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		George Floyd's family 'outraged' after reports of LAPD Valentine-themed 
		image: attorney
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		 [February 16, 2021] 
		(Reuters) - The attorney who 
		represented the family of George Floyd over his death at the hands of a 
		white Minneapolis police officer issued a statement on Monday following 
		media reports that Los Angeles Police Department members had circulated 
		an image of Floyd with the phrase, "You take my breath away." 
 Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man whose May 25 arrest was captured on 
		video, pleaded for his life and said he could not breathe as Derek 
		Chauvin, a white officer, knelt on his neck. His death sparked protests 
		against police brutality in the United States and abroad and renewed 
		debate about racism.
 
 The department issued a statement over the weekend acknowledging it was 
		investigating an employee complaint about an image allegedly authored by 
		a department employee, but said it had yet to find any postings.
 
		 
		
 The image of Floyd with the caption "You take my breath away" in a 
		"valentine format" was circulated among department members, chief Michel 
		Moore confirmed to the Los Angeles Times on Saturday.
 
 Moore told the Times that the officer who made the complaint would be 
		interviewed on Monday and that the department was working to determine 
		how and where the image may have come into the workplace.
 
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			A man recites spoken word poetry at a makeshift memorial honoring 
			George Floyd, at the spot where he was taken into custody, in 
			Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S., June 1, 2020. REUTERS/Lucas 
			Jackson/File Photo/File Photo 
            
			 
            "People will find my wrath" if confirmation that officers were 
			circulating the image is found, the chief told the Times.
 In a statement Crump, a civil rights lawyer, demanded accountability 
			and an immediate apology to Floyd's family.
 
 "The Floyd family is understandably outraged. This is beyond insult 
			on top of injury – it’s injury on top of death. The type of 
			callousness and cruelty within a person’s soul needed to do 
			something like this evades comprehension – and is indicative of a 
			much larger problem within the culture of the LAPD," he said.
 
 The Los Angeles Police Department on Monday did not immediately 
			respond to a Reuters request for comment.
 
 Chauvin’s trial is scheduled to begin on March 8 and the other three 
			officers charged in the wake of Floyd's death will be tried in 
			August, according to court papers.
 
 (Reporting by Maria Caspani, Editing by Howard Goller)
 
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