One person was shot and gravely wounded on Wednesday in a second night of unrest in Charlotte, North Carolina, officials said, as riot police dispersed unruly protesters after the fatal police shooting of a black man under disputed circumstances.
North
Carolina's governor later declared a state of emergency amid the disturbances
and said the National Guard and state Highway Patrol troopers would be sent in
to help police in Charlotte restore and maintain order.
Charlotte
Police Chief Kerr Putney initially reported that a person shot during the
protest had died, but city officials later posted a Twitter message saying the
individual had been hospitalized in critical condition on life support.
The city
also said the gunshot was fired by one civilian at another, not by police. A
police officer was also being treated for injuries suffered during Wednesday's
protests, it said.
Putney told
Fox News: "We’re trying to disperse the crowd. We’ve been very patient,
but now they’ve become very aggressive, throwing bottles and so forth, at my
officers, so it’s time for us now to restore order."
The
flashpoint for Charlotte's unrest was Tuesday's fatal police shooting of Keith
Scott, 43, who according to police was armed with a handgun and refused
officers' orders to drop the weapon. His family and a witness to the shooting
said Scott was holding a book, not a firearm.
Authorities
have not released any video of the incident but the city's mayor said she would
view the footage on Thursday.
Governor Pat
McCrory said he was acting at the request of the Charlotte police chief in
sending National Guard and state troopers to assist local law enforcement.
"Any
violence directed toward our citizens or police officers or destruction of
property should not be tolerated," McCrory said in a statement.
UNREST
ERUPTS OUTSIDE HOTEL
The latest
trouble began with a peaceful rally that turned violent after several hundred
chanting demonstrators marched through downtown with brief stops at a black
church, police headquarters and a large entertainment venue called the
EpiCentre.
As they
approached downtown Charlotte's central intersection, protesters confronted a
column of patrol cars and officers in front of the Omni Charlotte Hotel and
began to surround groups of police and their vehicles.
Police then
unleashed volleys of rubber bullets, pepper spray, tear gas and flash-bang
grenades to disperse the protesters, who began hurling fireworks and debris at
officers outside the hotel.
The
confrontation grew more intense as a phalanx of helmeted police carrying
shields advanced down a street, pushing back a crowd of demonstrators who
scurried for cover as officers fired more tear gas.
Protesters
smashed windows and glass doors at a nearby Hyatt hotel, whose manager told
Reuters that two employees were punched. The slogan "Black Lives
Matter" was spray-painted on windows.
Demonstrators
were also seen looting a convenience store after smashing its windows and a
shop that sells athletic wear for fans of Charlotte's National Basketball
League team, the Hornets. Others set fire to trash cans.
Some
protesters expressed anger at the lawlessness exhibited by fellow
demonstrators. One woman was heard shouting, "Stop - that's not what this
is about," as young men broke bottles in the street.
Earlier in
the evening, Scott's wife, Rakeyia, issued a statement describing her family as
"devastated" and appealing for calm. "We have more questions
than answers about Keith's death," the statement said.
Sixteen
officers were injured late on Tuesday and early Wednesday as police in riot
gear clashed with demonstrators who hurled stones, set fires and briefly
blocked an interstate highway.
Tuesday's
disturbances in Charlotte unfolded as demonstrators in Tulsa, Oklahoma,
demanded the arrest of a police officer seen in a video last week fatally
shooting an unarmed black man who had his hands in clear view at the time.
The deaths
were the latest incidents to raise questions of racial bias in U.S. law
enforcement, and they stoked a national debate on policing ahead of the
presidential election in November.
President
Barack Obama spoke by telephone on Wednesday with the mayors of Charlotte and
Tulsa, a White House official said.
In
Charlotte, Putney insisted Scott was shot by a black officer after he exited
his car and disregarded orders to drop a gun he brandished. "We did not
find a book," Putney told a news conference. "We did find a
weapon."
Charlotte
resident Taheshia Williams said she saw the incident from her balcony and that
she watched Scott get out of his car with his hands raised.
"Hands
up. No gun. When he got out of the car, a book fell off his lap," Williams
told reporters. She said she heard Scott ask police what he had done wrong,
could not hear their reply, then heard four shots.
Black
activists and pastors called for an economic boycott of the city, and the
American Civil Liberties Union urged police to release body and dashboard
camera footage of the incident.




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