House Democrats demand probes of police killings of black Americans
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[May 29, 2020]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The
Democratic-controlled U.S. House Judiciary Committee on Thursday asked
the Justice Department to investigate systemic police misconduct
following a spate of high-profile police killings of African Americans.
The killings of George Floyd in Minneapolis, who died when a white
officer pinned him down with a knee to the neck, and Breonna Taylor,
shot in her Louisville, Kentucky, apartment, raise questions as to
whether police were engaged in a "pattern or practice of
unconstitutional conduct," House Judiciary Chairman Jerrold Nadler and
the other Democratic members told Attorney General William Barr in a
letter.
The letter also asks the department to probe the local law enforcement
authorities who were responsible for investigating the death of Ahmaud
Arbery, another unarmed black man who was gunned down by a former police
officer and his son while jogging in his Georgia neighborhood.
"Public trust in the blind administration of justice is being seriously
tested by recent high-profile killings of African-Americans," Nadler
wrote.
The deaths of Floyd, Arbery and Taylor have garnered national attention
and civil rights advocates say they are the latest in a long history of
racially motivated attacks against unarmed black men and women by white
police or perpetrators.
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House Judiciary Chairman Rep. Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) walks along the
Ohio Clock Corridor following the first day of U.S. President Donald
Trump's Senate Impeachment Trial in Washington, U.S., January 22,
2020. REUTERS/Tom Brenner
The death of Floyd, 46, sparked sometimes violent protests this
week, after video showing him gasping for air while a policeman
kneeled on his neck went viral. It echoed the 2014 death of Eric
Garner in New York, which helped fuel the rise of the Black Lives
Matter movement.
The FBI has already opened investigations of the three latest
incidents, and the department has said it is weighing whether to
file hate crime charges against Arbery's killers.
Former Attorney General Jeff Sessions put the brakes on "pattern or
practice" probes of alleged systemic discrimination in 2017, after
he ordered the department to review consent decrees the Obama
administration had struck with troubled police departments.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Scott Malone and Dan
Grebler)
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