Protests, looting erupt in Minneapolis over racially charged killing by
police
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[May 28, 2020]
By Eric Miller and Nicholas Pfosi
MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) - Protesters clashed
with riot police firing tear gas for a second night in Minneapolis on
Wednesday in an outpouring of rage over the death of a black man seen in
a widely circulated video gasping for breath as a white officer knelt on
his neck.
The video, taken by an onlooker to Monday night's fatal encounter
between police and George Floyd, 46, showed him lying face down and
handcuffed, groaning for help and repeatedly saying, "please, I can't
breathe," before growing motionless.
The second day of demonstrations, accompanied by looting and vandalism,
began hours after Mayor Jacob Frey urged prosecutors to file criminal
charges against the white policeman shown pinning Floyd to the street.
Floyd, who was unarmed and reportedly suspected of trying to pass
counterfeit bills at a corner eatery, was taken by ambulance from the
scene of his arrest and pronounced dead the same night at a hospital.
The policeman shown kneeling on Floyd's neck and three fellow officers
involved were dismissed from the police department on Tuesday as the FBI
opened an investigation.
Hundreds of protesters, many with faces covered, thronged streets around
the Third Precinct police station late on Wednesday, about half a mile
from where Floyd had been arrested, chanting, "No justice, no peace" and
"I can't breathe."
The crowd grew to thousands as night fell and the protest turned into a
standoff outside the station, where police in riot gear formed barricade
lines while protesters taunted them from behind makeshift barricades of
their own.
Police, some taking positions on rooftops, used tear gas, plastic
bullets and concussion grenades to keep the crowds at bay. Protesters
pelted police with rocks and other projectiles. Some threw tear gas
canisters back at the officers.
Television news images from a helicopter over the area showed dozens of
people looting a Target <TGT.N> store, running out with clothing and
shopping carts full of merchandise.
Fires erupted after dark at several businesses, including an auto parts
store. Eyewitnesses said the blazes appeared to be the work of
arsonists. Media said a smaller, peaceful protest was held outside the
home of one of the police officers.
ANGER ON THE WEST COAST
Outrage at Floyd's death also triggered a rally in his name against
police brutality by hundreds of people in downtown Los Angeles on
Wednesday afternoon.
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Protesters run from tear gas near the Minneapolis Police third
precinct, where they gathered after a white police officer was
caught on a bystander's video pressing his knee into the neck of
African-American man George Floyd, who later died at a hospital, in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. May 27, 2020. REUTERS/Nicholas Pfosi
That demonstration turned violent after a crowd marched onto a
nearby freeway and blocked traffic, then attacked two California
Highway Patrol cruisers, smashing their windows, local media
reported. One protester who clung to the hood of a patrol car fell
to the pavement as it sped away, and was treated at the scene by
paramedics, news footage of the incident showed.
The video of Monday's deadly confrontation between Minneapolis
police and Floyd led Mayor Frey to call on Wednesday for Hennepin
County Attorney Mike Freeman "to charge the arresting officer in
this case".
The city identified the four officers as Derek Chauvin, Thomas Lane,
Tou Thao and J Alexander Kueng. It did not say who knelt on Floyd's
neck, and gave no further information.
The local police union said the officers were cooperating with
investigators and cautioned against a "rush to judgment".
"We must review all video. We must wait for the medical examiner's
report," the union statement said.
The county attorney's office said it would decide how to proceed
once investigators had concluded their inquiries.
The case was reminiscent of the 2014 killing of Eric Garner, an
unarmed black man in New York City who died after being put in a
banned police chokehold.
Garner's dying words, "I can't breathe," became a rallying cry for
the Black Lives Matter movement calling attention to a wave of
killings of African-Americans by police using unjustified lethal
force.
(Reporting by Eric Miller and Nicholas Pfosi in Minneapolis;
Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Chicago and Steve Gorman
and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by
Stephen Coates, Clarence Fernandez and Gareth Jones)
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