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Videos show officer shooting armed teen near Ferguson

Jane Onyanga-Omara, USA TODAY, and Kevin S. Held, KSDK-TV, St. Louis
Police try to control a crowd Dec. 24, 2014, on the lot of a gas station following a shooting a few hours earlier in Berkeley, Mo.

BERKELEY, Mo. — Authorities released a surveillance video Wednesday showing a confrontation that ended the night before with a white police officer killing an armed black man in this St. Louis suburb.

The shooting happened about 5 miles northwest of Ferguson, where a white police officer fatally shot unarmed Michael Brown in August, sparking months of civil unrest.

At about 11:15 p.m. CT Tuesday while conducting a routine business check, a police officer saw two males at the side of a gas station, Sgt. Brian Schellman, a St. Louis County police spokesman, said in a statement.

The officer, whose name has not been released, approached them. Then one of the men pulled out a handgun and pointed it at the officer, Schellman said.

"Fearing for his life, the Berkeley officer fired several shots, striking the subject, fatally wounding him," Schellman said. "The second subject fled the scene."

The 18-year-old suspect was armed with a loaded 9mm handgun, St. Louis County Police Chief Jon Belmar said. The police department in Berkeley, a city of about 9,000 where more than eight in 10 residents are black, asked the St. Louis County Police Department to handle the investigation.

Authorities later identified the suspect as Antonio Martin, 18, of St. Louis. He died at the scene, but Belmar did not say where the fatal shot hit him and autopsy results are not yet available.

Martin's mother, Toni Martin, told KSDK-TV that her son did not have a gun and had only just left their home to go see his girlfriend.

Martin's other relatives were not immediately available for comment Wednesday. The address listed for Martin is a vacant, boarded-up home, and a neighbor told The Associated Press that the family had moved out some time ago.

In the nearly 2-minute surveillance video from the parking lot outside the gas station and convenience store, two young men are leaving the store at about the time a police car rolls up.

The officer gets out and speaks with them. About 90 seconds later, the video appears to show one of the men raising his arm, though what he is holding is difficult to see because they were several feet from the camera.

Then the video shows the officer, a six-year veteran of Berkeley's police department, rapidly moving backward. The officer fired three shots.

Police later released video of several angles of the shooting from other surveillance video.

One shot struck the suspect, another struck the tire of the officer's patrol car and it is unknown where the third shot hit, Belmar said. Police do not believe that the suspect fired any shots.

"He will carry the weight of this for the rest of his life, certainly for the rest of his career," Belmar said of the officer. "So there are no winners here."

Mayor Theodore Hoskins of Berkeley said comparisons to the Michael Brown case are unfair: Video of this incident is available, the suspect pointed a gun at the white officer, and the majority of the officers on his police force are black.

The 18-year-old who died had a criminal record, including arrests for armed robbery, armed criminal action and unlawful use of a weapon. Belmar said many officers in the local police departments knew him.

"We had somebody pointing a gun at a police officer," Belmar said. "There's not a lot of time" to think about using pepper spray or a stun gun.

Another man with the suspect fled and is considered a person of interest in the case. Belmar said at least three people witnessed the shooting.

Afterward, a crowd of 200 to 300 people gathered at the Mobil gas station and some people had explosive devices, possibly fireworks, Belmar said.

Protests were renewed last month when a grand jury declined to indict Darren Wilson, a white police officer, in the shooting of Brown, who was black and unarmed.

Tuesday night's death was the third fatal shooting of a black suspect by a white police officer in the St. Louis area since Brown was killed. Kajieme Powell, 25, was killed Aug. 9 after approaching St. Louis officers with a knife. Vonderrit Myers Jr., 18, was fatally shot Oct. 8 after allegedly shooting at a St. Louis officer.

The body of the young man remained on the scene for about two hours, Belmar said. After Brown died in August, his body remained on the street for more than four hours, an action that drew widespread criticism.

Belmar said two hours is fairly typical as police gather evidence, and interference from protesters may have prolonged the situation in Berkeley.

"Call it what it is: A police officer has killed another black man and this has got to stop," said Jason Keith Coleman, a black Baptist minister and activist who interrupted the Berkeley mayor's press conference.

"Everybody don't die the same," countered Hoskins, who is black. "Some people die because they initiate it, and at this point, our review suggests police did not initiate it."

Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon offered a careful early response.

"The events in Berkeley are a reminder that law enforcement officers have a difficult, and often dangerous, job in protecting themselves and law-abiding citizens," Nixon said in a statement.

Nixon, a Democrat, faced criticism during the Ferguson crisis, particularly from activists and the African-American community, for failing to name an independent prosecutor to consider whether former Ferguson police officer Darren Wilson should face criminal charges for the shooting death of Brown.

He later faced criticism for not immediately dispatching a more robust National Guard presence to the Ferguson area immediately after St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert McCulloch announced last month that a grand jury declined to indict Wilson. More than a dozen business were set ablaze and many more were looted in the hours following McCulloch's announcement.

During the protests early Wednesday, at least two officers were injured and treated at area hospitals, the county police chief said. One officer was injured trying to escape the explosives and another suffered facial abrasions after he was hit with a brick.

Several police cars were damaged, and a man in a hoodie set a convenience store across the street on fire. The flames were extinguished quickly, but a glass door was shattered. Four people were arrested.

A gun recovered Dec. 23, 2014, from an officer-involved shooting in Berkeley, Mo.

"I understand police officers have a job and have an obligation to go home to their families at the end of the night," said Orlando Brown, 36, of nearby St. Charles, who was among the protesters. "But do you have to treat every situation with lethal force? ... It's not a racial issue, or black or white. It's wrong or right."

Orlando Brown said he was pepper-sprayed during the protest as police tried to separate him from a friend whose hand he was holding. He said his friend was arrested for failing to disperse.

The officer who shot the suspect was assigned a body camera at roll call at the start of his shift, but it was handed to him later in his shift, Belmar said. He didn't put it on immediately and was not wearing it at the time of the shooting.

The police vehicle was equipped with a dashboard camera, but authorities are unsure whether it was activated. Those cameras typically are activated if the officer's lights atop the vehicle are switched on.

Detectives said they recovered the suspect's handgun at the scene. The weapon's serial number was unreadable; Belmar suspects the serial number was intentionally removed.

The officer has been placed on administrative leave as the investigation continues.

Contributing: John Henry, KSDK-TV, St. Louis; Aamer Madhani, USA TODAY; The Associated Press

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