Monday’s protest in Asbury Park was peaceful, and many police officers knelt in solidarity with demonstrators who denounced police brutality. However, tensions flared around 9:30 p.m. as police moved to clear the streets of about 200 people who remained after the main protest had ended. The city had imposed an 8 p.m. curfew.
A city police officer was injured after demonstrators hurled rocks at officers, police said. State Police Superintendent Col. Pat Callahan said there were a dozen arrests and that one officer had a fracture in his skull as a result of the rock trowing. Another was bitten in the leg, and a third needed stitches on his chin.
Asbury Park Press reporter Gustavo Martinez Contreras was streaming the protest live on Twitter when he was arrested and issued a ticket for failing to obey an order to disperse. He was released from police custody on Tuesday.
The charge against the reporter will be dismissed, Grewal said in a tweet earlier on Tuesday.
“I know that officers face enormous challenges while maintaining order during a chaotic situation. But I’ve discussed this matter with local authorities and they will be dismissing the charge today,” he said. “We will also figure out why this happened and make sure it doesn’t happen again. Because in America, we don’t lock up reporters for doing their job.”
Credentialed members of the media were exempt from the curfew.
There were 21 protests scheduled statewide on Tuesday, Callahan said.
On Tuesday morning, Toms River police walked at the head of a protest march in their Jersey Shore town. As three police cars slowly led the way from a shopping center to the Ocean County Courthouse, Chief Mitch Little and other officers walked behind a banner that read: “We Are With You.”
Several hundred people chanted “I can’t breathe!,” a saying that was among the last words of Floyd and Eric Garner, also a Black man, who died years ago after he was placed in a chokehold by police.
A few hours later, protesters streamed across a nearly 3-mile causeway into the seaside resort of Ocean City in southern New Jersey. Marching to police headquarters a few blocks from the boardwalk, they lie face down in the street as police looked on.