A smile 'worth a million dollars': Daunte Wright laid to rest after
Minnesota police shooting
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[April 23, 2021]
By Nathan Layne
MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) - Hundreds of
mourners, wearing face masks and weeping, filled a Minneapolis church on
Thursday for the funeral of Daunte Wright, a Black man whose shooting by
police after a traffic stop has sparked fresh concerns over the way cops
treat people of color.
Wright, 20, who was shot by a white police officer in a Minneapolis
suburb on April 11, was laid to rest two days after a Minneapolis jury
found a white police officer guilty of murdering George Floyd last May,
a killing that triggered worldwide protests for racial justice.
While the conviction brought a measure of satisfaction to people calling
for an end to brutality and racism in policing, Wright's death served as
a reminder of the daily risks facing Black people during encounters with
police.
On Thursday, Wright lay in a white casket at center of church, covered
in red roses. His family members sat near the front of the church,
wiping tears from their faces as an organist played gospel music.
"My son had a smile that was worth a million dollars. When he walked in
the room, he lit up the room," says Katie Wright, Daunte's mother, who
fought through sobs as she spoke.
Other family members, cousins and siblings, remembered Daunte as "the
life of the party" and a father who lived for his beloved two-year-old
son Daunte Jr.
His aunt, Naisha Wright, wrote a tribute on a prayer card handed out to
attendees, recalling how she playfully nicknamed Daunte "lemon head" and
how he would smile.
Wright was a talented basketball player and he particularly loved the
Fourth of July, when he would celebrate with his family by lighting
fireworks, the prayer card said.
Among the attendees at Shiloh Temple International Ministries, a church
with a predominantly Black congregation, were Minnesota Governor Tim
Walz, U.S. Senator from Minnesota Amy Klobuchar and U.S. Representative
Ilhan Omar, who represents the congressional district encompassing
Minneapolis and some of its suburbs.
George Floyd's family was in attendance, as well as the loved ones of
several other Black Americans who were killed: the mother of Philando
Castile, the family of Emmett Till, the boyfriend of Breonna Taylor.
'NOT ABOVE THE LAW'
The congregation clapped and shouted in enthusiasm at a eulogy given by
the Reverend Al Sharpton and opening statements by attorney Ben Crump,
who represents Wright's family after representing many other families of
slain Black Americans.
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Katie Wright, the mother of Daunte Wright, a Black man who was
fatally shot by a police officer after a routine traffic stop,
accompanied by family members and Rev. Al Sharpton, releases doves
during his funeral at Lakewood Cemetery, in Minneapolis, Minnesota,
U.S., April 22, 2021. REUTERS/Nicholas Pfosi
Both Sharpton and Crump expressed hope that Daunte
Wright's case would get "justice" in the court of law, receiving
standing ovations.
"The time has come for police to understand that they're not above
the law, they're to enforce the law," Sharpton said.
Police video of the shooting in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, shows
multiple officers attempting to arrest Wright for an outstanding
warrant during a routine traffic stop. It then shows Officer
Kimberly Potter threatening to stun Wright with her Taser before
firing her handgun. A few moments later, she can be heard exclaiming
that she shot him.
Before he resigned, the city's police chief Tim Gannon said Potter
mistakenly used her gun instead of her Taser.
Potter, who also resigned after the incident, has been charged with
second-degree manslaughter. She has not entered a plea and her
lawyer, Earl Gray, has not commented about the case.
The shooting of Wright set off more than a week of demonstrations
outside the Brooklyn Center police headquarters.
Governor Walz quickly condemned the shooting as an example of racism
in his state and in the country.
"We know that this tragedy is connected to the deep and systemic
racism in our society that Black people in Minnesota and across this
country face every single day," he said in remarks at the funeral on
Thursday.
U.S. Representative Omar offered her condolences to the Wright
family at the funeral and presented Daunte's mother Katie with the
flag that was flown over the U.S. Capitol in honor of her son.
Addressing the congregation on Thursday, U.S. Senator Klobuchar
promised to work to pass the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act in
the Senate, which the U.S. House of Representatives has passed and
which aims to hold police officers accountable for misconduct.
"This is the urgent task before us," Klobuchar said. "Racism in this
country is not isolated, it is systemic."
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Minneapolis; Additional reporting by
Gabriella Borter and Brendan O'Brien; Writing by Gabriella Borter;
Editing by Grant McCool, Aurora Ellis and Daniel Wallis)
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