(CNN) Two Wisconsin police officers are on leave Monday as state authorities investigate why a Black man was shot multiple times in the back as he entered the driver's side door of an SUV, officials said.
The man's three children -- 3, 5 and 8 -- were in the car, a family attorney said.
Identified by the governor as Jacob Blake, the man is in stable condition in an intensive care unit, according to attorney Ben Crump, who represents the Blake family. Crump posted a video of the Sunday evening shooting in Kenosha.
The footage spread across social media, sparking protests and leading county officials to institute a curfew that remained in place until Monday morning. Another will be instituted from 8 p.m. Monday until 7 a.m. Tuesday morning, according to the Kenosha County Sheriff's Department.
The shooting came as demonstrators continue to decry police violence in American cities, including the encounters that killed George Floyd and Breonna Taylor. The night before Blake's shooting, protests erupted in Lafayette, Louisiana, after police killed a Black man -- Trayford Pellerin, 31 -- outside a convenience store.
The National Guard has been called to the city, Mayor John Antaramian confirmed. Troops will be focused on supporting the needs of local first responders and law enforcement "to protect critical infrastructure and cultural institutions," Gov. Tony Evers said in a statement.
Protesters gathered Monday evening at the Kenosha courthouse and came face-to-face with police in riot gear. An armored vehicle was also on scene, and police threw gas into the crowd of protesters.
Kenosha police asked the Wisconsin Justice Department's division of criminal investigation to take over the investigation, and the agency aims to file a report with prosecutors within 30 days. District Attorney Michael Graveley's office will determine whether to bring any charges.
In Kenosha, a city of 100,000 located on the Lake Michigan coastline between Chicago and Milwaukee, protesters overnight broke windows and sprayed graffiti at a Kenosha County administrative building, according to CNN affiliate WISN. Vehicles at a nearby auto dealership were torched, a fire was started at a county courthouse and officers in tactical gear formed a line to protect a public safety building, the station reported.
Before the sun rose Monday, numerous dump and garbage trucks remained smoldering on the street after being set ablaze. The courthouse and administrative building were closed Monday, and all court hearings for the day are postponed, the county said on Facebook.
"We believe in justice and therefore justice means for everyone. We will hold the police and the public accountable," Antaramian said. "Rioting and looting is something that is not acceptable to the community."
Kenosha officers were called to a domestic incident about 5:11 p.m. Sunday, police said.
The shooting unfolded on a residential street packed with apartment buildings, a block from a city golf course. The Lake Michigan shoreline lies about a mile east.
In the video clip, an African American man walks around the front of a gray SUV with two officers a step or two behind him, one with his weapon trained on the man's back. As the Black man enters the driver side door of his car, the nearest officer grabs the tail of his tank top and seven shots are heard.
The man entering the car appears to go limp. A sustained car horn blares. A woman nearby jumps up and down, apparently in anguish.
Kenosha police are not equipped with body cameras at this time, Antaramian said. They are budgeted for purchase in 2022, he said. Police cars are equipped with dash cameras, but Antaramian is not sure whether they captured the incident..
Raysean White, who filmed the video clip that drew more than 9 million views from Crump's Twitter feed alone, was across the street when he heard women arguing, he said. He saw Blake arrive and order one of his sons into a vehicle. The boy happily obliged and Blake walked into a home behind a woman, he said.
White stepped away and when he returned, he said, police were wrestling with Blake. White doesn't know what started the argument, he said. He began filming what he called the middle and the end of the altercation, he said, explaining he was angry and traumatized by what he saw and couldn't sleep Sunday night.
"The police want everybody to know they're out here to protect and serve, but you guys are constantly giving us -- Black people, in particular -- reasons not to let you guys protect and serve," White told CNN. "We don't want you guys around because we are scared for our lives. You come to an incident to disarm an argument, and this Black man gets shot. It wasn't supposed to go down that."
The police union representing the officers urged the public to withhold judgment until the state Justice Department completes its investigation.
"As always, the video currently circulating does not capture all the intricacies of a highly dynamic incident. We ask that you withhold from passing judgment until all the facts are known and released," said Pete Deates, president of the Kenosha Professional Police Association.
Gravely, the local district attorney, said his office is tasked with making two determinations.
"One, did any officer in this case commit any crimes? And two, are there any crimes we believe were committed that we can prove beyond a reasonable doubt? If those two things are concluded as a yes, then criminal charges would be brought at the end of that process," Graveley said.
State Attorney General Josh Kaul said his office "will unwaveringly pursue justice in this case."
In a tweet, Crump, who represents Floyd's family, says the man was leaving the scene after "breaking up a fight between two women."
Officers were called to respond to a domestic disturbance, police said, but it's unclear who called 911 or what happened before the video recording begins. In a police call, a dispatcher says Blake "isn't supposed to be there" and that he took the complainant's keys and refused to leave. The dispatcher later explains she doesn't have more details because the caller was "uncooperative."
The dispatcher's report of shots fired comes about five minutes after the initial report. According to Crump, police had already used a Taser on Blake before the shooting.
It is not clear from the video if both officers opened fire. The second officer has his gun out as the shots are heard, the video clip shows.
Both are on administrative leave, state authorities said. All officers are cooperating, they said. Neither officer has been identified.
Blake, 29, was critically injured in the shooting, Gov. Evers said.
"Tonight, Jacob Blake was shot in the back multiple times, in broad daylight," Evers said in a statement. "While we do not have all of the details yet, what we know for certain is that he is not the first Black man or person to have been shot or injured or mercilessly killed at the hands of individuals in law enforcement."
Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes added, "The irony is not lost on me that as Jacob Blake was actually trying to deescalate a situation in his community, but the responding officer didn't feel the need to do the same."
Evers has called for a special legislative session in which he will ask lawmakers to consider a bill to "increase accountability and transparency in policing," address appropriate use of force and ban dangerous policing.
Deates, with the police union, called Evers' statement "wholly irresponsible and not reflective of the hardworking members of the law enforcement community."
Following the shooting, police said, officers rendered aid before the injured man was flown to the Froedtert Hospital in Milwaukee.
The Kenosha Police Department requested the scene be turned over to the Kenosha County Sheriff's Department and Wisconsin State Patrol, it said in a statement.
Crump said Blake's relatives reached out to his office for assistance. Though police did not provide details on the witnesses, Crump told CNN that Blake's three young sons were inside the vehicle when their dad was shot and tweeted that the kids "will be traumatized forever."
"It is outrageous. Who was he threatening?" Blake's uncle, Justin Blake, asked CNN after viewing video of the shooting. "He had a tank top and shorts on. He had no weapon. He was going back to the car because the children needed to be checked on."
In a statement announcing the family had retained him, Crump said Jacob Blake was trying to "deescalate a domestic incident when police drew their weapons and tasered him. As he was walking away to check on his children, police fired their weapons several times into his back at point blank range. Blake's three sons were only a few feet away."
US Attorney General Bill Barr will provide a briefing on the shooting during a previously scheduled visit to the White House on Monday morning, White House chief of staff Mark Meadows said.
"From what I was briefed on, obviously, the video tells a story that's troubling," Meadows said, adding it's still too early to tell what happened.
Jeffery Robinson, a deputy legal director with the American Civil Liberties Union, said Blake's shooting -- along with Floyd's outside a Minneapolis grocery store and Taylor's in her own home -- demonstrates "the very institution of American policing is rotten at its core."
Of Blake's shooting, Robinson said, "With each of the seven shots fired, the police department made their intent clear -- they believed they had the right to kill an unarmed Black man for the crime of walking away from them."
A GoFundMe seeking $500,000 to help with Blake's medical bills, therapy, lawyers and support for his children was, as of Monday evening, close to reaching the goal.
Correction: An earlier version of this story had the wrong condition for Blake in one reference. He is in serious condition.