Protests over death of unarmed black man in Madison reach fourth straight day

2015/03/09
Photo from Twitter/@Manuel_Rapalo

A march began at Madison East High School and closed six lanes of traffic on a major city street as protesters walked to the State Capitol building for the noon demonstration. The group included about 100 students from the University of Wisconsin-Madison, who walked out of class at 10:30 a.m. local time. High school students also joined the march, the Wisconsin State Journal reported.



Police presence in the Capitol building was “barely seen,” which is “different from a typical protest,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reporter Jason Stein tweeted.



The demonstrations began Friday night, after veteran Madison police officer Matt Kenny, who is white, shot and killed Tony Terrell Robinson Jr., an unarmed 19-year-old black man, around 6:30 p.m. that evening.


Kenny was responding to reports of a man jumping in and out of traffic, creating a safety hazard, Police Chief Mike Koval stated. Kenny followed the suspect into an apartment and forced his way in because he heard a disturbance. The man was injured by gunfire in the ensuing fight, the chief said. Koval stressed the officer immediately began to administer first aid, as did other officers who arrived at the scene. However, the man died in a local hospital.



"He was unarmed. That's going to make this all the more complicated for the investigators, for the public to accept, to understand... why deadly force had to be used," Koval said of Robinson. The department said Kenny would not have been wearing a body camera, according to Fox News.


Echoing protests that began this summer with the police killings of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri and Eric Garner in New York City, demonstrators chanted, “Black lives matter!”



Koval asked the protesters to show restraint, Vice News reported.


"It's understandable that the reaction seen among some of our citizens is extremely volatile and emotional and upsetting, it's absolutely appropriate in this circumstance," Koval told reporters. "We would urge that everybody exercise restraint and calm."



According to 911 dispatchers, Robinson was acting violently and hitting people around him.



"Apparently Tony hit one of his friends. No weapons seen," a dispatcher said on 911 audio obtained by WKOW.


About four minutes later, he said: "I got another call for the same suspect at [the same address]. He tried to strangle another patron."


About 30 seconds later, an unidentified officer said, "Shots fired, shots fired."



That commotion is what led Kenny to enter the apartment, Koval said.


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