By Scott Malone
FERGUSON Mo. (Reuters) - A St. Louis suburb that faced weeks of sometimes violent protests following August's fatal shooting of an unarmed black teenager by a white policeman remained on edge on Wednesday as it waited to learn if the officer would face charges.
A grand jury has been meeting for nearly three months, considering whether to indict Ferguson, Missouri, police officer Darren Wilson for the Aug. 9 shooting of Michael Brown, an incident that laid bare long-simmering racial tensions in the mostly black city.
Missouri Governor Jay Nixon on Tuesday named a panel of 16 commissioners to develop solutions to the deep-seated socioeconomic disparities in and around Ferguson.
"This commission is not focused so much on changing hearts as on changing behaviors and we plan to do this by pushing through very aggressively legislation to change the way law enforcement acts," said Reverend Traci Blackmon, one of the newly named members of the Ferguson Commission.
Nixon has declared a state of emergency ahead of the grand jury's report, which officials said would likely come this month and that many expect to provoke another wave of protests.
Nixon has defended the emergency declaration, which some called heavy-handed, particularly given that protests in recent days had been peaceful. The state of emergency allows the National Guard to deploy to the St. Louis area. Officials said Guard members will not play a front-line role in interacting with protesters.
"For him to put Missouri into a state of emergency, to me it's a declaration of war on the protesters," a local activist and rapper who goes by the name T-Dubb-O said on a media conference call organized by activists. "We'll be treated as third-class citizens again when this decision is released and they don't like what we are doing."
St. Louis Mayor Francis Slay asked for 400 National Guard troops to be deployed to his city, to work in alternating 12-hour shifts at 45 locations around the city, St. Louis Public Radio reported.
"We will not try to disrupt, minimize, or in any way impede our constituents' constitutionally protected right to assemble and speak freely," Slay wrote in a letter to the city's Board of Alderman, a copy of which the broadcaster posted online. "Our primary missions are to keep people safe, protect property and safeguard constitutional rights."
Troops have not been visible on the streets of Ferguson since Nixon declared a state of emergency.
St. Louis officials did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Officials said local police had been through conflict de-escalation training since August, after being criticized for using tear gas and rubber bullets on protesters who at times threw rocks and gasoline bombs. Activist leaders have also been training potential protesters in nonviolent civil disobedience techniques.
There are conflicting accounts of what preceded the Aug. 9 shooting of Brown, with some witnesses contending he had raised his hands in surrender and others describing a struggled between the teen and Wilson.
(Additional reporting by Fiona Ortiz; Editing by Peter Cooney and Bill Trott)