U.S. report faults Ferguson police's tactics

Police arrest a man as they disperse a protest in Ferguson, Mo., in this file photo from Aug. 9.
Police arrest a man as they disperse a protest in Ferguson, Mo., in this file photo from Aug. 9.

ST. LOUIS -- Police antagonized crowds that gathered to protest in Ferguson, Mo., after Michael Brown's death last summer, violated free-speech rights and made it difficult to hold officers accountable, according to a Justice Department draft report.

The report summary -- which covers the two-week period of unrest after a white police officer fatally shot the unarmed black 18-year-old in August -- also faulted officers for inappropriately using tear gas, withholding information that should have been made public and relying on military-style equipment "that produced a negative public reaction" in the community.

The summary is part of a longer after-action report to be released in the coming weeks focusing on the actions of police in Ferguson, St. Louis city and county, and the Missouri State Highway Patrol.

Details of the summary were first reported by the St. Louis Post-Dispatch on Tuesday. The Associated Press later obtained a copy.

The draft report suggests the protests after Brown's death Aug. 9 were aggravated by the community's hostility toward Ferguson police and worsened when authorities didn't quickly divulge details of his death.

"Had law enforcement released information on the officer-involved shooting in a timely manner and continued the information flow as it became available, community distrust and media skepticism would most likely have been lessened," according to the document.

A grand jury and the Justice Department both declined to prosecute officer Darren Wilson, who is white and later resigned, but another Justice Department report released in March was critical of Ferguson police and the city's profit-driven municipal court system.

The after-action report was announced in September by then-Attorney General Eric Holder and is separate from other federal civil-rights inquiries.

The summary, which includes 45 findings, identified a slew of poor policing tactics such as the use of dogs for crowd control, which incited fear and anger; tear gas was sometimes used without warning on people who had nowhere to retreat; and officers were inconsistent in using force and making arrests, the Justice Department said.

More broadly, the report chastised the Ferguson Police Department for failing to manage the community reaction and develop a long-term strategy, as well as for maintaining poor relationships with the black community -- a problem that "over time led to devastating effects."

"The protests were ... also a manifestation of the long-standing tension between the Ferguson [Police Department] and the African-American community," the report summary stated.

The report was prepared by the Justice Department's Community Oriented Policing Services office, a component that works to build trust between police departments and the communities they serve. The office, which also conducts reports on some high-profile police responses, said Tuesday it will release its final report on the Ferguson response in coming weeks.

St. Louis Police spokesman Schron Jackson said department officials "are interested in the final report to identify what we did well and what we may need to improve upon.

"The department reached out to COPS to inquire about a blueprint for handling similar situations," Jackson said in an email. "We were told none exist and we were forging new ground. Now, agencies around the country look to our region for input on issues relating to civil unrest."

Representatives from the other police agencies who were analyzed either declined to comment Tuesday or did not return messages seeking comment.

Among the problems singled out in the report summary is the "highly elevated tactical response" that police used from the outset of the protests, which set a tone that "limited options for a measured, strategic approach."

The report acknowledges that a tactical response was sometimes called for, but an "elevated daytime response was not justified and served to escalate rather than de-escalate the overall situation."

The report also found that police "underestimated the impact social media had on the incident and the speed at which both facts and rumors were spread and failed to have a social media strategy."

In repeating "vague and arbitrary" commands for protesters to keep moving, the police wound up violating demonstrators' First Amendment rights.

"While law enforcement must meet its duty to protect people and property during mass demonstrations and protests," the Justice Department said, "it can never do so at the expense of upholding the Constitution and First Amendment-protected rights."

A Section on 07/01/2015

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