Mark Duggan death: Hundreds gather for Tottenham vigil
Up to 500 people have attended a vigil for Mark Duggan outside Tottenham police station.
On Wednesday, a jury concluded the 29-year-old was lawfully killed when he was shot dead by police in August 2011, sparking riots in many English cities.
The gathering was used to protest against deaths in police custody. His family had called for it to be a peaceful event to remember Mr Duggan.
A minute's silence ended with chants of "No justice, no peace".
Mark Duggan's aunt, Carole Duggan, who said before the event she wanted "no more violence", addressed the crowd from the steps of the police station.
She said: "We have to remember Mark is not the first person to die at the hands of the police.
"There's been thousands more."
Mr Duggan's mother Pamela also spoke, thanking everyone for attending peacefully outside the police station.
She said: "We want justice for my son.
"Mark was a young boy. He wasn't a gangster. Gangsters have everything. Mark didn't have nothing.
"Mark had his children, his life."
The family of Sean Rigg, a black musician with schizophrenia who died at Brixton police station in 2008, also attended the gathering in north London.
Trade unionists were also there with banners in what the BBC's Nick Beake called "a broader anti-police protest".
Later, members of the Duggan family released white doves into the sky.
Ahead of the vigil, the police station's shutters came down with a message on the front saying that the station was closed.
The first two people to arrive, bringing chairs with them, were Islington pensioner Anne Johnson, 80, a member of the Communist Party of Great Britain, and 73-year-old Martha Osamor.
Ms Osamor, who works at Haringey Law Centre, in Tottenham, said: "I knew Mark Duggan when he was a little boy. So little has changed over the years.
"Here am I picketing outside Tottenham police station yet again."
Earlier, police said they had been aware of a "small number" of people intending to provoke disorder, despite the family's pleas for a peaceful vigil.
The Metropolitan Police said it had a "policing operation" in place across London in case there had been any problems.
Tottenham Hotspur's game against Crystal Palace at nearby White Hart Lane kicked off an hour after people started gathering for the vigil.
Met Commissioner Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe had already praised the family's "dignified" response to the inquest.
Birmingham eventPrime Minster David Cameron welcomed Ms Duggan's message of restraint, saying: "I very much respect Mark Duggan's aunt for saying 'pursue the case in the courts and not the street'."
In Birmingham, about 30 people also gathered as part of a similar event.
Organiser Geoff Dexter said it had been arranged for those who could not travel to London, to allow them to show support for Mark Duggan's family.
People gathered outside Tottenham police station after Mark Duggan was shot in 2011, with anger growing and leading to the worst rioting in a generation.
The jury at his inquest concluded after three months that he was in possession of a gun - although not holding one - and therefore posed an imminent threat to police when he was killed.
Send your pictures and videos to yourpics@bbc.co.uk or text them to 61124 (UK) or +44 7624 800 100 (International). If you have a large file you can upload here.
Are you in Tottenham? Send us your views using the form below.