Three police officers have been shot to death and several others wounded in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the city’s mayor has said.
Three police officers have been shot to death and three others wounded in Baton Rouge less than two weeks after a black man was killed by police in the Louisiana city, sparking nationwide protests.
The officers in Baton Rouge were responding to a call of shots fired when they were attacked by at least one gunman on Sunday, Baton Rouge Mayor Kip Holden said.
He said three officers had died in what he described as “an ambush-style deal.”
One suspect is dead and police were checking the shooting scene with a robot to make sure there are no explosives, Baton Rouge Police spokesman L’Jean Mckneely said.
Police said they are seeking more than one suspect and that the public should be on the lookout for people dressed in black and carrying long guns.
It was not immediately clear whether there was a link between the shootings and the recent unrest over the police killings of black men in Baton Rouge and Minnesota. Police told CNN that Sunday’s shootings did not appear to be race-related.
President Barack Obama condemned the “attack on law enforcement in Baton Rouge” and vowed that justice would be done.
“We may not yet know the motives for this attack, but I want to be clear: There is no justification for violence against law enforcement. None. These attacks are the work of cowards who speak for no one,” Obama said in a statement.
Obama has sought to balance concerns about police abuses, largely against African-Americans, while paying tribute to fallen officers. He attended a memorial service last week for five Dallas police officers killed by a black ex-US soldier at the end of a protest against the fatal police shootings of Alton Sterling in Baton Rouge and Philando Castile in Minnesota.
The Black Lives Matter civil rights movement has called for police to end racial profiling, bringing the issue to national attention ahead of the Nov. 8 US presidential election. Republicans have pushed back, calling for support of the police.
Police officers block off a road after a shooting of police in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, US July 17, 2016. Reuters
It is a time of especially heightened security across the country, notably in Cleveland and Philadelphia, hosts to this week’s Republican National Convention and next week’s Democratic National Convention, respectively, which are expected to formally nominate Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton for the election.
“We demand law and order,” Trump said in a Facebook posting Sunday afternoon.
The head of a Cleveland police union called on Ohio Governor John Kasich to declare a state of emergency and suspend laws allowing for the open carry of firearms during the Republican convention.
“I don’t care what the legal precedent is. I feel strongly that leadership needs to stand up and defend these police officers,” Steve Loomis, president of the Cleveland Police Patrolmen’s Association, told Reuters in an interview.
Loomis said he was concerned about copycat shootings at the Republican convention.
A spokeswoman for Kasich said the governor did not have the power to suspend the open carry law.
Injured officers
Sunday’s shootings occurred around 9 a.m. local time (1400 GMT) about a mile from the Baton Rouge Police Department headquarters, where dozens of people were arrested earlier this month while protesting Sterling’s death. The 37-year-old African-American father of five was shot and killed at close quarters by law enforcement officers on July 5.
A witness to Sunday’s shootings, Brady Vancel, told a CBS television affiliate he had seen a gunman, a second man in a red shirt lying in a parking lot and another gunman running away “as shots were being fired back and forth from several guns.”
He said the police arrived shortly after the gunfire began.
One police officer was listed in critical condition at Our Lady of the Lake Regional Medical Center, while another was in fair condition, hospital spokeswoman Kelly Zimmerman said.
The third injured officer was taken to another hospital and his condition was unknown.
Shocked community members lined the highway about a mile from the shootings, at the site of the protests against Sterling’s killing.
“It never hits home until it’s in your own living room,” said Redell Norman, an activist who attended the recent protests at police headquarters.
While the scene of the shootings was contained, police warned residents to stay away from the area.
Multiple US government agencies, including the FBI and Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF), are investigating the shootings, federal officials said.
Source: bdnews24