Published time: August 14, 2014 14:42
Edited time: August 14, 2014 20:45
Edited time: August 14, 2014 20:45
Police stand watch as demonstrators protest the shooting death of teenager Michael Brown on August 13, 2014 in Ferguson, Missouri. (AFP Photo / Getty Images / Scott Olson)
The governor of Missouri relieved
St. Louis County law enforcement from policing the ongoing demonstrations in the
town of Ferguson, putting Highway Patrol in charge instead.
Speaking to the press on
Thursday, Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon announced on Thursday that he has directed
the state’s Highway Patrol to provide security to the town, where outrage
continues to erupt following the officer-involved shooting and killing of
Michael Brown, an 18-year-old unarmed teenager, on Saturday.
“We’ve all been
deeply troubled by this crisis,” Nixon said, adding that the
current crisis unfolding in the state “is not what Missouri is about.” He
acknowledged that Ferguson looks “like a war zone”lately, and said, “We
need to rebuilt the trust that’s been lost” in the wake of Brown’s
death and the use of police force on demonstrators.
Nixon added that the Highway
Patrol’s involvement will not affect the responsibility of those involved in
conducting investigations into the killing of Brown and the protests that have
taken place since his death. He confirmed that the Department of Justice is
conducting a parallel investigation.
Nixon also touched on the
controversy surrounding police refusal to identify the officer involved in
Brown's death. In response to a question at the press conference, Nixon said
the official's name should be released as “expeditiously as
possible.”
Previously, Rep Wm. Lacy Clay
(D-Mo.) told Bloomberg News on Thursday morning that Gov. Jay Nixon, also a
Democrat, had confirmed to him that county police will be pulled from their
duties in Ferguson.
On Wednesday evening, protests in
Ferguson for the fourth straight day appeared to resemble a war zone when
militarized police began firing tear gas and non-lethal ammunition into the
streets towards private residences. Two journalists, one from Washington Post
and another from Huffington Post, were briefly detained while on assignment.
“The gov. just called
me and he’s on his way to St. Louis now to announce he’s taking St. Louis
County police out of the situation,” Rep. Clay told Derek
Wallbank, a reporter for Bloomberg, early Thursday.
Earlier that afternoon, US
President Barack Obama said during a press conference that he has spoken with
Gov. Nixon and Attorney General Eric Holder, and had instructed federal
officials to do everything they could to investigate Brown's death and keep the
situation in Ferguson calm. According to NewsChannel 5, the Justice Department
will also be spending special prosecutors to Ferguson to assist in the
investigation.
The FBI has previously
acknowledged that it is investigating Saturday’s shooting death, and Rep. Clay
issued a statement on Monday with other members of Congress urging federal
agents to expand their probe.
“In light of the
foregoing developments, we ask the Department of Justice to investigate the
shooting of Michael Brown, looking at both the facts of the specific incident
as well as the potential for any pattern or practice of police misconduct by
the Ferguson Police Department," reads a portion of the statement,
signed by Reps. Clay, John Conyers (D-Michigan) and Marsha Fudge (D-Ohio).
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