Community activists are calling for a boycott of businesses — rather than unrest — in Charlotte, North Carolina, to protest a deadly police shooting of a black man Tuesday afternoon.
"It's hunting season and the black male is the prey. And something has to be done," a religious leader said at a press conference Wednesday morning.
That shooting led to violent protests overnight.
It all started late Tuesday afternoon at an apartment complex. Police were looking for a suspect who had a warrant for his arrest. Police say a man — not the one they were searching for — got out of his car and was holding a gun. North Carolina is anopen-carry state.
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"The officers felt a lethal threat and fired his weapon because of that," Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Chief Kerr Putney said.
That man, Keith Lamont Scott, was pronounced dead at a local hospital.
Police said Wednesday morning they recovered a gun from the scene, contradicting what Scott's family and friends said.
"Reading a book, waiting for his kid to come home. Cops shot him for nothing," a man near the scene told WCNC.
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Police said they didn't find a book at the scene. The officer who shot the man is identified as Brentley Vinson. He is also black. He was not wearing a body camera, though police said they do have video of the shooting.
Dozens of protesters gathered on the streets and brought a major highway to a standstill Tuesday night. Some threw rocks and bottles, jumped on police cars and set fires. Aerial footage of the scene showed some demonstrators taking packages off semi-trucks and throwing them into a fire.
Several protesters and police officers were injured, and some even needed to be hospitalized.