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Protesters of police-involved shootings march on DC

More than 10,000 protesters converged on the nation’s capital Saturday demanding legislative action

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Demonstrators chant at Freedom Plaza in Washington, Saturday, Dec. 13, 2014, during the Justice for All rally and march.

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By Matthew Barakat
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — More than 10,000 protesters converged on the nation’s capital Saturday to call attention to the deaths of unarmed black men at the hands of police and call for legislative action.

Led by several civil rights organizations, the crowd will march to the Capitol on Saturday afternoon with the families of Michael Brown and Eric Garner, two unarmed black men who died in incidents with white police officers. Civil rights advocate The Rev. Al Sharpton also will be part of the march. The groups and marchers — with signs reading “Black Lives Matter” and “Who do you protect? Who do you serve” — are calling for law enforcement reforms after several high-profile cases of what they call police brutality.

At Freedom Plaza, the rally was interrupted briefly by more than a dozen protesters who took the stage with a bullhorn. They announced that they were from the St. Louis area — where Brown died — and demanded to speak.

Large numbers of protesters on the ground supported the group, some chanting, “Let them speak.”

Ultimately, rally organizers allowed Johnetta Elzie of St. Louis to address the crowd. “This movement was started by the young people,” she said. The group left the stage after she spoke.

Organizers called the interruption unnecessarily divisive. But some in the Missouri group said they were disappointed and found the rally staid and ineffective.

“I thought there was going to be actions, not a show. This is a show,” Elzie said.

St. Louis protester Leon Kemp said he is glad the movement is gaining momentum, but he’s worried that the message is watered down. He said he was upset that the phrase “black lives matter” was changed in some cases to “all lives matter.”

“It’s not about ‘all lives matter.’ That goes without saying,” Kemp said. It’s about ‘black lives matter.’”

Protests — some violent — have occurred around the nation since grand juries last month declined to indict the officers involved in the deaths of 18-year-old Brown and Garner, 43, who gasped “I can’t breathe” while being arrested for allegedly selling loose, untaxed cigarettes in New York. Some protesters held signs and wore shirts that said “I can’t breathe” Saturday.

Politicians and others have talked about the need for better police training, body cameras and changes in the grand jury process to restore faith in the legal system.

Terry Baisden, 52, of Baltimore said she is “hopeful change is coming” and that the movement is not part of a fleeting flash of anger.

She said she hasn’t protested before but felt compelled to because “changes in action, changes in belief, happen in numbers.”

Murry Edwards said he made the trip to Washington from St. Louis because he wants to make sure the momentum from the movement in Ferguson reaches a national stage.

“This is the national march,” Edwards said. “We have to get behind the national movement.”

Sheryce Holloway, a recent graduate from Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, attended a smaller gathering outside Robert F. Kennedy Stadium in Washington ahead of the main rally. She said she also has been participating in protests at her alma mater.

Holloway said the goal of the protests is “ending blue-on-black crime. Black lives do matter.”

Saturday’s march — sponsored in part by the National Action Network, the Urban League, the NAACP — is scheduled to go down Pennsylvania Avenue between the White House and the Capitol. At the Capitol, speakers will outline a legislative agenda they want Congress to pursue in relation to police killings.

While protesters rally in Washington, other groups including Ferguson Action will be conducting similar “Day of Resistance” movements all around the country. A large march is planned in New York City.

Copyright 2014 The Associated Press

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