Angry protests flared again after a family attorney of an unarmed black man who was fatally shot by San Diego police charged that the killing was unjust and officials were trying to sway public opinion by only releasing a single, favourable frame from video of the shooting.
Earlier in the day, Alfred Olango's family gathered with lawyers and religious leaders and urged people to continue demonstrating but implored them to do it peacefully to honor his memory.
Olango's anguished mother said her son was a good, joyful man who suffered a "mental breakdown" over the recent death of his best friend and needed compassion when police encountered him.
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"He needed someone who was going to calm him down and then take care of the situation," she said, her voice thick with emotion and dark glasses covering her eyes. "Not to come and just finish his life."
Olango's sister had called police three times Tuesday to report that he was sick, "not acting like himself," and was walking in traffic. It took officers more than an hour to respond. Once they arrived, the shooting took place within about a minute.
Fewer but more violent protesters were in the streets for yesterday's third night of demonstrations.
Between 50 and 75 people marched through streets and blocked intersections until police used pepper-spray balls to break them up.
Some got into fights with drivers who were angry over blocked traffic, at times breaking car windows and in one case pushing a man off his motorcycle, police said. Some threw bottles at police.
Two men, ages 19 and 28, were arrested for failing to end an unlawful assembly, police said.
Authorities released a still frame from a bystander's video that showed the 38-year-old Olango with his hands together at chest level and pointed at an officer directly in front of him. Police Chief Jeff Davis said Olango refused to obey orders to remove a hand from his pants pocket and was shot after he swiftly drew an object from his front pocket and pointed at the officer in a "shooting stance."
The object turned out to be a 4-inch electronic cigarette, known as a vape pen.
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