Marchers at US Capitol protest police killings
WASHINGTON (AP) — Protesters carrying signs bearing names of black
Americans killed by police have marched outside the U.S. Capitol to
demand a human rights investigation.
About two dozen protesters were met by a line of police who stopped them from advancing toward the building Monday morning.
The protesters stood side by side to mourn black Americans killed by police. They said they were seeking an international investigation of U.S. police violence.
A number of protests have been staged around the country following recent grand jury decisions not to indict white police officers in New York and Ferguson, Missouri, over the deaths of unarmed blacks.
Zoe Spencer, a Virginia State University associate professor and protest organizer, said the names and characters of victims have been dragged through the mud "to justify their own murders."
About two dozen protesters were met by a line of police who stopped them from advancing toward the building Monday morning.
The protesters stood side by side to mourn black Americans killed by police. They said they were seeking an international investigation of U.S. police violence.
A number of protests have been staged around the country following recent grand jury decisions not to indict white police officers in New York and Ferguson, Missouri, over the deaths of unarmed blacks.
Zoe Spencer, a Virginia State University associate professor and protest organizer, said the names and characters of victims have been dragged through the mud "to justify their own murders."
Shouts
of "Hands up, don't shoot" began as protesters marched away from the
Capitol but quickly changed to chants of "Fists up, fight back."
Calling attention to the recent deaths at the hands of police,
protesters carry out a peaceful demonstration on Capitol Hill in
Washington, Monday, Dec. 8, 2014. The group confronted U.S. Capitol
police officers, demanding to walk through the east plaza to raise
awareness of their call for justice for black men who have died at the
hands of white policemen. They were refused entry by senior officers and
continued their march down city sidewalks. (AP Photo/J. Scott
Applewhite)
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