A citywide curfew that sprang into effect at 10:00 pm on Tuesday (local time) and lasted until 5:00 am yesterday was largely respected, although police made 35 arrests and warned that they were assessing the volatile situation minute-by-minute.
That included an anticipated demonstration in the early evening set to begin at the city's main train station, said Baltimore Police Captain Eric Kowalczyk.
"We anticipate that that will be a large group that will march. From what we understand right now, they will march through the city to City Hall. We are asking that they remain peaceful," he told reporters yesterday.
It was the latest instance in the United States of a black man dying at the hands of police -- a situation that has stirred resentment among African Americans who believe they are the victims of police brutality.
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That anger sparked coast-to-coast demonstrations in major US cities after a white policeman shot dead an unarmed black teenager in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson in August.
Reflecting on a night that was tense but largely trouble-free, Kowalczyk said: "Last night the curfew went into effect at 10:00 pm. We have had 35 arrests. Of those 35 arrests, 34 were adults and one was a juvenile. We have a small protest right now."
However authorities, who will impose the night-time curfew for a week, were taking no chances and heavily armed National Guard personnel were out in force once again.
"We have resources staged throughout the city to be able to respond if there should be any incident," said Kowalczyk.
"Again, we're asking everyone to remain peaceful -- as we have seen over the last 24 hours -- and we will be watching that.