Clergy members yesterday led several hundred people on a march, using a bullhorn to read the names of people killed by police across the US, marking the third straight day of recent protests in the St Louis suburb where Michael Brown was fatally shot on August 9 by a white police officer.
Tensions escalated last week when a white police officer in St Louis shot and killed 18-year-old Vonderrit Myers Jr, who police say shot at police before he was killed.
Protesters also blocked the entrance to a major employer, held a loud rally inside St Louis City Hall, disrupted business at a Ferguson shopping centre and a Wal-Mart and tried to crash a private fundraiser for a St Louis County executive candidate where Sen Claire McCaskill was scheduled to appear.
Among those arrested on a charge of disturbing the peace was scholar and civil rights activist Cornel West, police said. The former Princeton University professor has been in the St Louis area for a weekend of protests, speeches and workshops designed to call attention to anger over police treatment of minorities.
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"My faith compels me to be here," said Bishop Wayne Smith of the Episcopal Diocese of Missouri. "I want to show solidarity, and call attention to the structural racism of St Louis."
The planned demonstrations began Friday afternoon with a march outside the St Louis County prosecutor's office, where protesters renewed calls for prosecutor Bob McCulloch to charge Darren Wilson, the officer who shot Brown. A grand jury is reviewing the case and the US Justice Department is conducting a civil rights investigation.