Year later, AP reporter recalls origins of Ferguson movement

1FILE - In this Aug. 18, 2014, file photo, protesters walk through the streets after a standoff with police in Ferguson, Mo.
2A year ago, most Americans had never heard of the St. Louis suburb called Ferguson.
3But after a white police officer fatally shot a black 18-year-old in the street, the name of the middle-class community quickly became known around the world.
4ST. LOUIS (AP)?
5EDITOR'S NOTE?
6But after a white police officer fatally shot a black 18-year-old in the street, the name of the middle-class community became virtually a household word.
7From the first hours after Michael Brown's death, Associated Press reporter Jim Salter watched as a neighborhood protest launched a national movement.
8What follows is an excerpt of the introduction to "Deadly Force: Fatal Confrontations with Police," an upcoming book published by The Associated Press (www.ap.org/books).
9Until August 2014, Ferguson, Missouri, wasn't the kind of place that generated much news.
10It was a mostly quiet suburban town of 21,000, a mix of beautiful old homes and working-class neighborhoods.
11Like a lot of communities in north St. Louis County, it had seen significant white flight and was now two-thirds African-American.
12My wife's grandmother lived in Ferguson until she died in 1991, so I spent some time there as a young man.
13But since joining the St. Louis office of The Associated Press in 1993, I had never been to Ferguson as a reporter.
14On Aug. 9, I returned home from a bike ride to learn that a young black man had been fatally shot by a white Ferguson police officer.
15By that humid Saturday evening, hundreds of people were congregating near the scene where Michael Brown was killed by Darren Wilson.
16The crowd was angry.
17Some witnesses said the 18-year-old had his hands up in surrender when he was shot.
18The next day, as Ferguson police prepared for a news conference to explain what happened, I was among a crowd of reporters who heard distant chanting.
19As I walked toward the noise, I could see in the distance hundreds of people, many holding signs.
20The chant soon became clear: "Hands up! Don't shoot!"
21That would become the rallying cry in the unrest that followed.
22It was also the first evidence that Ferguson would be a far bigger story than we initially imagined.
23Shootings by police are not uncommon, a sad reality of urban life.
24In April last year, about four months before Brown died, a mentally ill man was shot in a Milwaukee park.
25A few days before, a man waving an air rifle was killed in an Ohio Wal-Mart by police.
26So what was different in Ferguson?
27Brown and Wilson had their fatal encounter in the middle of a street surrounded by apartment buildings.
28It was almost noon on a Saturday, and many people ? residents, construction workers, visitors ? were outside.
29Word quickly spread from witnesses who believed the shooting was unjustified, that Brown was trying to surrender.
30What we didn't know at the time was the depth of mistrust between black residents and the predominantly white Ferguson Police Department, a level of suspicion that no doubt fueled what happened next.
31On Sunday evening, thousands of people crowded the same street where Brown was killed for a vigil.
32The anger was evident, but the event was peaceful.
33Suddenly, a young woman came running: "They're rioting on West Florissant."
34I ran the three blocks to the busy four-lane street lined with retail businesses.
35My attention was drawn to a large group of people cheering and yelling obscenities in the direction of a QuikTrip convenience store.
36By the time I got there, it was on fire.
37People were running out, their arms full of stolen goods.
38Never before had the anger been as intense in Ferguson.
39Young men began hurling bricks through store windows, kicking in doors, throwing rocks and Molotov cocktails at police cars.
40The destruction that night led police to adopt a tougher stance.
41By Monday, hundreds of officers in riot gear, some in armored trucks, lined the streets.
42Now police were becoming more aggressive.
43Some aimed their threats and angry words at protesters and journalists.
44AP reporters, photographers and videographers from around the nation arrived, and the words and images we helped capture became part of the national debate about police interaction with black communities, the police response to protests and economic disparity between the races.
45It was often harrowing work.
46Our journalists faced threats from protesters and police.
47Gas masks and bulletproof vests arrived, but many of us on the front lines of the riots felt the sting of tear gas when we failed to deploy the masks quickly enough.
48The unrest lasted for months, worsened by a series of fatal police shootings in St. Louis.
49Most of the protests were nonviolent.
50Meanwhile, local authorities had released virtually no information about when the grand jury considering potential charges for Wilson would render a final decision.
51The announcement that Wilson would not be charged finally arrived on the evening of Nov. 24.
52The night produced striking visuals of buildings engulfed in flames and riot police massed under a "Season's Greetings" banner.
53The next morning, the AP team was back out on the streets of Ferguson as the National Guard rolled in and the community assessed the damage.
54Ferguson became the impetus for a national movement.
55Soon, other fatal police encounters with black suspects drew similar scrutiny.
56After Ferguson, old presumptions are gone and new questions asked.
57The events there intensified how the nation looks at law enforcement, the use of deadly force and the inflamed relations between blacks and American police.