A white police officer will not face charges over the fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager in August.
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Amid rising tensions on the streets of Ferguson, a St Louis County grand jury declined to indict officer Darren Wilson, 28, for firing shots that killed 18-year-old Michael Brown, St Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert McCulloch said.
Brown, an 18-year-old African American, was shot dead after he was pulled over by the Mr Wilson in August while walking down the middle of the road with a friend, Dorian Johnson.
Mr Wilson says Brown leant through his window and attacked him, at which time two shots were fired, once of them hitting Brown's arm. According to Mr Wilson, Brown then ran away, stopped and turned to lunge at him, at which point he shot Brown at least six times.
According to evidence presented Brown and his friend had been earlier stolen cigars from a local store, and Mr Wilson considered them suspects for the theft.
His friend Mr Johnson said Brown was first shot as he fled and was attempting to surrender with his hands in the air when the fatal shots were fired.
The incident prompted protests almost immediately, not just for the shooting in a neighbourhood where the overwhelmingly white police force has a tense relationship with the majority black community, but for the reaction of the police afterwards.
Brown's body was left lying in the middle of the street for four hours while an increasingly angry crowd gathered.
That night protests spread, with some instances of violence and looting, prompting police to respond in force with the use of military equipment as well as riot gear. The unrest and provocative police response led the Missouri governor Jay Nixon to remove control of the scene from local police and turn it over to State Highway Patrol.
While the violence ended the street protests have remained in place for over 100 days. Tension has slowly increased as a grand jury has considered whether to charge Mr Wilson with a crime.
Police reinforcements have been prepared with special training and equipment including helmets, shield, batons, rubber bullets, pepper spray and smoke canisters.
Many of the protest groups have prepared too, training their members in civil disobedience and first aid. Organisers, loosely arranged into affiliated groups have outlined rules of engagementwith police and "safe spaces" have been prepared for protesters to escape the cold or tear gas.
One of them, the Don't Shoot Coalition, consists of about 50 different groups. It has called on protesters to remain peaceful. The groups see the action in Ferguson as not only a response to Brown's killing, but to what they see as a culture of police violence against African Americans across the country.
Some see the protests in Ferguson as far more significant than a reaction to a single incident. On NBC's Meet the Press, guest Gwen Ifill of PBS called the unrest and violence the beginning of a "new civil-rights movement".
"There's a new civil-rights movement which has sprung up," she said. "These young people in the streets, these young people who created a social-media movement around Michael Brown, they're not saying pass a law, they're saying enforce the current ones."
In downtown Ferguson, a township on the outskirts businesses of St Louis, have closed and boarded up their windows while one of the area's school districts has shut down and local gun shops have reported a surge in gun sales from locals wanting to protect their homes.
Rather than charging Mr Wilson as he might have, the elected Prosecuting Attorney, Robert McCulloch, chose to turn the decision over to a grand jury.
Mr McCulloch's involvement in the case has been controversial, with over 70,000 people signing a petition demanding that he remove himself from the case because of his close family ties to the police and what some say is a long history of siding with the police against citizens.
Despite rumours that Mr McCulloch would recuse himself or be replaced by Governor Nixon, the prosecutor has stayed on the case, though he has delegated the presentation of evidence to two senior attorneys in his office.
Some of the protesters were angered that Mr McCulloch did not recommend a specific charge against Mr Wilson, which is regarded by many as unusual. Without a charging recommendation, the grand jury can return an indictment on first- or second-degree murder, or either voluntary or involuntary manslaughter or no indictment at all.