Following violent protests, Ferguson experienced a night of relative calm after a grand jury began investigating whether criminal charges should be brought against the white police officer who fatally shot an unarmed black teen and a visit to the St. Louis suburb by Attorney General Eric Holder.
NPR's Elise Hu, reporting from Ferguson, tweeted this morning:
If you're waking up, calm prevailed in #Ferguson last night. Cops made only 6 arrests, compared to 47 the night before.
— Elise Hu (@elisewho) August 21, 2014
As St. Louis Public Radio's Chris McDaniel writes:
"As demonstrators made laps up and down the road (remaining in motion in accordance with law enforcement's rule), most of the policing was self-policing."A handful of demonstrators would yell out to 'Keep moving!' or 'Get out the streets' when a crowd would gather. And those same demonstrators would admonish journalists for backups as well." 'Y'all have nice gas masks, that's cool,' one demonstrator said to a stationary journalist. 'We don't, so please keep moving.' "
Holder met with dozens of leaders at a community college on Wednesday in hopes his visit would calm the troubled community, which erupted into anger and violence following the Aug. 9 fatal shooting of teen Michael Brown by police officer Darren Wilson, reports NPR's Carrie Johnson.
Holder told college students about his personal experience with being racially profiled and asked them to start a conversation about how the justice system can change.
"I remember how humiliating that was and how angry I was and the impact it had on me," Holder said at a gathering of dozens of community leaders at the St. Louis Community College.
Holder also met with Missouri Highway Patrol Capt. Ron Johnson, thanking him for taking control of a tough situation and telling him to get some rest.
Johnson, asked if he had confidence in the local investigation, said Holder's presence "is a guarantee on that."
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