Violence and protests erupted in Milwaukee overnight after a man was fatally shot by police during a foot chase.
Police said the victim, 23, was armed with a
handgun and shot dead by an officer after fleeing a traffic stop on
Milwaukee's north side Saturday afternoon.
Hours later angry crowds took to the streets,
smashing a police car and setting fire to another. One officer was
injured by a flying brick; a gas station and auto-parts store were set
alight. Police said gunshots were heard.
Violence and protests erupted in Milwaukee overnight after a man was fatally shot by police during a foot chase.
Police said the victim, 23, was armed with a
handgun and shot dead by an officer after fleeing a traffic stop on
Milwaukee's north side Saturday afternoon.
Hours later angry crowds took to the streets,
smashing a police car and setting fire to another. One officer was
injured by a flying brick; a gas station and auto-parts store were set
alight. Police said gunshots were heard.
Milwaukee Mayor Tom Barrett pleaded for calm at
an early morning news conference, asking residents to
"do everything" to
help restore order.
"If you love your son, if you love your daughter, text them, call them, pull them by the ears and get 'em home," he said.
Police said at least three people had been arrested as of early Sunday.
The man who was killed has not been publicly identified.
Milwaukee's mayor said the man was struck twice
in the chest and the arm and that he believes the officer involved
had a body camera on at the time of the shooting.
Police also said the man shot had a
"lengthy arrest record" and was carrying a
semiautomatic handgun reported stolen in a burglary in Waukesha in
March.
The name of the officer involved in the shooting has not been released.
The races of the officer and the man shot also have not been released.
As the gas station burned, the founder of a local non-profit called "The
Spread Love Initiative," Terrell Johnnies, went out to try to talk to
people on the street and urge non-violence.