a stung report, to make black lives matter. also ahead our coverage of ferguson, missouri one year after the flash point and the spark of protest. how often do you say you have been to jail? about 50. 50 times. america tonight s lori jane gliha, in ferguson with justice denied. thanks for joining us, i m joie chen. we tend to see the spark that ignited ferguson, missouri, last summer as the death of one man, the unarmed teenager mike brown, at the hands of a white police officer. but the investigation unlocked a horrible reality, the real fuel that burned in this flash point. a year later, with that reality exposed america tonight s lori jane gliha went back to ferguson to find out what if anything has changed. in. this is my white lightning who endured just as much as we did. reporter: this was once kiana williams home and the car she was in when police arrested her last june. i went straight to jail and i stayed there for two weeks. reporter: it isn t th
an autopsy showed he was hit at least 6 times, twice in the head. .his body lay on the street for over 4 hours. his death unleashed an anger that had been building for decades at a system the community here says is stacked against them from birth. .and raised questions about policing and race in america. everything that s happening in ferguson is everything that s wrong with police-community relationships, particularly when it comes to black men. one of the reasons that black young men are angry about this because they all see themselves as a michael brown. it could have been them. that anger would continue for months to come, but while the legal process ran its course a community held back .watching and waitingfor justice to be done. fault lines was there during that time in this special extended episode we look deeper into why so many here feel such injustice from those sworn to protect them. sit down for micheal brown sit down for micheal brown sit down for micheal
he was 18, and unarmed, when gunned down by a white police officer in ferguson missouri. an autopsy showed he was hit at least 6 times, twice in the head. .his body lay on the street for over 4 hours. his death unleashed an anger that had been building for decades at a system the community here says is stacked against them from birth. .and raised questions about policing and race in america. everything that s happening in ferguson is everything that s wrong with police-community relationships, particularly when it comes to black men. one of the reasons that black young men are angry about this because they all see themselves as a michael brown. it could have been them. that anger would continue for months to come, but while the legal process ran its course a community held back .watching and waitingfor justice to be done. fault lines was there during that time in this special extended episode we look deeper into why so many here feel such injustice from those sworn to p
ferguson missouri. an autopsy showed he was hit at least 6 times, twice in the head. .his body lay on the street for over 4 hours. his death unleashed an anger that had been building for decades at a system the community here says is stacked against them from birth. .and raised questions about policing and race in america. everything that s happening in ferguson is everything that s wrong with police-community relationships, particularly when it comes to black men. one of the reasons that black young men are angry about this because they all see themselves as a michael brown. it could have been them. that anger would continue for months to come, but while the legal process ran its course a community held back .watching and waitingfor justice to be done. fault lines was there during that time in this special extended episode we look deeper into why so many here feel such injustice from those sworn to protect them. sit down for micheal brown sit down for micheal brown s
his family and friends he was 18, and unarmed, when gunned down by a white police officer in ferguson missouri. an autopsy showed he was hit at least 6 times, twice in the head. .his body lay on the street for over 4 hours. his death unleashed an anger that had been building for decades at a system the community here says is stacked against them from birth. .and raised questions about policing and race in america. everything that s happening in ferguson is everything that s wrong with police-community relationships, particularly when it comes to black men. one of the reasons that black young men are angry about this because they all see themselves as a michael brown. it could have been them. that anger would continue for months to come, but while the legal process ran its course a community held back .watching and waitingfor justice to be done. fault lines was there during that time in this special extended episode we look deeper into why so many here feel such injustic