Demonstrations in the Missouri town of Ferguson cooled after Attorney General Eric Holder met Wednesday the parents of Michael Brown, the unarmed 18-year-old student shot dead on August 9.
Brown's death ignited nearly two weeks of nighttime protests in the majority black town that frequently turned violent and stirred racial tensions.
The initial police response only aggravated the demonstrators, some of whom armed themselves in response to what they said were unnecessarily aggressive tactics by the mostly white force.
Late yesterday only a few hundred people braved the pressure-cooker Missouri heat and humidity for a relaxed and orderly march up and down West Florissant Avenue, where most of the protests have taken place.
Missouri Governor Jay Nixon said the National Guard, deployed on Monday, were no longer needed.
The Guard had been assigned only to protect a police command center, allowing law enforcement personnel to deal directly with protesters and rioting.
In Washington, the journalists outnumbered the 20 or so protesters that showed up outside the White House for the so-called "Nationwide Day of Rage for Ferguson."
The event was organized online by the Anonymous activist group, which called for similar "rage" protests in other major US cities.
Holder pledged a full and thorough investigation into Brown's fatal shooting, which the teenager's family branded an "execution."
Police say Brown -- who was shot six times -- was the suspect in a robbery, but muddying the waters, also disclosed that he was not stopped for that reason.
Brown's funeral, a potential rallying point for more demonstrations, will take place Monday, while there are more demonstrations planned at the weekend in the town and in the capital Washington.
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