'Take a knee,' protesters ask black Secret Service officers in
Washington
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[June 08, 2020]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - As protesters
implored the black U.S. Secret Service officer to take a knee in
solidarity with their demonstration against racism and brutality by law
enforcement, the young man explained why he could not.
"I appreciate all of this. ... I'm still black. You see what I'm saying?
You guys are still fighting for my rights," the unidentified officer
told the protesters through a fence outside the Treasury building in
Washington. "What I'm saying is, technically we just can't do that."
The interaction on Saturday, recorded by Reuters TV, came during the
U.S. capital's biggest rally yet as tens of thousands marked the May 25
death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, an unarmed black
man.
From federal law enforcement agencies to small-town municipal police
forces, African-American officers have had to work the front lines of
many of the protests seen over the past 13 days in U.S. cities and
smaller communities nationwide.
Some of those demonstrating outside the Treasury Department next to the
White House said they sympathized with the officer's predicament.
"I'm a military guy. And when you are in uniform, there's certain things
you can and can't do," one protester told the crowd. Another gave the
officer a fist bump through the fencing.
Others chanted: "Take the knee. Do it. Do it. Take the knee. Take the
knee. Just take it."
They applauded when a black female Secret Service officer stepped
forward and briefly knelt.
A third black Secret Service officer told the mostly African-American
demonstrators that he respected their motivation for protesting.
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The motorcade of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump makes its way
past the New York Times building after a meeting in New York U.S.,
November 22, 2016. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
"I got into this profession because of how I grew up in Georgia.
What I've had to witness, the stories that I've had to hear from my
parents," the third officer said. "But also I'm talking to you as
another black man just to say, this is something that encourages me.
And just like you're out there for me, consider what I'm doing here,
for you."
Demonstrators nationwide are seeking to turn the focus of the
protests into a broader quest for reform of the U.S. criminal
justice system and its treatment of minorities.
In an impassioned speech last week, Catrina Thompson, police chief
of Winston-Salem, North Carolina, told protesters the actions of
those charged with Floyd's death did not represent the majority of
U.S. police officers.
As the mother of a black teen with autism "who may not be able to
respond to an officer telling him to put his hands up," she said: "I
would not stand here in this position and in any way, shape or form
support anybody in our organization if I believed they would bring
harm to my son or any of you."
(Reporting by Dan Balinovic; Writing by Daniel Wallis; Editing by
Peter Cooney)
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