Though calm had returned to the small city of Ferguson, after days of sometimes violent protests, the funeral for Michael Brown will be under heavy surveillance.
It is scheduled for 10:00 am (local time) in the nearby city of St. Louis, in the Friendly Temple Missionary Baptist church, which can seat up to 5,000 people.
The 18-year-old Brown, shot dead August 9 in broad daylight by police officer Darren Wilson, is then to be buried in a private ceremony at the St. Peters cemetery.
But accounts of the shooting differ widely, with police alleging Brown was trying to grab Wilson's gun, but witnesses, including Brown's friend who was walking with him, saying he was shot as he held his hands in the air in a clear sign of surrender.
Yesterday, under a stifling heat, some 400 mostly black demonstrators gathered to remember Brown. Many wore shirts printed with the protest movement's refrain: "Hands up, don't shoot."
Brown's father urged calm today in respect for his son.
"All I want is peace, while my son is being laid to rest. Can you please, please take a day of silence, so we can lay our son to rest," he said.
At the funeral, a number of national civil rights leaders were expected, including Al Sharpton.
"We must turn this moment into a movement (...) towards solutions: how we deal with the whole aggressive policing of what is considered low-level crimes," whether in Ferguson or Staten Island, New York, he told NBC yesterday.
Garner's death has prompted an emotional response in New York, where Sharpton led thousands in a protest on Saturday.
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