Laquan McDonald death: 3 arrested as groups protesting teen's killing block stores - Action News
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Laquan McDonald death: 3 arrested as groups protesting teen's killing block stores

Chicago police say three people have been arrested during demonstrations along the city's high-end shopping district on Black Friday to draw attention to the police shooting of a black teenager.

Police say protests have gone "exceptionally well"

Two men are detained near Pioneer Court on Friday, Nov. 27, 2015, in Chicago. Community activists and labour leaders held a demonstration billed as a "march for justice" in the wake of the release of video showing an officer fatally shooting Laquan McDonald. (Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press)

Chicago police say three people have been arrested during demonstrations along the city's high-end shopping district on Black Friday to draw attention to the police shooting of a black teenager.

Several protesters were seen lying face-down on the ground in handcuffs. A police spokesman saidtwo arrests were traffic-related and a third was related to a battery. He didn't give details.

Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said he believes the protests have gone "exceptionally well" in large part because his officers have gone out of their way to let demonstrators express their outrage. He says despite people screaming in their faces, getting hit with spittle and thrown objects, officers are acting in a professional manner.

The march is the latest demonstration in the city since Tuesday, when officials released a video that shows 17-year-old Laquan McDonald being shot 16 times and prosecutors charged Officer Jason Van Dyke with first-degree murder.

Apple store shut down

Hundreds of protesters blocked store entrances and shut down traffic in Chicago's ritziest shopping district on the busy shopping day.

Chicago Apple store employees look to protesters lined up outside the Apple store on North Michigan Avenue on Friday, Nov. 27. Entrances were also blocked at the Disney Store, Nike, Tiffany & Co., and Neiman Marcus on one of the busiest shopping days of the year. (Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press)

Demonstrators stood shoulder to shoulder in a cold drizzling rain to turn the traditional start of the holiday shopping season on Michigan Avenue's Magnificent Mile into a high-profile platform from which to deliver their message: The killing ofMcDonald captured on a squad-car video made public earlier this week was another example of what they say is the systemic disregard police show for the lives and rights of black people.

They chanted "16 shots! 16 shots!" and stopped traffic for blocks to express their anger over the Oct. 20, 2014, shooting and the subsequent investigation, which they say was mishandled.

While shoppers continued to make their way along sidewalks and the empty street, some major retailers were forced to close, at least temporarily. Among them was the typically swamped Apple store, where dozens of employees in red shirts stood in an otherwise empty two-story space and watched through store windows as protesters linked arms to stop anyone from entering.

It was the largest demonstration in Chicago's streets since police on Tuesday released the video under a court order to make it public.

The footage shows McDonald jogging down a street and then veering away fromVan Dyke and another officer who emerge from a police SUV drawing their guns. Within seconds, Van Dyke begins firing. McDonald, who authorities allege was carrying a three-inch knife and was suspected of breaking into cars, spins around and falls to the pavement as Van Dyke keeps shooting.

Protesters make their way up North Michigan Avenue on Friday. Many people seemed to take the shopping disturbance in stride, while some even snapped photos of the crowd. (Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press)

Prosecutors charged Van Dyke with first-degree murder on Tuesday, hours before the video's release.

Frank Chapman, 73, of Chicago, said the video confirms what activists have said for years about Chicago police brutality.

"That needs to end," Chapman said. "Too many have already died."

Roads blocked for demonstration

Chicago police blocked off roads to accommodate the march down Michigan Avenue, and officers in some areas formed a barrier of sorts between protesters and stores and helped shoppers get through the doors. But protesters succeeded in blocking main entrances on both sides of the street for more than three blocks.

When one person tried to get through the front door of Saks Fifth Avenue, protesters screamed at him, shouting, "Shut it down! Shut it down." Entrances were also blocked at the Disney Store, Nike, Tiffany & Co., and Neiman Marcus, among others.

Shoppers seemed to take the disturbance in stride, with some even snapping photos of the crowd.

"Honestly it's the cold that's likely to scare us away first," said Christopher Smithe, who was visiting from London with his girlfriend.

A protester heads north along North Michigan Avenue on Friday, Nov. 27, 2015, in Chicago, as community activists and labor leaders hold a demonstration billed as a "march for justice" in the wake of the release of video showing an officer fatally shooting Laquan McDonald. (Nam Y. Huh/Associated Press)

With the rain and the protests, there seemed to be less foot traffic than on a normal Black Friday, said John Curran, vice president of the Magnificent Mile Association, which represents 780 businesses on North Michigan Avenue.

"The storefronts that were blocked by the demonstrators certainly had an impact on some of the businesses," he said.

Throughout the week, protesters have expressed anger over the video of the shooting. They've also harshly criticized the department for its months-long effort to prevent the video from being released and the state's attorney's office for taking more than a year to file charges against Van Dyke, despite having footage of the incident.

All previous marches have been largely peaceful. There have been isolated clashes between police and protesters, with about 10 arrests and only a few minor reports of property damage.

Van Dyke is being held without bond. His attorney said Van Dyke feared for his life when he fired at McDonald and that the case should be tried in an actual courtroom, not the court of public opinion.