About 100 people gathered before dawn Tuesday for a candlelight vigil
and prayer service on the second anniversary of the fatal police
shooting of an unarmed man on his wedding day that sparked outrage in
the black community.The Rev. Al Sharpton and Sean Bell's fiancee, Nicole Paultre Bell,
led the memorial on the street in Queens where the 23-year-old black
man was killed
outside a strip club on Nov. 25, 2006 after leaving his bachelor's
party.At precisely 4:10 a.m. -- the time of the shooting -- the mourners
rang a large bell 50 times to mark the number of bullets fired at the
Bell and two of his
friends, who were seriously injured.After laying wreaths and flowers, the group marched half a mile to a church, where Sharpton held a prayer service. "The idea is to commemorate the second anniversary and to continue to push for a federal case," Sharpton said later.At a non-jury trial in April, a judge acquitted three police
officers of state charges that included manslaughter, assault and
reckless endangerment.The officers -- undercover detectives investigating reports of
prostitution at the club -- said they opened fire because they thought
one of the men was
reaching for a gun. No weapon was found.The shooting and subsequent acquittals of the officers ignited
protests and raised questions about whether the NYPD was too quick to
use excessive force
against minorities.Last week, Bell's family and their lawyers met privately with
federal prosecutors to discuss a possible civil rights case against the
shooters."They've assured them they were doing a full investigation,"
Sharpton said Tuesday. "We don't know what the outcome will be but ...
the family is still
demanding justice in this matter." U.S. Attorney Benton Campbell has
refused to comment on the private meeting."Sean Bell's civil rights were violated -- the right to go home unarmed and not be killed by police," Sharpton said.Among others in attendance Tuesday were Bell's parents and Joseph Guzman, one of the two men injured in the shooting."It seemed like it just happened all over again just being here,"
Bell's father, William Bell, told NY1 television. "The feeling hasn't
changed. It still hurts." SOURCE:NEWSDAY.COM