Police officer shot in troubled city of Ferguson
Two police officers were shot at and one was wounded late on Saturday near the flashpoint city of Ferguson, Missouri, where the fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager triggered race riots and national outrage.
St. Louis County Police Department spokesman Brian Schellman said a bullet struck one officer on foot patrol in his left arm at 9:10 pm on Saturday.
The shooter is on the loose.
The officer had been conducting a business check at the Ferguson Community Center when he noticed the male suspect and tried to ask him why he was there. The suspect then ran away.
"The officer initiated a foot pursuit of the subject. During the foot pursuit, the subject spun toward the officer armed with a handgun, and fired shots at the officer," Schellman said in a statement.
"The officer returned fire at the suspect; however, there is no indication at this time that the suspect was struck by return gunfire from the officer."
A police search failed to turn up the suspect.
In neighboring St. Louis, an off-duty police officer was shot at by an unknown number of assailants while driving his own car on a highway shortly after midnight.
The officer, who sustained minor injuries from broken glass, did not return fire.
"It is unclear at this time if the officer was targeted or if this was a random act of violence," Schellman said.
Ferguson has seen large protests take place since Michael Brown, 18, was shot dead on Aug 9 by a white police officer.
The college-bound teen was shot at least six times by police officer Darren Wilson, and his body was left in the street for several hours before it was removed.
Violence rocked Ferguson - a St. Louis suburb of 21,000 with an African-American majority and an overwhelmingly white police department and town council - prompting Missouri Governor Jay Nixon to briefly call in the National Guard to quell protests.
Some demonstrators complained that police used undue force against peaceful protests. The military-grade equipment of Ferguson's force also prompted nationwide discussion about whether police should be dressed for war zones while engaging with civilians.
Reuters - AFP
Missouri State Highway Patrol troopers stand watch on Saturday in Ferguson, as police search for a suspect in the shooting of a police officer. Christian Gooden / Associated Press |
(China Daily 09/29/2014 page12)