Missouri governor put to the test by St. Louis protests
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. — As a candidate for Missouri governor, Eric Greitens asserted that there could have been peace “by the second night” if a governor with a calm and commanding presence had intervened in the violent protests in Ferguson after the fatal police shooting of Michael Brown.
The former Navy SEAL officer declared that he would have been both caring and firm by listening to people’s concerns and imposing a dusk-to-dawn curfew.
Now, Greitens’ promises are being put to the test during a new round of protests over the acquittal last week of a white former St. Louis police officer who fatally shot a black drug suspect. Though daytime protests have been peaceful, the first three nights were marred by broken windows, physical clashes with police and scores of arrests.
Peace did not come quite as quickly as Greitens envisioned. And although he has not imposed a curfew, the Republican governor has been in St. Louis with a strong law-and-order message, even posting a social media video of a handcuffed man being carried face down by four officers as an apparent deterrent to other potential vandals.