint, right. Dude stole my money and within seconds had bought drugs and was smoking them.

This shit happens everyday, every hour, every minute across this country. Cops don’t have time because it doesn’t matter, the cycle continues, bust a guy, he is back out on the street hours later picking up where he left off and so it goes.

And yes the dude was black. His life matters.

Baton Rouge ES!

Ticky Toc
Ticky Toc
July 6, 2016 3:58 pm

I lived in Baton Rouge for about a year. It certainly was not my cup of tea (no city is) but I will admit that by and large everyone I met was friendly, the food was good, and the women were pretty.

RCW
RCW
July 6, 2016 4:05 pm

These situations aren’t always black & white (bad pun I know) but:
1) cops should be held to same standard as anyone else wielding a weapon
2) rogue cops (the minority) should not be protected by their own
3) cops are militarized
4) we need them to prevent bungle in the jungle
5) when I’m stopped by them, it’s both hands open & visible. My only words: yes sir, no sir, am I free to go?
6) until this paradigm changes, you’re a fool and/or have a death wish if you try to resist/fight them.
7) they’re revenue agents of the state. Anytime I see them, I try to stay clear of them; trouble is always close by
I’m a white guy and even my dim bulb of a brain can do the math.

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 6, 2016 4:21 pm

Milo weighs in:

Iska Waran
Iska Waran
July 6, 2016 4:27 pm
kokoda
kokoda
  Iska Waran
July 6, 2016 5:07 pm

Now THAT, was very funny.

Overthecliff
Overthecliff
  kokoda
July 6, 2016 5:51 pm

Good advise as well.

lysander
lysander
July 6, 2016 6:38 pm

This is what planned societal chaos looks like. Divide and conquer and all that jazz. TPTB have us hopping from one foot to another like a bunch of idiots. “I hate blacks, but I hate cops too”.

I can’t stand bad cops and I despise niggers. But what I REALLY hate are the people responsible for all this bullshit.

When hitlery is elected, our Greek tragedy will truly begin. Now I know that there’s no way to stop her because the fix is in. I’ll vote nonetheless, but it’ll be the last time.

When hitlery is in, this kinda shit will escalate to a level we never imagined.

starfcker
starfcker
July 6, 2016 7:27 pm
Spinolator
Spinolator
July 6, 2016 7:27 pm

They should show that video in schools. Sadly, at this point, it would be edumacational.

underfire
underfire
July 6, 2016 8:33 pm

So, how come they don’t just have black cops patrol black neighborhoods? Problem solved.

….. Yes I know the answer, just thought I’d ask the question.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
July 7, 2016 10:24 am

You know it just hit me, they want to disarm the populations o much, why don’t they go first and disarm the police? Let’s see how that goes.

wip
wip
  hardscrabble farmer
July 7, 2016 6:45 pm

I’m having a hard time believing HSF wrote the above. He has an impeccable writing style.