Police officer shoots, kills black teen in Wisconsin

Michael Brown

Michael Brown: an unharmed teenager also killed by a policeman

Michael Brown: an unharmed teenager also killed by a policeman
Michael Brown: an unharmed teenager also killed by a policeman

A police officer shot and killed a 19-year-old black youth who allegedly assaulted him in Madison, Wisconsin, the city’s police chief said Saturday.

The incident Friday evening touched off protests in the Midwestern university city, and local media reported a heavy police presence in the area where the shooting occurred.

It was the latest in a string of police shootings of young blacks that have set racial tensions on edge in the United States, igniting a nationwide debate over police tactics in minority communities.

Police chief Mike Koval told WKOW television the police officer was responding to a report of a battery and had forced his way into an apartment after hearing sounds of a disturbance inside.

“Once inside the home, the subject involved in the incident — the same one who had been allegedly out in traffic and had battered someone — this same subject then assaulted my officer, and in the context of mutual combat in that sense, the officer did draw his revolver and subsequently shot the subject,” Koval said.

FILE PHOTO: Demonstrators protest the shooting death of teenager Michael Brown on August 13, 2014
FILE PHOTO: Demonstrators protest the shooting death of teenager Michael Brown on August 13, 2014

Koval said the officer then administered CPR, and the wounded youth was taken to a hospital where he died.

He said an initial search found no gun or other weapon at the scene.

The shooting was under investigation by the city’s Department of Criminal Investigations, Koval said.

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The police chief appealed for calm.

“In light of so much things that have happened not just across this country but in our own community, it is understandable that the reaction at the scene and of some of our citizens is extremely volatile, emotional and upsetting. We understand that. That’s absolutely appropriate under these circumstances.

“We would urge, obviously, that everybody exercise restraint, calm, and allow the Department of Criminal Investigations to conduct their affairs,” he said.

A large crowd of chanting protesters formed Friday night at the scene of shooting.

The shooting comes just days after the US Justice Department said it would not prosecute the white policeman who shot an unarmed black teenager in Ferguson, Missouri, whose death sparked riots and outrage.

But the report did find that the St Louis suburb’s local police force had systematically targeted African Americans.

US President Barack Obama said Friday that he believes the racism revealed in the report was “not an isolated incident.”

The president was going to Selma, Alabama Saturday to commemorate the 50th anniversary of a civil rights march whose violent suppression by local police drew national attention to the systematic denial of African Americans’ voting rights in the racially divided US South.

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