Black man shot by Louisiana police
mourned in Baton Rouge
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[July 16, 2016]
By Kathy Finn
BATON ROUGE, La. (Reuters) - Civil rights
leaders Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton joined hundreds of mourners in
Louisiana on Friday to remember a black man killed last week by white
policemen, one of two deadly encounters that led to protests against
racial bias in law enforcement.
As heavy rain fell outside, a steady stream of people filed into an
activity center at Baton Rouge's Southern University to view the body of
37-year-old Alton Sterling, whose open casket was surrounded by flowers
and photographs.
The visitation was held at the center to accommodate the large crowd
that turned out to pay their respects to the father of five known as
"Big Alton." Police shot him at a close quarters on July 5 as he sold
CDs outside a convenience store, an incident that was recorded on a
cellphone.
“We’re not anti police, we’re anti wrong," Rev. Sharpton told the
mourners in condemning Sterling's killing, which came during the same
week as the fatal shooting of a young black man in Minnesota by a police
officer.
Among the mourners was Minerva Dunn, who serves in the U.S. Army and
worships at the same church as Sterling's aunt, who raised him after his
parents passed away.
“I am ripped apart by this,” Dunn said. “My husband is a police officer,
I’m a soldier, and I have two black sons,” she said. “I am so
disheartened, and my hurt comes from different places.”
The deaths in Louisiana and Minnesota renewed outrage against law
enforcement's treatment of minorities and also rekindled a national
debate on race relations that began after police-involved killings two
years ago.
Then in Dallas last Thursday, one of the protests ended with the killing
of five policemen in a racially motivated attack by a black U.S.
military veteran who opened fire on white officers. The rampage
highlighted the dangers routinely faced by law enforcement officers,
while adding a new element of concern about the racially tinged violence
that has shocked many Americans.
“Nobody condones killing cops, nobody stands up for what happened in
Dallas, but I want to see some of you stand up in Louisiana and say we
think it is wrong when cops do wrong,” Sharpton said.
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The body of Alton Sterling, who was shot dead by Baton Rouge police
officers, lies in a casket during his funeral. REUTERS/Jonathan
Bachman
Carl Slaughter, a Baton Rouge resident who has run a community
center for 35 years, remembered Sterling as a teenager who spent
many hours there after the death of his parents.
“He was a good kid, always good natured, and everybody has good
memories of him,” Slaughter said.
He said he sympathized with police but even so, he thinks Sterling’s
killing was unjust, based on video footage of the incident he
watched on television.
Sterling was shot and killed in the store's parking lot during an
altercation with two white officers responding to a 911 call about a
man threatening someone with a gun. The incident was recorded by the
shop owner.
According to an affidavit, the officers tried to restrain Sterling
and deployed Tasers. But they used deadly force after Sterling
reached for a gun in his pants pocket, it said.
The U.S. Justice Department has opened a civil rights investigation
into the shooting.
"This fight for social justice and police reform will require us to
agitate, legislate and litigate," Representative Cedric Richmond, a
Democrat whose congressional district stretches from Baton Rouge to
New Orleans, said during the service.
(Writing by Frank McGurty; editing by Grant McCool and Tom Brown)
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