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RT Producer Hurt in Ferguson Riots Expected Police to Teargas Protesters

© AP Photo / Charlie RiedelA protester squirts lighter fluid on a police car as the car windows are shuttered near the Ferguson Police Department after the announcement of the grand jury decision not to indict police officer Darren Wilson in the fatal shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old in Ferguson
A protester squirts lighter fluid on a police car as the car windows are shuttered near the Ferguson Police Department after the announcement of the grand jury decision not to indict police officer Darren Wilson in the fatal shooting of Michael Brown, an unarmed black 18-year-old in Ferguson - Sputnik International
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A producer working for RT TV channel's video news agency stressed that the police were not targeting journalists in particular.

Protesters gather in front of the Ferguson Police Department before the announcement of the grand jury decision about whether to indict a Ferguson police officer in the shooting death of Michael Brown in Ferguson - Sputnik International
RT Producer Injured in Ferguson Protests: Editor-in-Chief
MOSCOW, November 25 (Sputnik) — A producer working for RT TV channel's video news agency Ruptly, injured during the recent protests in the US city of Ferguson, told RIA Novosti on Tuesday she expected the police to resort to tear gas.

"We all expected the police to react in this way to the protesters. They started firing teargas in order to disperse people, and I was in the middle of everything," Lorena de la Cuesta said.

Violent protests erupted in the St. Louis suburb of Ferguson after a grand jury chose not to press charges against white police officer Darren Wilson, who fatally shot unarmed African-American teenager Michael Brown in August.

Ferguson Nationwide Protests - Sputnik International
Protests Erupt Across US After Ferguson Grand Jury Decision
"I was walking with the protesters, and then suddenly everyone started running the opposite direction, because the police were coming … I felt a huge impact on my leg, and I realized it was a tear gas canister. It exploded and the gas came out, so my eyes were burning and I couldn't breathe," the producer said describing the events in Ferguson. De la Cuesta also stressed that the police were not targeting journalists in particular.

She also confirmed that her injury was not serious and that she did not require medical assistance.

According to the local newspaper the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, the protests, which have seen the torching of police vehicles and the setting of businesses on fire, have left 13 people injured and 61 arrested.

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