The release of the robbery video, against the strong objections of the FBI and the Department of Justice, was nothing more than deflection bait to try and convince people to give the police the benefit of the doubt with the "well, maybe he deserved it" mindset. It gets people talking about ridiculous things like the mindset of the dead guy and about toxicology reports, as if that's somehow more important, or even more relevant, than someone stopping in their tracks, raising their hands and saying, "Don't shoot! I'm unarmed," and then getting knocked to the ground by bullets, with one more for good measure added to his chest after he's laying laying there, just to make sure he was good and dead. But, but, but, even though the cop had no idea at the time, the dead guy is a suspect in a robbery. Not an armed robbery, mind you, but a
strong arm robbery, because that's really bad, just as bad as an armed robbery, so he got what was coming to him. Hrmph. So there.
So, how many took the bait? Let's see a show of hands. Wow, that's more than I thought. That's a lot. You can put your hands down now.
Ferguson, MO has a long and rich history of white cops shooting and killing the mostly black citizens of the town, most of the shootings later being determined to be unjustified, and a county prosecutor with an equally long and rich history of either negotiating the charges of the shooters down to minor infractions or not even prosecuting the cases at all. The police in Ferguson have a tradition of white cops shooting black citizens and then refusing to release the names of the shooters, just like this time. The police also have a tradition of confrontation that sparks outrage and the natural tendency of people to strike back in defense, just like this time.
We see it here on EO all too often, where someone will post something confrontational towards someone, and the strike-back response to defend oneself is natural and predictable, and then it escalates. If you play it right you can poke and prod and provoke someone into doing something you want them to do, so that you can so what you want to do. The police really wanted that to happen during the Occupy Wall Street protests in NYC when they showed up in military fashion with riot gear and armored personnel carriers to deal with a calm and peaceful crowd. That crowd didn't take the bait, however, because tensions weren't all that high and the police couldn't manage to raise them sufficiently. The people saw right through it.
That wasn't the case in Ferguson, where tension have been running high for years. The protests were largely peaceful in Ferguson, right up until the Ferguson Military Police showed up to quell the unrest that they managed to incite by showing up and confronting the citizens and getting the predictable and desired response, enabling the police to use their newly acquired government cheese (which, incidentally, must be deployed within a year or they risk losing it, so these military toys end up getting used in situations they have no business be used).