At least 24 police officers in Memphis, Tennessee, were injured by an angry crowd who attacked them after investigators fatally shot a fugitive.
The police standoff, which began on Wednesday night, occurred when US Marshals Service agents attempted to arrest an unidentified wanted man.
The man allegedly tried to ram his car into officers before emerging with a weapon, police say, and was then shot.
Images from the scene showed officers using shields to deflect projectiles.
According to the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, which has launched a probe of the police killing, the incident began around 19:00 local time when agents from the US Marshal Service’s Gulf Coast Regional Fugitive Task Force attempted to arrest the man as he was entering a vehicle in the city’s Frayser area.
The man, who has not been identified by law enforcement, has been named by family and local politicians as 21-year-old Brandon Webber.
His cousin, Demetrick Skinner, told the Daily Memphian that marshals fired as many as 20 shots at him.
Memphis police, who say they were not involved in the shooting, were called to assist investigators as a crowd grew around the scene.
A crowd grew after the shooting, and continued to escalate until 22:00 local time when it began to rain and police used tear gas and loud speakers to disperse protesters.
People threw bricks, tree limbs and rocks at officers, who donned protective gear, and damaged cars in the area.
Mayor Jim Strickland said in a statement on Facebook that a “concrete wall outside a business was torn down” and windows were broken at a fire station.
He applauded police for their “incredible restraint as they endured concrete rocks being thrown at them and people spitting at them”, adding that “the aggression shown towards our officers and deputies tonight was unwarranted”.