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Shouts Of 'Murderers! KKK!' Outside Courthouse

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Shouts Of 'Murderers! KKK!' Outside Courthouse

City Ready For Any Rioting, Protests Verdict May Bring

NEW YORK (CBS) ― As detectives Marc Cooper, Gescard Isnora, and Michael Oliver left the Queens courthouse where they'd just been cleared of all charges in the 50-shot shooting death of Sean Bell, many in the crowd of several hundred voiced their frustrations with the verdict, hurling their emotions at the three officers.

"Murderers! Murderers!" some could be heard screaming.

Others likened the officers' union, the Police Benevolent Association, to the notorious Ku Klux Klan. "PBA, PBA: KKK! KKK!" they shouted, marching in a circle in protest.

"To kill a black man in New York City is nothing! It's swatting a fly!" shouted one angry protester.

At certain points, some members of the crowd became a bit unruly, screaming expletives and pushing through the masses toward police officers to vent their anger. One man in a red sweatshirt had to be restrained by others after causing a minor scuffle.

Many people in the predominantly black crowd began reciting other cases where black New Yorkers were shot by police, and the officers, they said, got away with it.

"This was a disgrace, what happened today," shouted Calvin Hutton, a Harlem resident. "We prayed for a different result, but we got the same old bull----."

Inside the packed Queens courtroom, gasps could be heard when Judge Arthur Cooperman acquitted the officers. Bell's mother cried; her husband put his arm around her and shook his head. Bell's fiancee, Nicole Paultre Bell, left the courtroom immediately. Officer Michael Oliver, who fired the most shots, also cried.

"It hurts," said Paultre Bell's attorney, Michael Hardy. "If it didn't you wouldn't be human. Because it touches real lives. ... This is not over. This is not over."

A friend led a visibly upset shooting survivor Trent Benefield from the courthouse, with an arm firmly around his shoulders, while enraged people outside shouted "Murderers! Murderers!"

Scores of police officers formed lines in the middle of traffic to block the crowd from charging the courthouse. Some spectators briefly jostled with the officers right after the verdict was announced and several people rushed out of the courthouse, but the contact didn't become violent.

The crowd wore black T-shirts with Bell's face in a yellow circle in the middle, while other shirts read "Justice for Sean Bell." One group held a banner proclaiming, "50 Shots. 50 More Reasons We Need Revolution."

Dozens of people briefly began pushing and shoving each other as a crowd of hundreds started a processional following Bell's fiancee and Rev. Al Sharpton to their cars, on their way to Bell's gravesite. No one was hurt or arrested.

Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said, "We don't anticipate violence, but we are prepared for any contingency."

Despite the anger over the verdict, the protests were muted compared with past verdicts where officers were cleared in police shootings of black men. Several factors contributed to this, including improved race relations in the city in recent years and the fact that two of the officers are black.

Patrick Lynch, president of the Patrolmen's Benevolent Association, said the judge sent a message to officers that "when you're in front of the bench, that you will get fairness." But he said of the case: "there's no winners, there's no losers. We still have a death that occurred."

William Hardgraves, 48, an electrician from Harlem, brought his 12-year-old son and 23-year-old daughter to hear the verdict. "It could have been my son, it could have been my daughter" shot like Bell that night, he said.

He didn't know what result he had expected.

"I hoped it would be different this time. They shot him 50 times," Hardgraves said. "But of course, it wasn't."

(© 2009 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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