A couple dozen people were escorted out of an event at St. Louis University last Friday after protesting a speech by St. Louis County Prosecutor Bob McCulloch. It’s been nearly three months since unethical grand jury proceedings led by McCulloch failed, by design, to produce an indictment against Darren Wilson for murdering Michael Brown. Activists continue to hold McCulloch responsible for the grand jury's decision that provided police immunity under the disguise of justice.
McCulloch, an SLU alum, was invited to be the opening speaker at a discussion at the university called “Thin Blue Line: Policing Post-Ferguson."
“There’s no post-Ferguson," student Christian Gordan, 22, told HuffPost as he demonstrated outside the SLU building. "Ferguson is still a city. There’s still a problem; there’s no post-anything."
Days before the event, SLU president Fred Pestello released a letter in response to scrutiny over inviting McCulloch. The letter insisted McCulloch’s presence would be beneficial to the conversation students need to have, saying, “One way to fulfill our mission is to expose members of the community to our academic world and to help our students gain a richer understanding of the societal challenges outside our classrooms.”
The event was open to the public, but attendees were required to register. McCulloch began his presentation by discussing the procedures used in the Mike Brown grand jury process. In December, McCulloch admitted to calling a troubled witness to the stand to testify in front of the grand jury.
In his speech, McCulloch said his job was “to see justice done,” and not solely to get an indictment of Wilson.
Just 15 minutes into his speech, protesters stood up and pleaded to put Bob McCulloch on trial and began singing the “requiem for Mike Brown” song. In response to protesters chanting, “Black lives matter,” McCulloch said, "I'm pretty certain all lives matter," the St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported.
McCulloch continues to provoke outrage with inflammatory disrespect for the reality that Black people face a targeted threat of death from police in Ferguson and the greater Saint Louis region.
Protesters were eventually escorted out of the courtroom by police officers. None were arrested. Meanwhile, back inside the courtroom, McCulloch told the audience the protesters had not used freedom of speech in a respectable way. "I'm always amazed when those who profess their rights to free speech won't let anyone else speak," the Post-Dispatch noted McCulloch saying.
McCulloch went on to speak about municipal court reform, saying
“it doesn’t take a genius to figure out” maintaining court systems in several municipalities is a bad use of resources, and that he has tried to work with municipal police departments “that shouldn’t be departments.” McCulloch ended his speech by saying "there's always room for improvement, whatever job you do," KMOV reported.