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		 Protesters 
		stage peaceful 'die-in' in downtown St. Louis 
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		[November 17, 2014] 
		By Scott Malone
 ST. LOUIS (Reuters) - A crowd of a couple 
		hundred demonstrators, angry about the fatal August shooting of an 
		unarmed black teenager by a white police officer, took to the streets of 
		St. Louis on Sunday, briefly blocking a major intersection in protest.
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			 Dozens of people lay down in the street outside of a downtown 
			theater hosting a film festival, pretending to have been shot by 
			other protests playing the role of police officers in an action 
			intended to evoke the memory of 18-year-old Michael Brown, who died 
			100 days ago in front of his home in the suburb of Ferguson, 
			Missouri. 
 Marchers went on to briefly block a major intersection near 
			Washington University and the event ended without any of the 
			violence that seen in Ferguson following Brown's shooting death by 
			police officer Darren Wilson.
 
 "This is a mature movement. It is a different movement that it was 
			in August. Then it just had anger, justifiable anger," said DeRay 
			McKesson, a 29-year-old protest leader, as a wet snow fell on the 
			city. "Now we are organized. We are strategizing. And we are going 
			to bring our message to the power structure."
   
			
			 A grand jury, sitting in the county seat of Clayton, Missouri, is 
			currently deliberating whether to bring criminal charges against 
			Wilson. Many residents and officials in the region fear another wave 
			of rioting similar to the one in August that led to the burning out 
			of multiple businesses in Ferguson could result if the grand jury 
			decides not to charge Wilson.
 "We are bracing for that possibility. That is what many people are 
			expecting. The entire community is going to be upset," if Wilson is 
			not indicted, said Jose Chavez, 46, a leader of the local Latinos en 
			Axion group.
 
 There have been conflicting witness accounts of the shooting, with 
			some saying that Brown had his hands up in surrender while and 
			others have described it as a struggle between Brown and Wilson.
 
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			Ferguson and its surroundings have been fairly quiet the last few 
			days as both police and protests plan their response to the grand 
			jury's report.
 "We've decided not to wait for that decision. We've decided to get 
			started," said Rockit Ali, a 22-year-old organizer of Sunday's 
			demonstration, who marched in a Spider-Man mask.
 
 While Sunday's event had been planned as a nonviolent action, Ali 
			said that violence could not be ruled out if the grand jury finds 
			Wilson without fault.
 
 "Rioting and looting are the tools of those without a voice. The 
			rioting and looting, while I didn’t participate in it, was 
			necessary. Without it we would not be standing here today," Ali 
			said. "There is no revolution without violence."
 
 (Reporting by Scott Malone Editing by W Simon)
 
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