Officers salute in honor of fallen police at Dallas hospital on July 8, 2016.
Officers salute in honor of fallen police at Dallas hospital on July 8, 2016. WFAA

DALLAS โ€” After a long night of chaos and uncertainty, the city is finallyย quiet.

Twenty blocks in the heart of downtown are blocked off by police barricades, an active crime scene where five officers were killed and seven others were wounded by sniper fire amid an otherwise peaceful demonstration against police brutality.

In the hours after what appears to be the most deadly attack on police since September 11, everyday habits are suspended. The Bank of America in the center of the blockade is closed. So is the McDonaldโ€™s on the corner. Raven Bartee, who works in the area, parked her car yesterday in what is now a crime scene, and she canโ€™t get to her house keys, her car or her daughter’sย diapers.

John Collins, a lawyer who has lived in Dallas for more than five decades, watches the officers from across Lamar Street and reaches for the obvious point of comparison.ย Collins remembers the days after President John F. Kennedy was assassinated, just a few blocks from where heโ€™s now standing.

โ€œWeโ€™ll all pull together now,” he said, “but itโ€™ll take a long time for us to heal.”

Periodically, members of the public approach police officers, offering to buy them coffee, water or anything else they might need. Naomi Baxter, a member of Mothers Against Police Brutality who attended Thursdayโ€™s protest, asks if there is anything at all she can do.ย The officers say they appreciate her support, and decline the offer.

Baxter has been a regular attendee at Dallas demonstrations for years. She joined the organization to protest police brutality after her cousin, Clinton Allen, was shot and killed by a police officer in 2013. Allen was unarmed, and the police officer, Clark Staller, was not indicted.

But in recent years, she said, she has seen a marked improvement in the relationship between the Dallas police force and the black community. It stands in stark comparison to the fear and distrust of police reflected in many communities, something that President Barack Obama addressed earlier this week.

โ€œChief [David] Brown has really taken it upon himself to talk with the police officers, to let them know theyโ€™re here for the people, and I feel like they are,โ€ Baxter said, trying to hold back tears. โ€œWalking up on us with their hands on their holsters โ€”ย no. They walk to us with their hands just like these officers,โ€ she said, waving at the officers along Jackson Street.

Baxter was one of the first to arrive at Thursdayโ€™s demonstration, her tambourine in tow. She said the event was peaceful and calm until the very end, and remembered officers clearing traffic and reminding the demonstrators to stay hydrated in the Dallas heat.

โ€œThese police officers had no aggression,โ€ Baxter said. โ€œIf they did, I would have been the first person to speak up. Because thatโ€™s what Iโ€™m about โ€“ย us speaking up for whatโ€™s right.โ€

โ€œThey were in the right this time,โ€ she said.

Brown said Friday morning that he was not ready to speculate on the shootersโ€™ motives or draw a definitive connection between the rally and the culprits. But he added thatย one of the snipers said he “wanted to kill white people” before being killed by a police department bomb.

Shetamia Taylor, who attended the Thursday demonstration with her family, was a civilian victim. Taylor, who jumped on top of her sons to protect them, was shot in the leg and is expected to recover.

The long-term repercussions of the Dallas shooting have yet to be determined. The sniper attack was the third in a series of high-profile events in an emotionally charged week, after police officers killed black men in Baton Rouge, La., and Falcon Heights, Minnesota.

Alton Sterling, 37, was killed by Baton Rouge police while selling CDs outside a convenience store, while Philando Castile, 32, was killed after being pulled over for a traffic violation. Both incidents were recorded on film.

The national conversation around shootings and gun control was also electrified by the recent mass shooting in Orlando โ€”ย which had the highest death toll of any shooting in modern American history โ€”ย and a 25-hour sit-in led by Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives.

But until shots rang out in the streets of Dallas Thursday night, the mood at the protest was one of sadness and support, according to several event attendees.

โ€œThis was my first protest, and at the beginning I felt so safe,โ€ said Diya Wazirali, who attended the demonstration with her sister and cousin. โ€œIt was very peaceful โ€”ย I just felt like I was part of the community, and we were all there together.โ€

Although the event was publicized as a protest against police brutality, the relationship between the protesters and Dallas police officers in particular was not marked by animosity, according to Sahare Wazirali.

โ€œThe Dallas Police Department has repeatedly stood in solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement โ€”ย theyโ€™ve been consistently supportive,โ€ Wazirali said. โ€œTheyโ€™ve walked alongside marchers, and theyโ€™re one of the most active police departments in terms of making sure thereโ€™s accountability in police work.โ€

โ€œWeโ€™re grieving for their families,โ€ she added.

Over the past few years, officer training has increasingly focused on de-escalation tactics, which Brown has cited as one reason the number of excessive-force complaints against Dallas officers has steadily decreased.

Early Thursday evening, the Dallas Police Department posted videos and photos of the demonstration on the department Twitter account. In one photo, smiling police officers stand beside a man holding a sign that says, โ€œNo Justice, No Peace.โ€ In another tweet, officers filmed the the crowd as demonstrators chanted โ€œIndict, convict, send these killer cops to jail / The whole damn system is guilty as hell.โ€

At sundown, just before 9 p.m., the first shots were fired, but in the din, it wasnโ€™t immediately clear what the source of the sound was.

โ€œI heard the shots, but I donโ€™t think it registered in my mind โ€”ย I thought something had happened to my dadโ€™s car,โ€ said Lexi Lewis, a Dallas highschooler who attended the event with family members. โ€œNobody in the car realized they were shots.โ€

The scene was calm, until it wasnโ€™t. Quickly, police officers started urging people to leave the scene.

โ€œIt got quiet, and then they told us โ€”ย run, run,โ€ Sahare Wazirali said. โ€œWeโ€™ve never run so fast in our lives.โ€

YouTube video

By midnight, the streets were largely empty, except for police officers. Officers urged civilians who were still downtown to stay indoors.

At press conferences held over the course of the night, the police chief and Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings kept an intense calm, answering questions as a standoff between officers and one of the suspects developed in a nearby parking garage.

โ€œThe suspect has told our negotiators that โ€˜the end is coming,โ€™ and heโ€™s going to hurt and kill more of us, meaning law enforcement, and that there are bombs all over the place, in this garage and downtown,โ€ Brown said. โ€œSo weโ€™re being very careful with our tactics.โ€

Rawlings acknowledged that the situation was changing minute to minute and encouraged locals to stay away from normally-bustling downtown Dallas until the confusion had settled.

โ€œThis is still an active crime scene, and we are determining right now how big that crime scene is,โ€ Rawlings said.

Rawlings also commended Brown and the Dallas police force for their conduct under fire.

โ€œTo say that our police officers put their life on the line every day is no hyperbole, ladies and gentlemen,โ€ Rawlings said.

โ€œLeadership matters at this time โ€“ย Iโ€™m proud of our chief,โ€ he added.

For more on this story, learn more about howย Dallas police used a robot to kill a suspect for the first time in the U.S., how Lt. Gov.ย Dan Patrick and other Texas lawmakers are blaming Black Lives Matterย for the shooting, and why Ross Ramsey says we should “save the hashtags for later” after Dallas attacks.ย 

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Jordan Rudner was a reporting fellow for The Texas Tribune in 2015-16. A Plan II and history major at the University of Texas at Austin, Jordan previously interned at KUT News and the Supreme Court of...