A sixth person was arrested Wednesday night during ongoing protests over the Thanksgiving night shooting death of Emantic Fitzgerald “EJ” Bradford Jr. at the hands of a Hoover police officer.

Martez Lamar Parker, 25, was taken into custody inside Target at The Grove shopping center. He is charged with loitering with a mask. Parker was wearing a bandana over his face. His bond is set at $500.

Protesters entered the Target just before 8 p.m. They briefly walked through the store, pushing shopping carts, before Parker was taken into custody.

After a Target manager, who was not identified, told protesters to leave, they continued inside Marshall’s. They chanted inside Marshall’s for a few minutes before continuing to Dollar Tree, Petco and Frontera Mexican Grill. Doors to those establishments were locked.

Protesters continued to Chick-Fil-A, where a manager welcomed them inside the restaurant. They continued to Freddy’s Steakburgers, where they were also asked to leave.

Protesters then went to the Hoover City Jail, where they stayed in the jail waiting area until just after 10 p.m. when Parker was released on bond.

Protesters are in the waiting area inside the Hoover City Jail. They’re collectively writing a letter to the City of Hoover—one protester writing one sentence before passing it to the next protester. pic.twitter.com/voSRVMsKKW — Anna Beahm (@_AnnaBeahm) December 13, 2018

Around 30 protesters were at The Grove shopping center and at Hoover City Jail.

Protest organizer Carlos Chaverst Jr., 25, was arrested Tuesday night outside the Hoover Public Safety Center. Chaverst, along with about 30 protesters, went to the Valleydale Road facility where they continued demonstrations over Bradford’s death.

Previous protests have been held at the Galleria, Hoover City Hall, Sam’s Club, the home of Hoover Mayor Frank Brocato and Renaissance Ross Bridge. Protesters are demanding that video of the deadly shooting be released – of which a portion has already been viewed by attorneys for the Bradford family - and also want the officer who shot Bradford to face criminal charges.

Sherrette Spicer, 37, was taken into custody Tuesday by Mountain Brook Police, who determined she had an outstanding warrant for disorderly conduct in connection with the Dec. 4 protest that ended in a brief blockage at I-459 and I-65. She was extradited to Hoover, and already has posted bond on the misdemeanor charge.

Spicer’s Facebook page describes her as the local chairwoman of the New Black Panther Party.

Mark Myles, 36, was arrested Sunday afternoon on an outstanding warrant, also for disorderly conduction in connection with the same incident, when officers spotted him at the mall. Myles was booked into the Jefferson County Jail Tuesday afternoon on a felony drug charge that stemmed from a traffic stop in Mountain Brook Monday.

Authorities said Myles was pulled over for an undisclosed traffic violation. As police prepared to impound the car, they discovered illicit drugs. Myles is charged with first-degree marijuana possession, a felony, and possession of imitation drugs, a misdemeanor. He has been released after posting $5,300 bond.

Susan Diprizio, 48, was arrested Thursday, Dec. 6, when Hoover police received a report of someone in front of Hoover City Hall throwing Christmas ornaments into traffic. Authorities say Diprizio also was standing in traffic on U.S. 31 and tried to climb on the hood of a vehicle while stating she was “going to stop traffic until there was justice for EJ.” She has a previous conviction for disorderly conduct in Autauga County in 2015, and failure to obey police in Prattville in 2017.

Martez Parker has been released. pic.twitter.com/kGjcnEoaCV — Shauna Stuart (@ShaunaReporter) December 13, 2018

Andy Baer, an assistant professor in the Department of History at UAB, was arrested by Hoover police and Jefferson County sheriff’s deputies near the Galleria, according to Hoover city officials.

Baer, 37, is charged with disorderly conduct in connection with the Dec. 4 protests on I-459. He was taken into custody during a traffic stop on Galleria Circle. The arrest was shown on Facebook Live by others in the car with Baer.

19 Protesters at Hoover Target and Hoover Jail

Alabama ACLU, Alabama NAACP requests copies of police policies

The Alabama chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union and the Alabama NAACP filed public records requests today to police departments in Birmingham, Mobile, Montgomery, Hoover, Huntsville, and Saraland for their use-of-force policies, body camera policies, and racial bias training materials.

Officials say they filed the requests in response to the police shooting death of Emantic “E.J.” Bradford Jr. and numerous incidents of “excessive use of force” in Alabama.

Officials noted the cases Chikesia Clemons, a black woman wrestled to the ground and exposed for making a complaint at a Waffle House in Saraland; Ulysses Wilkerson, a black teenager, beaten and hospitalized in Troy; Sureshbhai Patel, an Indian man, slammed to the ground in Madison and Greg Gunn, a black man shot and killed walking home in Montgomery.

“Far too often, the concept of ‘reasonable force’ has been distorted to justify police officers killing or seriously injuring people of color for indefensible reasons. The death of E.J. Bradford by the Hoover Police Department is a reminder of the tragic loss a family and community faces when law enforcement utilizes lethal force,” said Dillon Nettles, policy analyst for the ACLU of Alabama. “Law enforcement must implement transformative reforms that build public trust and lead to humane, equitable, and constitutional policing in all communities. We plan to fight for that transparency by collecting policies, practices, and data for departments across the state in the hope that it leads to greater accountability for violations of law, policy, and community trust.”

For more than two weeks, protesters have called for the public release of any and all footage of the Thanksgiving night shooting that left Bradford dead and 18-year-old Brian Wilson and 12-year-old Molly Davis shot. Activists have criticized law enforcement agencies for not releasing footage.

Alabama NAACP President Benard Simelton also addressed the release of body camera footage.

"The NAACP has advocated for use of body cameras by police officers so that the community could see really what happened, but when law enforcement refuses to release the video to the public, it does not help the situation. It is as if the video was never taken,” Simelton said.

He also said the public has a right to know law enforcement polices on handling a subject with a weapon.

“Too many of our young black males in particular are being shot and killed like animals and no one is held accountable. These tragic scenes must stop. The people in our communities deserve to know the policies and procedures that law enforcement agencies use when engaging individuals with weapons," he said.

ALCU officials say Alabama law enforcement must be open and transparent about their decision-making.

Read the full statement here.