St. Louis Post-Dispatch Ferguson coverage - August 27

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T H E N O . 1 S T. L O U I S W E B S I T E A N D N E W S P A P E R

Thursday • 08.28.2014 • $1.50

brown killing raises issues in county executive contest

the politics of ferguson Embattled McCulloch is strong Stenger backer.

Dooley, in the Democratic primary. Four days later, Ferguson erupted when Michael Brown, 18, was fatally shot CLAYTON • County Counby police Officer Darren cilman Steve Stenger, on the Wilson. Now, the events that night of Aug. 5, profusely McCulloch ripped apart that north St. thanked Robert McCulloch for the role the St. Louis County Louis County community have inprosecutor played in helping the sinuated themselves into a general councilman score a decisive vic- election campaign that until Aug. 9 tory over the county’s first AfricanAmerican chief executive, Charlie See County • Page A6

By STEVE GIEGERICH and WALKER MOSKOP Post-Dispatch

post-dispatch

Democrat Steve Stenger speaks on Aug. 5 after his primary victory for county executive.

Post-Dispatch

Republican Rick Stream talks to supporters at his election watch party earlier this month.

As unrest fades, time to count the cost

David Carson • dcarson@post-dispatch.com

LAW ENFORCEMENT • St. Louis County so far has spent about $1 million in police overtime responding to Ferguson, officials said. Other departments assisted, and incurred their own costs.

Christian Gooden • cgooden@post-dispatch.com

CLEANUP • “The residents there (in the area affected by rioting and looting) need a break, and any support we can provide to help the community heal and get back on its feet should be provided,” County Executive Charlie Dooley said. “It’s the humane thing to do.”

Laurie Skrivan • lskrivan@post-dispatch.com

SUPPORT • “I lost my job. They kept blocking off the streets. I don’t have a car and I couldn’t get to the bus stop,” said Titilayo Blanchard (left), who took advantage of a free shuttle to the Dellwood Recreation Center. The county is funding services there for residents.

ADDING UP THE BILL

Complete report

healing and outreach

Policing, recovery runs into millions

SLU law professors address killing of Brown • A7

Looking for a response that lasts

By Kevin McDermott kmcdermott@post-dispatch.com 314-340-8268

Now that the unrest in Ferguson apparently has subsided, the bills soon will come due. For two weeks, law enforcement agencies from those in small cities all the way to the Missouri Highway Patrol and the

state’s National Guard sent officers and tactical equipment to the small suburban town. From gas masks to overtime, the costs are being tallied. Generally it’s still too early to quantify exactly what the total public cost will be for the extra law enforcement since Michael

Gauen: Collinsville was once close to boiling over • A12

AT stltoday.com/ michaelbrown Reprints of Post-Dispatch front pages The memorable photos from our coverage

See Cost • Page A7

Timeline: The story as it unfolds

Groups seek endangered status for monarch By Chuck Raasch craasch@post-dispatch.com > 202-298-6880

food-safety groups is asking the Fish and Wildlife Service to grant endangered species protection to the iconic monarch butterfly, whose U.S. population, the groups say, last year fell to 90 percent below its 20-year average. In a petition asking for the designation, which would allow the federal government to more

TODAY

91°/74°

Unfit for a king

CHANCE OF STORMS

TOMORROW

91°/73° PARTLY CLOUDY

Weather A20 POST-DISPATCH WEATHERBIRD ®

Marches, protests and prayer vigils have been a constant in the region for more than two weeks, and as a grand jury pores over evidence in the Michael Brown killing, similar actions are expected to continue.

PHOENIX • The accidental

Monarch butterfly

But other responses to the police shooting, designed to be more long-lasting, have popped up. They include getting more African-Americans engaged in their communities and challenging people to leave their comfort zones and talk about race. On Wednesday, a storefront on See Heal • Page A7

Shooting by girl, 9, with Uzi stirs debate over rules at gun ranges By JACQUES BILLEAUD and GENE JOHNSON Associated Press

WASHINGTON • A coalition of environmental and

See Butterfly • Page A6

By Doug Moore dmoore@post-dispatch.com 314-340-8125

shooting death of a firing-range instructor by a 9-year-old girl with an Uzi has set off a powerful debate over youngsters and guns, with many people wondering what sort of parents would let a

Pickleball craze comes to St. Louis

St. Peters rethinks red-light cameras • A2

Merger of ping-pong and tennis provides workout at an easier pace.

Long homer lifts Pirates over Cards • C1

HEALTH • B1

Fisher still angry over ESPN story • C1

child handle a submachine gun. Instructor Charles Vacca, 39, was standing next to the girl Monday at the Last Stop range in White Hills, Ariz., about 60 miles south of Las Vegas, when she squeezed the trigger. The recoil wrenched the Uzi upward, and Vacca was shot in the head. See Gun • Page A6

Both sides claim victory in Gaza • A5

1 M Vol. 136, No. 240 ©2014


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