'Get your knee off our necks,' activist Sharpton says at Floyd memorial
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[June 05, 2020]
By Brendan O'Brien
MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) - U.S. civil rights
activist the Rev. Al Sharpton told mourners that George Floyd's death in
police custody and the nationwide protests it ignited marked a reckoning
for America over race and justice, demanding, "Get your knee off our
necks."
Memorial tributes to Floyd in Minneapolis, where he was killed on May
25, and in the New York borough of Brooklyn, a major flashpoint for
demonstrations, came as protesters returned to the streets of several
cities for a 10th straight day on Thursday, including Atlanta,
Washington, Denver, Detroit and Los Angeles.
The largely peaceful protests waned into Friday morning and emergency
curfews in many cities including Los Angeles were lifted.
Delivering the eulogy at a memorial service at a university chapel in
Minneapolis, Sharpton said Floyd's death at the hands of police, pinned
to the ground under the knee of a white officer, symbolized a universal
experience of police brutality for African Americans.
"George Floyd should not be among the deceased. He did not die of common
health conditions. He died of a common American criminal justice
malfunction," Sharpton said.
"It's time for us to stand up in George's name and say, 'Get your knee
off our necks.'"
Sharpton led mourners in eight minutes and 46 seconds of silence, the
amount of time Floyd lay on a Minneapolis street with the officer's knee
pressed into his neck.
A string of memorial services are expected to stretch across six days
and three states. A funeral is planned for Tuesday.
The nationwide protests were for the most part orderly on Thursday, in
contrast to several previous nights punctuated by sporadic arson,
looting and clashes between protesters and police and the mobilization
of the National Guard in several states.
New York City insisted that residents stay home after 8 p.m. and was
facing calls from frustrated residents to end the restrictions. Video on
social media showed police in different cities using batons and flash
grenades and firing tear gas without warning.
In Buffalo, New York, two police officers were suspended after a video
showed them shoving a 75-year-old man to the ground as he approached
police lines. The man, who appeared to bleed from his head, was taken to
hospital where he was in a stable but serious condition.
New York police also detained and later released a food delivery worker
late on Thursday for violating the curfew, even though food delivery is
considered essential work.
Videos circulated on social media show the man pointing his food
delivery bag and telling police officers, “Are you serious? Look, look,
look... (I) am not even doing anything."
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Reverend Al Sharpton speaks during a memorial service for George
Floyd following his death in Minneapolis police custody, in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S., June 4, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas Jackson
'SEISMIC MOMENT'
In Atlanta, which had seen nights of unrest including police cars
and storefronts being set on fire, most protesters headed home at
the 9 p.m. curfew and only six arrests were made, police said on
Friday.
The change in mood reflected a determination voiced by many
protesters and organizers in recent days to transform outrage over
Floyd's death into a renewed civil rights movement, seeking reforms
to America's criminal justice system.
"This is a very seismic moment, and someday I'm going to have a kid,
and he or she or they are going to ask me what I did during the
uprising of 2020, during the American spring," said Nana Mensah, a
writer in her 30s from Brooklyn.
She held a sign that read: "You're lucky we just want equality and
not revenge."
In the capital, hundreds if not thousands assembled for a rally at
the Lincoln Memorial, many sitting on the ground listening to
speakers and chanting, "Say his name - George Floyd," before an
evening thunderstorm dispersed the crowd.
The size of the demonstrations coast to coast appeared to ebb after
prosecutors on Wednesday elevated murder charges against one police
officer and arrested three others accused of aiding and abetting
him.
On Thursday, the three newly arrested officers made their first
appearance in court and were ordered to remain held, with bail set
at $750,000 each.
Their principal co-defendant, Derek Chauvin, 44, is due to appear
for his bail hearing on Monday. Chauvin is the officer seen in video
footage kneeling on Floyd's neck as Floyd gasped for air and groaned
"I can't breathe" before passing out.
The four defendants, all dismissed from the Minneapolis police the
day after Floyd died, each faces a maximum sentence of 40 years in
prison if convicted on the most serious charges.
Floyd, a Houston native who had worked security at nightclubs, was
unarmed when taken into custody outside a corner market where an
employee had reported that a man matching his description tried to
pay for cigarettes with a counterfeit bill.
(Reporting by Reporting by Brendan O'Brien, Michelle Nichols, Nathan
Layne, Peter Szekely and Andrew Hay, Steve Gorman, Rich McKay and
Aakriti Bhalla; Editing by Nick Macfie)
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