California

Emotions Run High as Stephon Clark's Brother Disrupts Sacramento Council Meeting, Protesters Block Kings' Arena for 2nd Time

Two Sacramento police officers responding to a report of someone breaking car windows fatally shot Clark in his grandmother's backyard March 18. Police say they thought Clark was holding a gun, but he was found with only a cellphone.

Stephon Clark’s brother, Stevante Clark, marched into a Sacramento city council meeting on Tuesday, chanted his brother’s name and jumped on the dais in front of Mayor Darrell Steinberg.

Later, protesters again blocked fans from entering the Golden1 Center for an NBA game downtown between the Sacramento Kings and Dallas Mavericks.

The crowds had gathered for the second time since the March 18 fatal police shooting of 22-year-old Stephon Clark, an unarmed black man, in his grandmother's backyard.

City officials and community leaders had called for calm earlier Tuesday as they announced the California attorney general's involvement in the investigation, a move the police chief said he hopes will bring "faith and transparency" to a case that has sparked angry protests. Sacramento is preparing this week for events memorializing Clark and large crowds are expected.

"Due to the nature of this investigation, the extremely high emotions, anger and hurt in our city, I felt it was the best interest of our entire community, including the members of our police department, to ask the attorney general to be an independent part of this investigation," Police Chief Daniel Hahn said.

Two Sacramento police officers responding to a report of someone breaking car windows fatally shot Clark in his grandmother's backyard March 18. Police say they thought Clark was holding a gun, but he was found with only a cellphone.

Attorney General Xavier Becerra's office will provide oversight of the investigation and conduct a review of the police department's policies and use-of-force training. Body camera footage released by the department shows police firing 20 rounds at Clark.

But Clark's family remains skeptical, said his uncle, Curtis Gordon.

"We'll see what happens," Gordon said. "It's all talk at this point ... Show me."

The decision of whether to bring criminal charges against the officers involved remains with District Attorney Anne Marie Schubert, although Becerra said his office could also bring charges.

"Understand that this process will take time," Schubert said. "Thorough and fair independent review demands that we do it right."

Clark's grandmother, Sequita Thompson, called Monday for the police to change how they apply force in such situations and to consider non-lethal options.

"We fully expect that the attorney general's office will do a complete and thorough investigation that is fair and impartial — and that extends due process not just to those being investigated, but equally to the family of Stephon Clark," family attorney Benjamin Crump said in a statement.

Hahn said the two officers, whose names the department has not released, are facing death threats. He asked that protests remain peaceful as the investigation proceeds.

It is rare for police officers to be charged following a shooting and rarer still for them to be convicted. Often times it's because of the doctrine of reasonable fear: if prosecutors or jurors believe that officers have a reason to fear for their safety, they can use force up to and including lethal force.

At Tuesday's council meeting, Stevante Clark said he didn't think the elected officials would make meaningful changes as a result of his brother's death. The Council took a 15-minute break as a result of the disruption and later early after tensions within and outside the chambers rose.

One person was arrested outside of the council chambers for assault on an officer and being drunk in public, KCRA reported.

The meeting, which was billed as an "open dialogue" over Clark's death, drew an overflow crowd and began with a moment of silence for Clark, NBC affiliate KCRA reported. 

Among those who spoke was 10-year-old Terrell Wilson, who tearfully described thinking about Clark everyday since the shooting. 

"All he had was a cellphone. Twenty shots over a cellphone," he said. "This happened in the past with Tayvon Martin and Michael Brown and now it's Stephon Clark. This has to stop. It can't be no more."

Outside the meeting, community members and activists chanted Clark's name. Some then marched to the basketball arena, where they blocked off the entrance to the game for the second time in a week.

The game tipped off just a few minutes behind schedule in front of a sparsely populated crowd.

On different occasions, protesters have also filled downtown Sacramento, at one point shutting down the interstate during rush hour, and the South Sacramento neighborhood where Clark was killed. The protests have largely remained non-violent although tensions have been high. In one case, several protesters smashed a car window, according to the Sacramento Bee.

"Just as your actions have been positive in getting people to hear the message, negative actions will dilute that message," said Dr. Ollie Mack, a longtime Sacramento resident who spoke at the news conference to encourage peaceful protest. "If you have people jumping on cars, spitting on people, that will be the news and not the fact that we're moving forward toward seeking justice."

The NAACP and the National Action Network said a two-hour funeral for Clark is set to begin at 11 a.m. Thursday at Bayside of South Sacramento Church. The Rev. Al Sharpton, president of the National Action Network, is set to speak along with other clergy.

The NAACP said a wake is set from 2 p.m. to 7 p.m. Wednesday at Bayside of South Sacramento Church.

Before Tuesday's meeting, Mayor Steinberg urged the city to set a positive national example.

"The country is watching us," he said. "Let us show how a city in pain together, with all of our partners, can in fact achieve a better way."

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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