#FreeDeray: Black activist DeRay Mckesson's arrest in Baton Rouge protest sparks outrage
BATON ROUGE, La. - A prominent Black Lives Matter activist and 100 other people were taken into custody, authorities said Sunday, after protesters took to the streets to call for justice and voice anger over the fatal shooting of an African-American man by two white police officers.
Spokeswoman Casey Rayborn Hicks of the East Baton Rouge Sheriff's Office told The Associated Press that 101 people were taken to the parish jail in connection with the protests that began Saturday. No information was immediately available on what charges they faced or whether some people were later released.
Tensions between black citizens and police have risen palpably over the past week or so amid police shootings of African-American men in Minnesota and Louisiana and the gunning down of five white police officers by a black suspect in Dallas in apparent retaliation.
Saturday featured several occasionally violent protests nationwide against police violence, and saw hundreds of protesters arrested.
Among those arrested in Baton Rouge was DeRay Mckesson, according to an Associated Press reporter who was at the scene. Mckesson is a leading figure in the Black Lives Matter movement that blossomed in the wake of the 2014 killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri at the hands of police.
Booking documents provided by the East Baton Rouge Sheriff's Office say Mckesson was arrested on charges of "Simple Obstruction of a Highway of Commerce," and the police report claims Mckesson illegally walked into the street after police allegedly announced over loud speaker that the road must be clear.
Video posted on Periscope shows footage taken by McKesson in the moments leading up to his arrest.
The video shows Mckesson walking alongside Airline Highway on his way back to the main area where the protests were going on when he was arrested.
On the video, Mckesson can be heard talking with fellow protesters and describing what he said was provocative police behavior against protesters.
"The police in Baton Rouge have been truly awful tonight," Mckesson said on the video. "They have provoked people, they chase people just for kicks. The police have been violent tonight. The protesters have not."
Moments later, someone shouts, "This is the police, you're under arrest! Don't fight me! Don't fight me!"
McKesson responds: "I'm under arrest, y'all!" before the camera is knocked to the ground.
Photo images captured by The Associated Press show police apprehending Mckesson, who at one point was on his knees before being pulled to his feet by police and led away with his hands secured behind his back.
He was released from police custody late Sunday afternoon.
He took to Twitter after his release to describe the entire ordeal in a series of tweets.
In response to Mckesson's arrest and detention on Sunday, many took to social media to express both outrage at and support for his arrest, and the #freeDeRay hashtag began trending.
Mckesson famously spoke out when prominent Baltimore activist Joseph Kent was arrested there under similar circumnstances.
In response to the growing outrage, Baton Rouge police put out a statement defending their tactics, saying, "It appears the protest at Baton Rouge Police Headquarters have become more violent as out of town protesters are arriving."
The statement said that in addition to the arrests at the event, "3 rifles, 3 shotguns and 2 pistols were confiscated. A Baton Rouge Police Officer had several of his teeth knocked out as a projectile was thrown from the protest."
The starting point of Saturday's demonstration was the convenience store where 37-year-old Alton Sterling was shot and killed last week, and much of the incident was captured on video. Protesters then fanned out to the Baton Rouge police department and the state Capitol.
The Department of Justice has opened an investigation into Sterling's death, which has angered many in the black community.
Shouting "No justice! No peace!" roughly 1,000 protesters gathered outside the police department, waving homemade signs as passing cars honked their support. Some drivers stopped by with bottles of water.
The protests lasted well into the evening but died down a little after midnight.
Police in riot gear came out numerous times as the demonstration wore on into the evening, facing off against the crowd that yelled slogans and waved signs. At one point early in the protest, a police officer on a microphone told the crowd that as long as they stayed on the grass and not on the road they could remain, and then police eventually pulled back and traffic reopened. But officers came out again after the demonstration moved to a different area of the street. At one point numerous police cars, with their blue lights flashing, sped off down the street where a smaller group of protesters had walked.
A police spokesman said two firearms were confiscated and several arrests made. Authorities said they pulled in officers from nearby parishes to buttress their numbers.
The local public radio station, WWNO, said on Twitter that one of their reporters was also arrested, and that they had little information on why.
Jade Flint was one of the protesters out on the street late Saturday.
"I feel if I'm not out here 'Who is?' This is stuff that I talk about daily with my friends and on Twitter. I can't say that I feel a certain way about a cause and not have my body out here representing for the community," said Flint. She said she would like to see the two officers involved in Sterling's death arrested.
Lael Montgomery of Baton Rouge was at the convenience store where Sterling was shot.
"I've been in active in the community for years. We have been suffering police brutality for a long time. A lot of racism has been going on here for a long time," he said. "I have kids. They need to be raised in a better environment than they're in."
Members of the New Black Panther Party for Self Defense called for the arrest and indictment of the officers involved in Sterling's shooting, shouting "Black Power" and raising their fists.
"These are human rights violations," Krystal Muhammad shouted to the crowd at the convenience store before heading over to the police department. "They are not operating as human beings. They are being predators on our communities across America."
In Minnesota, meanwhile, police used smoke bombs to clear demonstrators who blocked Interstate 94 in St. Paul late Saturday night and gathered to voice their growing concern about Sterling's death and the fatal police shooting on Wednesday of Philando Castile in suburban St. Paul.