Four police officers were fatally shot and seven wounded in
one of the worst shootings of police in recent U.S. history, by snipers who
targeted them during rallies in Dallas to protest against the fatal shooting of
two black men by police this week.
Dallas Police Chief David Brown told a news conference that
two snipers in elevated positions shot 11 officers, killing three, in what
appeared to be a coordinated attack. A fourth officer died, police said later
on Twitter. At least one more was in surgery. Some of the victims were shot in
the back.
Police said one suspect whom they had engaged in a shootout
had been arrested and a bomb squad unit was investigating a suspicious package
found near the suspect's location.
A second "person of interest" had turned himself
in, they added, though there was no word on the arrest of a possible second
sniper.
"Our worst nightmare has happened," Mike Rawlings,
mayor of the Texas city, told a news conference. "It is a heartbreaking
moment for the city of Dallas."
Television footage showed a heavy police presence, with
officers taking cover behind vehicles on the street.
The shooting happened as largely peaceful protests unfolded
around the United States after the shooting of Philando Castile, 32, by police
near St. Paul, Minnesota, late on Wednesday. His girlfriend posted live video
on the internet of the bloody scene minutes afterward, which was widely viewed.
Castile's death occurred within a day of the shooting of
Alton Sterling, 37, in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Sterling was killed during an
altercation with two white police officers. Graphic video of that incident
caused an outcry on social media.
"Our thoughts and prayers are with the Dallas law
enforcement community and the Dallas Area Rapid Transit officers killed and
injured this evening," Governor Greg Abbott said in a statement.
In Chicago, protesters shut down a stretch of the Dan Ryan
Expressway - one of Chicago's main arteries - for about 10 minutes on Thursday.
In New York, several hundred protesters blocked traffic in
Times Square in the heart of Manhattan, chanting "Hands up, don't
shoot." More than a dozen arrests were made, the New York Police
Department said.
In St. Paul, about a thousand people gathered outside the
governor's mansion, chanting "Hey hey, ho ho, those killer cops have got
to go," and other slogans.
Minnesota Governor Mark Dayton made a brief appearance in an
attempt to quell the crowd. He said earlier a state investigation was already
under way.
"Would this have happened if the driver and the
passengers were white? I don’t think it would have," Dayton told
reporters, speaking of the Castile shooting.
"So I'm forced to confront that this kind of racism
exists, and it's incumbent upon all of us to vow and ensure that it doesn't
happen and doesn't continue to happen," he said.
State investigators later identified Minneapolis area police
officer Jeronimo Yanez as the patrolman who fatally shot Castile during a
traffic stop.
"RACIAL DISPARITIES" - OBAMA
U.S. President Barack Obama described the killings as
tragedies.
"All of us as Americans should be troubled by these
shootings, because these are not isolated incidents. They're symptomatic of a
broader set of racial disparities that exist in our criminal justice
system," he said after arriving in Poland for a NATO summit.
The use of force by police against African-Americans in
cities from Ferguson, Missouri, to Baltimore and New York has sparked periodic
and sometimes violent protests in the past two years and has spawned the Black
Lives Matter movement.
Anger has intensified when the officers involved in such
incidents have been acquitted in trials or not charged at all.
"I was already fuming when I woke up this morning over
Baton Rouge, but for it to happen here again just pushed me right over the
edge," said truck driver Thomas Michaels, 42, who was among the protesters
in St. Paul.
"We live in a racist society where black lives don't
matter, my kids lives don't matter and I'm sick of it. I don't even know if it
can be fixed," he said.
Another protester, retail worker Tanya McDonald, 28, said:
"What gets me is how many people are failing to see that this is happening
almost every day. We're dying, we're being killed off by people hiding behind a
badge and no one's doing anything to stop it."
The Washington Post said Castile was at least the 506th
person and 123rd black American shot and killed by police so far in 2016,
according to a database it has set up to track such deaths.
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