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Saturday, May 25, 2013 | 1:46 p.m.

Updated: 10:44 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 11, 2010 | Posted: 5:10 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 11, 2010

Protesters Link Oakland Shooting To Grant's Death

OAKLAND, Calif. —

Nearly 100 protesters closed the Fruitvale BART station in Oakland for an hour Thursday night during a vigil that pointed at the parallels between the fatal shooting of Derrick Jones by two police officers on Monday and the death of Oscar Grant.

The demonstrators, who marched from a barbershop that Jones, 37, owned at 5815 Bancroft Ave., noted that the Fruitvale station is where unarmed passenger Oscar Grant III was fatally shot by former BART police Officer Johannes Mehserle on Jan. 1, 2009.

Referring to Jones' nickname, which was D.D., protesters chanted, "Oscar Grant, D.D. Jones, We won't let them kill our own."

Speaking to the crowd, Grant's uncle, Cephus Johnson, said, "We're not going nowhere until changes take place" in terms of punishing police officers who kill civilians.

Mehserle was convicted of involuntary manslaughter and sentenced to two years in prison for Grant's shooting.

Marchers said the two families were now connected through officers killing their loved ones.

"He could have been shot to just be subdued, but he was shot to be killed," said Jones' younger sister Tonya Saheli.

Oakland police have said that the officers who shot Jones did so with probably cause during a foot pursuit.

"All they knew was that he allegedly assaulted a woman and that they made contact with him to further investigate and he ran from officers," said Oakland Police spokesman Jeff Thomason.

Saheli argued that such incidents happen far too often in Oakland.

"Unfortunately police officers have gotten comfortable with qualified immunity," said Saheli. "And they feel like the can manufacture the same generic story."

Protestors might have stormed the platform, except police were waiting and dropped the gate to close the station as much for the safety of the demonstrators as anything else.

“We can't control the safety of people on the platform with trains running in and out,” said BART police Cmdr. Dan Hartwig. “Even if we stop the trains, there's a four foot drop to the trackway. It's totally unsafe.”

The Fruitvale Station was closed for about an hour during the protest as a precautionary measure, but no arrests were made, BART police Cmdr. Dan Hartwig said.

BART established a bus bridge to serve commuters who would have gotten off at Fruitvale to transport them there from either the Lake Merritt or Coliseum/Oakland Airport stations until the station reopened.

Johnson said future protests should take place in upscale areas such as Piedmont, Walnut Creek and the Montclair district in Oakland, which he said are where the judges and police officers live.

"No place is off limits," Johnson said.

Johnson called for people to participate at a town hall meeting on Saturday to "plan a strategic move until change occurs in the community."

He said the meeting would be held at 4 p.m. at the Olivet Baptist Church in Oakland.

Oakland police spokesman Officer Jeff Thomason said the march from the barbershop to the BART station was peaceful, and no arrests were made.

The civil rights group By Any Means Necessary organized the protest. Protesters made speeches in front of the barbershop at about 3:30 p.m. before heading to the Fruitvale Station.

Jones was killed Monday when police responded to reports that he had allegedly choked and beat a woman in an attempt to kill her at a laundromat near his barbershop.

He fled when police responded to the alleged attack and was found in the 5800 block of Trask Street, according to police.

Jones was shot after he refused repeated orders to surrender and grabbed at his waistband, police said. An officer saw a metal object in his hand and thought he was armed.

Family members on Tuesday called the shooting outrageous and unjustified. Jones' uncle, Sammy Jones, said his nephew had a wife and young daughter. The woman Jones allegedly attacked was not his wife.

Sammy Jones also said his nephew was a "very docile and humble guy," and there was no history of domestic violence in his family.

Police, however, said Jones was on parole for a gun violation and was previously arrested on charges related to illegal drugs, domestic violence and resisting arrest.

Protesters were planning another march at the same location for Friday afternoon, which could snarl the evening commute for more people.

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