Police killing protesters

Google seems to be failing me here.

I’m looking for recent (say, within the past 40 years) US cases where police have killed one or more of a group of protesters.

Also of interest would be cases where police made a genuine attempt to kill (e.g. shot at and hit) one or more protesters.

I assume that since you are saying 40 years ago you don’t want toget into this one. Some would say Ruby Ridge and Waco were protest against the government.

If you meant to include outside the U.S. then shooting of Patrick Chow in Hong Kong maybe fits the criteria.

How about in Thailand?

Sorry, only now noticed the OP said “US cases”.

we recently celebrated anniversary of Kent State killings, but that was more than 40 years ago

sorry, I should have specified that shooting was National Guard, not police

[Moderating]

Just a pre-emptive friendly reminder that this is GQ, not GD. The OP is looking for a list of such incidents, not judgements about them or the like. Everyone’s fine so far; I just want to make sure it stays that way.

I was looking for the Bundy protestor shot in Oregon while evading marshals.

LaVoy Finicum

He was not shot while engaged in a protest, which is what the OP is looking for. He was stopped for at a roadblock, and shot when he apparently went for his gun. It was more suicide by cop than “police killing protesters.”

There was little practical difference in that cae.

For this discussion, lethal force by any “police-like” organization should count.

*commemorated

And looking at the previous 40 years encompasses American administrations of both parties.
I find the dearth of cites comforting.

I cannot think of any shootings against protestors off the top of my head from the last 40 years…in the US such things are rare (Kent State…probably worker protests in the early 1900’s).

But, that does not mean the police don’t get aggressive and violent towards protestors in the US now…they certainly do. They just use means short of shooting them.

I think it was the ending of the movie “Billy Jack” that had a scroll of all the protesters killed by police or national guard while protesting the Vietnam War and racial injustice - and only the first entry, Kent State was real. As far as I could tell at the time, the rest were just fiction.

I would imagine the blow-back from Kent State was that firing live rounds directly into a crowd was not likely to be glossed over. Every bit of training says the police only shoot if they see a threat of serious injury from an armed assailant. I haven’t heard of rock-throwers reaching that category yet.

They weren’t rare at all up until the 1940s or so.Many workers were killed by police and the National Guard during early labor struggles, and many more by company guards, anti-union mobs, the KKK, and others.

The beginning of The Trial of Billy Jack had a listing of three real incidents and 1 fictional. The fictional incident was the basis of the movie.

The three listed incidents were the Orangeburg Massacre,
the Jackson State shooting in 1970 and the 1972 shooting at Southern State University. Two of those incidents fit the OP (except for the 40 year part). The Jackson St incident was more of a riot than a protest by my cursory glance at it.

Even if police don’t shoot protestors any more, that doesn’t mean they don’t kill them. I can envision a situation where police use tasers, beanbag rounds, water hoses, tear gas, or other usually-nonlethal measures against protesters, and a protester dying as a direct result (there’s a reason why the police refer to such measures as “less lethal”, rather than “nonlethal”). Though whether that’s actually happened since 1980, I don’t know.

Not sure that this would count as a protest but the police killed people during the Rodney King riots.

Interesting - the other two I had not heard of before. Thanks.

but if memory serves me, the first movie (or rather, previous movie) ended with a fairly extensive list of such incidents.