Protests in Pittsburgh over police shooting 17-year old

For the second night residents in East Pittburgh staged protests over the fatal shooting of Antwon Rose, who was shot by police officers as he fled a car that had been been stopped by them.

Protestors rally in front of the Allegheny County Courthouse on Thursday, June 21, 2018, in Pittsburgh. They are protesting the killing of Antwon Rose Jr who was fatally shot by a police officer seconds after he fled a traffic stop.
AP

Protestors rally in front of the Allegheny County Courthouse on Thursday, June 21, 2018, in Pittsburgh. They are protesting the killing of Antwon Rose Jr who was fatally shot by a police officer seconds after he fled a traffic stop.

For the second night, hundreds of people in Pennsylvania have taken to the streets to protest the fatal police shooting of a 17-year-old boy.

Protesters demonstrated outside the East Pittsburgh police headquarters on Thursday night and then began marching through the streets, eventually shutting down a major interstate.

Antwon Rose Jr was shot by an East Pittsburgh officer on Tuesday just seconds after he fled from a traffic stop in a confrontation partly captured on video.

Police had stopped the car Antwon was riding in as part of an investigation into an earlier shooting.

The video shows the officer firing three shots seconds after Antwon and another passenger are seen dashing from the car.

A lawyer for Antwon's family said on Thursday the boy did not pose an immediate threat to anyone.

AP

Protestors swarm the front of the Allegheny County Courthouse as they rally on Thursday, June 21, 2018 in Pittsburgh. They are protesting the killing of Antwon Rose Jr who was fatally shot by a police officer seconds after he fled a traffic stop.

Civil rights attorney S Lee Merritt said late on Wednesday that he didn't see any apparent justification for the use of deadly force by an East Pittsburgh police officer that left Antwon Rose Jr dead. Allegheny County police are conducting an independent investigation of the shooting in East Pittsburgh, a borough about 16 kilometres (10 miles) east of Pittsburgh.

Part of the encounter was captured on video and posted to Facebook by a bystander. 

Officer Michael Rosfeld confirmed to a WTAE-TV reporter who went to his house on Thursday that he was the officer who fired the shots but said he had not watched the news and was unaware the video even existed. Rosfeld said he could not talk about the shooting because of the open investigation.

Investigators and city officials have declined to name the officer. They said he was placed on administrative leave during the investigation.

Social media outrage

The shooting has sparked some social media outrage and calls for punishment of the officer, including from rapper Nas and a handful of other celebrities. A Wednesday night protest at the East Pittsburgh police headquarters lasted for several hours and drew more than 100 people, some of whom lay down in front of a police cruiser.

A second protest on Thursday afternoon at the Allegheny County courthouse attracted nearly 1,000 people, including speakers decrying police use of force and gun violence. Protesters later took to the streets, shutting down a major interstate. Some sat down on Interstate 376, blocking traffic in both directions, while others chanted, "What do we want? Justice. When do we want it? Now."

Investigators said the officer stopped the car Antwon and two other people were riding in on Tuesday because it matched the description of a car reported to be involved in a shooting about 15 minutes earlier in a nearby town. As the officer took the driver into custody, the short video shows Antwon and the other passenger running from the car.

Three shots fired

The officer quickly fired three shots, all of which struck Antwon, who later died at a hospital from his injuries. The medical examiner has not said where the teen was struck.

"We must emphasise that rumors of (Antwon) being involved in a separate shooting are unsubstantiated," Merritt wrote in his statement, saying the use of deadly force seems unjustified. "We know that he was not armed at the time he was shot down, that he posed no immediate threat to anyone."

Antwon's friends, family and teachers said he was a promising student, who volunteered at a charity, was generous and had a "million-dollar smile."

Allegheny County Police Commissioner Coleman McDonough said on Wednesday that he was confident the car Antwon was in was involved in the earlier shooting, partly because a window had been shot. He said officers found two guns in the car, and that the driver was released after questioning without being charged.

McDonough confirmed that Antwon was not armed and that no shots were fired at the officers.

Pennsylvania law allows officers to use deadly force against a fleeing suspect in only a handful of circumstances. It's permitted if the suspect poses a threat of immediate danger, has used or threatened lethal violence previously or possesses a lethal weapon.

New to job 

East Pittsburgh Mayor Louis Payne said the officer had worked for the department for two weeks and was officially sworn in a few hours before the shooting. Rosfeld confirmed to WTAE-TV that he had worked with the department almost three weeks and worked previously in the Oakmont, Harmar and University of Pittsburgh police departments.

Leaders of the Pittsburgh-based Black Political Empowerment Project asked on Thursday for the Pennsylvania attorney general's office to investigate this and other police-involved shootings, citing only two instances where the Allegheny County district attorney had filed homicide charges against police officers in fatal shootings in the last 20 years.

A joint statement from East Pittsburgh officials and police issued on Thursday expressed condolences and sadness over Antwon's death and asked the community to respect the investigative process. Rossfled said he had a lot of support from the local law enforcement community and from family.

Democratic US Senator Bob Casey also issued a statement on Thursday saying the teen's family had a right to answers.

"I am disturbed by what I saw on the video, and I have numerous questions about exactly what happened and why." he said.

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