
The second shooting came 24 hours after the the
U.S. Justice Department said it had opened an investigation into Tuesday’s
fatal shooting of a 37 year old black man, Alton Sterling, in Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, by two police officers.
The victim was said to have been shot six times and
died of the gunshot wounds.
The second shooting was been reported that a Minneapolis
area police officer in Saint Paul, Minnesota, fatally shot a black man during a
traffic stop, local law enforcement said on Thursday, and the victim’s fiancee
streamed live footage of the gruesome aftermath on the internet.
The victim, was identified by his family as
Philando Castile, 32, was shot dead by a police officer in the car, who opened
fire on him as he reached for his I.D.
Mr. Castile was in the car with his fiancee in the
passenger seat and their daughter in the back seat.
The Justice Department said it was assessing the
Minneapolis area incident but did not say if it would start a formal
investigation into whether excessive force was used.
Castile’s mother expressed shock. “I never once in
my life would have thought that my son would be killed by the persons that were
supposed to protect and serve him,” Valerie Castile said on CNN.
The use of force by police against
African-Americans in cities from Ferguson, Missouri, to Baltimore and New York
has sparked periodic and sometimes violent protests around the country, as well
as spawning a movement called Black Lives Matter. Anger has intensified when
the officers involved in such incidents are acquitted or not charged at all.
Protesters gathered on Thursday morning outside the
mansion of Governor Mark Dayton in St. Paul, about 10 miles (15 km) southeast
of the scene of the incident, local media said.
Valerie Castile described her son as a “laid back”
but industrious man who worked as a school cafeteria supervisor and enjoyed
playing video games. He had a permit to carry a concealed weapon, she said.
Castile, who was waiting for permission to see her
son’s body, said she wanted the officer to be prosecuted. The officer’s
ethnicity was not clear.
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