St. Louis Alderman Joe Vaccaro will have to wait if he wants to honor police with a city resolution.
The 23rd Ward Alderman said there were "other sides" to the protests that are now entering a third week following the acquittal of ex-St. Louis cop Jason Stockley. To punctuate his point, Vaccaro held a framed picture of a St. Louis city police officer who was shot in the line of duty as he introduced the resolution.
"There are parents, grandparents, children who worry about their moms and dads," Vaccaro said of the families of police officers.
It was a controversial move, coming just a week after 21st Ward Alderman John Collins-Muhammad introduced a resolution remembering the death of Anthony Lamar Smith, the man killed by Stockley in 2011. The Smith honor angered a large number of rank-and-file officers and their supporters who sided with Stockley.
He ultimately pulled his motion this morning, heeding calls to first submit his resolution to the public safety committee. Outside council chambers later, he confessed he didn't even know the name of the officer in the picture.
"His wife just came," he said. "I don't really know them."
Vaccaro said he submitted the resolution as a father of first responders, who worries every time one of his sons is out on a call.

"'Thank you' goes a long way," Kawolski said. "Gratitude goes a long way."

"Broken windows are not dead bodies," said Crow's Nest bar owner Eliza Coriell, who initiated the businesses' letter of support.
That's a message protesters have tried to push, arguing that the degree of problems caused by vandalism don't compare to police abuse. The business owners have taken some heat for their stance.
When the Riverfront Times published a list of the first businesses to sign — Coriell said the number has grown to more than 140 signatures representing more than 100 businesses — the police union that represents city cops blasted the small shops and restaurants on social media.
After today's board meeting, Coriell and protest organizers held a news conference in the middle of Tucker Boulevard to combat some of accusations. She said they were "pro reform" not anti-police.
The protests are now in their fifteenth day since the verdict. A core group of organizers had previously called for 100 days of disruption said they don't plan to end any time soon, but now say they're prepared to continue long beyond that.
"I want the city to know," Tory Russell said, "we just getting started."
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