George Floyd protests: Difference between revisions

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Reverted edit Special:Diff/961529061 by User:DonSpencer1: 1. See Talk:George_Floyd_protests#Paragraph_2_proposal 2. It's inappropriate to wikilink to street fighting in this context 3. WP:SUMMARYNO#1; the edit removed mention of police violence against reporters. --- Also changed "police brutality" to "police violence", because police brutality is a specific legally defined term while "police violence" includes arrests, which much of the violence against journalists is.
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* In [[Cicero, Illinois]], two men were fatally shot in separate incidents following an "afternoon of unrest"; this was confirmed by Cicero Police.<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=George Floyd fallout: 2 killed as unrest erupts in Cicero; Pritzker deploys National Guard to suburbs; 7 counties declared a disaster zone; CTA again suspends service |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-george-floyd-chicago-protests-20200601-mrgv3rsz3fgztlu5lyrsyuolr4-story.html |work=Chicago Tribune |location=Chicago, Illinois |date=June 2, 2020 |access-date=June 2, 2020 }}</ref> Town spokesman [[Ray Hanania]] said the shots were fired by "[[outside agitators]]."<ref>{{Cite web|date=June 2, 2020|title=2 killed, over 60 arrested in Cicero as unrest continues|url=https://wgntv.com/news/chicago-news/2-killed-over-60-arrested-in-cicero-as-unrest-continues/|access-date=June 2, 2020|website=WGN-TV|language=en-US}}</ref> The two men were both described as bystanders and were identified as 28-year-old Jose Gutierrez and 27-year-old Victor Cazares Jr.<ref>{{Cite web|last=|first=|date=June 4, 2020|title=Chicago man accused of killing bystander during looting in Cicero|url=https://chicago.suntimes.com/crime/2020/6/4/21281208/jose-gutierrez-zion-haygood-accused-killing-bystander-looting-cicero|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=|website=Chicago Sun-Times}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=De Mar|first=Charlie|date=June 1, 2020|title=Chaos In Cicero: 2 Bystanders Shot Dead In One Incident, Liquor Store Looting Suspects Caught Hiding In Another|url=https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/06/01/chaos-in-cicero-2-bystanders-shot-dead-in-one-incident-liquor-store-looting-suspects-caught-hiding-in-another/|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=|website=CBS Chicago}}</ref>
* In [[Cicero, Illinois]], two men were fatally shot in separate incidents following an "afternoon of unrest"; this was confirmed by Cicero Police.<ref>{{cite news |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=George Floyd fallout: 2 killed as unrest erupts in Cicero; Pritzker deploys National Guard to suburbs; 7 counties declared a disaster zone; CTA again suspends service |url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/breaking/ct-george-floyd-chicago-protests-20200601-mrgv3rsz3fgztlu5lyrsyuolr4-story.html |work=Chicago Tribune |location=Chicago, Illinois |date=June 2, 2020 |access-date=June 2, 2020 }}</ref> Town spokesman [[Ray Hanania]] said the shots were fired by "[[outside agitators]]."<ref>{{Cite web|date=June 2, 2020|title=2 killed, over 60 arrested in Cicero as unrest continues|url=https://wgntv.com/news/chicago-news/2-killed-over-60-arrested-in-cicero-as-unrest-continues/|access-date=June 2, 2020|website=WGN-TV|language=en-US}}</ref> The two men were both described as bystanders and were identified as 28-year-old Jose Gutierrez and 27-year-old Victor Cazares Jr.<ref>{{Cite web|last=|first=|date=June 4, 2020|title=Chicago man accused of killing bystander during looting in Cicero|url=https://chicago.suntimes.com/crime/2020/6/4/21281208/jose-gutierrez-zion-haygood-accused-killing-bystander-looting-cicero|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=|website=Chicago Sun-Times}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=De Mar|first=Charlie|date=June 1, 2020|title=Chaos In Cicero: 2 Bystanders Shot Dead In One Incident, Liquor Store Looting Suspects Caught Hiding In Another|url=https://chicago.cbslocal.com/2020/06/01/chaos-in-cicero-2-bystanders-shot-dead-in-one-incident-liquor-store-looting-suspects-caught-hiding-in-another/|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=|website=CBS Chicago}}</ref>
* In [[Las Vegas]], police shot and killed Jorge Gomez. Gomez was walking among protesters as a demonstration was coming to an end and reportedly reached for his firearm when he was shot.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rgj.com/story/news/2020/06/01/las-vegas-protest-george-floyd-black-lives-matter-protesters-trump-tower/5312668002/|title=Las Vegas protest rolling updates: Officer in critical condition after shot by a protester|first=Ed|last=Komenda|website=Reno Gazette Journal}}</ref>
* In [[Las Vegas]], police shot and killed Jorge Gomez. Gomez was walking among protesters as a demonstration was coming to an end and reportedly reached for his firearm when he was shot.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rgj.com/story/news/2020/06/01/las-vegas-protest-george-floyd-black-lives-matter-protesters-trump-tower/5312668002/|title=Las Vegas protest rolling updates: Officer in critical condition after shot by a protester|first=Ed|last=Komenda|website=Reno Gazette Journal}}</ref> In a separate incident in Las Vegas, police officer Shay Mikalonis was hospitalized in critical condition with a head wound after being shot by Edgar Samaniego while Mikalonis and other offers were arresting protesters near Circus Circus Hotel and Casino.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Lupiani|first=Joyce|date=June 5, 2020|title=Arrest report released for man accused of shooting officer during Las Vegas protest|url=https://www.ktnv.com/news/crime/arrest-report-released-for-man-accused-of-shooting-officer-during-las-vegas-protest|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=|website=KTNV News}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=|first=|date=June 5, 2020|title=Man deliberately shot Las Vegas officer, authorities say|url=https://www.rgj.com/story/news/2020/06/05/las-vegas-police-shooting-edgar-samaniego-shay-mikalonis/3158262001/|url-status=live|archive-url=|archive-date=|access-date=|website=Reno Gazette Journal}}</ref>


==== June 2 ====
==== June 2 ====

Revision as of 05:35, 9 June 2020

George Floyd protests
Part of human rights and police brutality in the United States
From top, left to right:
Marchers at the George Floyd protests in Washington, D.C., May 31, 2020; Armed National Guardsmen at a protest in Philadelphia, June 7; the overtaking and burning of the Minneapolis Police's 3rd Precinct, May 28; Police and Texas National Guard overlooking protesters in Austin, TX, May 31; Protesters confronting police in Minneapolis, May 28; Demonstrators holding signs in Washington, D.C., May 31
DateMay 26, 2020 – present
(4 years and 1 day)
Location
Caused by
MethodsProtests, demonstrations, civil disobedience, and civil resistance
StatusOngoing
Deaths, injuries and arrests
Death(s)20+[a]
Arrested11,000+[2]

Template:Campaignbox George Floyd protests The George Floyd protests are an ongoing series of protests and demonstrations against police brutality and racism in policing, which began in the United States in Minneapolis on May 26, 2020.[3] These followed the killing of George Floyd, a 46-year-old black man, after Derek Chauvin, a white police officer, knelt on Floyd's neck for almost nine minutes during an arrest the previous day.[4]

The unrest began as local protests in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area of Minnesota before quickly spreading across the entire nation and internationally in support of the Black Lives Matter movement. While the majority of protests have been peaceful,[5] demonstrations in some cities descended into riots and widespread looting,[6][7] with more being marked by street skirmishes and significant police violence, notably against peaceful protesters and reporters.[8][9] At least 200 cities imposed curfews by 3 June, while at least 27 states and Washington, D.C, activated over 74,000 National Guard personnel due to the mass unrest.[10][11][12] From the beginning of the protests to June 3, at least 11,000 people had been arrested,[13][14] including all four police officers involved in the arrest which led to Floyd's death.[15]

The Trump administration has drawn widespread criticism for its hardline, militarized response and rhetoric, perceived by many as divisive, during the crisis.[16] The unrest is also occurring during the global COVID-19 pandemic, with health experts as well as public authorities warning that the protests will likely facilitate an accelerated or rebounding spread of the virus.[17][18] The economic impact of the protests exacerbated the 2020 coronavirus recession by sharply curtailing consumer confidence, straining local businesses, and overwhelming public infrastructure with large-scale property damage.[19][20][21] The George Floyd protests have led to the passage of numerous laws and public directives, on both state and federal levels, to combat police misconduct, systemic racial bias, and police brutality in the United States.[22][23]

Background

History of police brutality in the United States

Frequent cases of police brutality and fatal use of force by law enforcement officers[24] in the United States, particularly against African Americans, have long led the civil rights movement and various other activists to protest against the lack of police accountability in incidents involving the use of excessive force. The Watts riots in 1965 were a response to police brutality during the civil rights movement. Confrontations with police during the 1965 riots resulted in the deaths of 34 people, most of whom were African-Americans.[25] The 1992 Los Angeles riots were a response to the acquittal of the police officers responsible for excessive force used on Rodney King.

In recent times, these incidents have included the 2014 shooting of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri; the death of Freddie Gray in Baltimore in 2015; and the 2014 death of Eric Garner in New York City, who, like George Floyd, repeatedly said "I can't breathe" in his final moments.[26] Several of these nationally publicized incidents occurred in Minnesota, including the 2015 shooting of Jamar Clark in Minneapolis, the 2016 shooting of Philando Castile in Falcon Heights, a suburb of neighboring Saint Paul,[27] and the 2017 shooting of Justine Damond, also in Minneapolis. In March 2020, the Kentucky shooting of Breonna Taylor by police at her own apartment was also widely publicized.[28] In 2016, Tony Timpa was killed by Dallas police officers in the same way as George Floyd.[29]

Impact of the COVID-19 pandemic

Measures taken against the growing COVID-19 pandemic, including closure of non-essential businesses[30] and implementation of a stay-at-home order,[31] had significant economic and social impact on many Americans as millions lost their jobs and were made more economically vulnerable.[32] Keith Ellison, Attorney General of Minnesota, said he was of the opinion that people "have been cooped up for two months, and so now they're in a different space and a different place. They're restless. Some of them have been unemployed, some of them don't have rent money, and they're angry, they're frustrated."[33]

Killing of George Floyd

Memorial at the site of Floyd's death

On May 25, 2020, at 8:08 p.m. CDT,[34] Minneapolis Police Department (MPD) officers responded to a 9-1-1 call regarding a "forgery in progress" on Chicago Avenue South in Powderhorn, Minneapolis. MPD Officers Thomas K. Lane and J. Alexander Kueng arrived with their body cameras turned on. A store employee told officers that the man was in a nearby car. Officers approached the car and ordered George Floyd, a 46-year-old African American man, who according to police "appeared to be under the influence," to exit the vehicle, at which point he "physically resisted." According to the MPD, officers "were able to get the suspect into handcuffs and noted he appeared to be suffering medical distress. Officers called for an ambulance." Once Floyd was handcuffed, he and Officer Lane walked to the sidewalk. Floyd sat on the ground at Officer Lane's direction. In a short conversation officer asked Floyd for his name and identification, explaining that he was arrested for passing counterfeit currency and asking if he was "on anything." Officers Kueng and Lane attempted to help Floyd to their squad car, but at 8:14 p.m. Floyd stiffened up and fell to the ground. Soon, MPD Officers Derek Chauvin and Tou Thao arrived in a separate squad car. The officers made several more failed attempts to get Floyd into the squad car.[35]

Floyd, who was still handcuffed, went to the ground face down. Officer Kueng held Floyd's back and Lane held his legs. Chauvin placed his left knee in the area of Floyd's head and neck. A Facebook Live livestream recorded by a bystander showed Officer Derek Chauvin kneeling on Floyd's neck.[36][37] Floyd repeatedly tells Chauvin "Please" and "I can't breathe," while a bystander is heard telling the police officer, "You got him down. Let him breathe."[38] After some time, a bystander points out that Floyd was bleeding from his nose while another bystander tells the police that Floyd is "not even resisting arrest right now," to which the police tell the bystanders that Floyd was "talking, he's fine." A bystander replies saying Floyd "ain't fine." A bystander then protests that the police were preventing Floyd from breathing, urging them to "get him off the ground ... You could have put him in the car by now. He's not resisting arrest or nothing."[37] Floyd then goes silent and motionless. Chauvin does not remove his knee until an ambulance arrives. Emergency medical services put Floyd on a stretcher. Not only had Chauvin knelt on Floyd's neck for about seven minutes (including four minutes after Floyd stopped moving) but another video showed an additional two officers had also knelt on Floyd while another officer watched.[39][40]

Medics were unable to detect a pulse, and Floyd was pronounced dead at the hospital.[41] An autopsy of Floyd was conducted on May 26, and the next day, the preliminary report by the Hennepin County Medical Examiner's Office was published, stating "no physical findings that support a diagnosis of traumatic asphyxia or strangulation." Floyd's underlying health conditions included coronary artery disease and hypertensive heart disease. The initial report said that "[t]he combined effects of Mr. Floyd being restrained by the police, his underlying health conditions and any potential intoxicants in his system likely contributed to his death."[42] The medical examiner further said Floyd was "high on fentanyl and had recently used methamphetamine at the time of his death."[43] However, on June 1, a private autopsy commissioned by the family of Floyd ruled the death a homicide and found that Floyd had died due to asphyxiation from sustained pressure, which conflicts with the original autopsy report done earlier that week.[44] Shortly after, the official post-mortem declared Floyd's death a homicide.[45] Video footage of the incident generated global attention and raised questions about the appropriate use of force by law enforcement.

Protests

Map of protests around the world with over 100 participants (click for a dynamic version of the map)

Nationwide protests

The day following Floyd's death, groups of protesters began to form in Minneapolis. The day after, protesters and police began to clash on the streets. Peaceful protests also began to form in other cities across the United States.[46]

On May 28, tensions continued to increase in Minneapolis, while more cities began to see related demonstrations.[46] By May 31, protests had turned violent in various cities. By early June, protests had been organized in all 50 U.S states as well as territories, at least 200 cities imposed curfews by June 3, while at least 27 states and Washington, D.C, activated over 74,000 National Guard personnel due to the mass unrest.[47][48]

International protests

By June 6, protests over Floyd's death had spread worldwide. Protests in Europe, Australia, Africa, and elsewhere have rallied against what they perceived as racial discrimination and police brutality, with some protests aimed at United States embassies.[49]

Activation of state and federal forces

States that activated the National Guard in response to the protests as of June 3.
Minnesota National Guard standing guard behind police at the state capitol building in St. Paul, May 31

State

By June 2, governors in 24 states and Washington, D.C. had called in the National Guard as a measure to quell the protests and riots, with over 17,000 National Guard troops being activated.[50][51] Most state police officers across the United States were present in dozens of cities to back up local efforts to put an end to rioting.[citation needed]

Federal

As of June 5, 2,950 federal law enforcement personnel from a dozen agencies, including the Secret Service, Capital Police, Park Police, Customs and Border Protection, FBI's Hostage Rescue Team, Bureau of Prisons' Special Operations Response Team, DEA's Special Response Team, ATF, and Marshals Service's Special Operations Group, have been dispatched to assist local authorities, with most of them being garrisoned in D.C.[52][53][54][55] The DEA's legal authority was specifically expanded by the Department of Justice beyond usual limits to include surveillance of protestors and the ability to arrest for non-drug related offenses.[56] In response, Representatives Jerry Nadler and Karen Bass of the House Judiciary Committee denounced the move and requested a formal briefing from DEA Acting Administrator Timothy Shea.[57]

United States President Donald Trump threatened to deploy the U.S. military in response to the unrest. In an address on June 3 he said, "If a city or state refuses to take the actions necessary to defend the life and property of their residents, then I will deploy the United States military and quickly solve the problem for them."[58] This would require invoking the Insurrection Act of 1807,[58] last used to quell the 1992 Los Angeles riots on May 1, 1992 by Executive Order 12804. Also on June 1, Arkansas senator Tom Cotton pushed for the U.S. Army's 101st Airborne Division to be deployed to quell the unrest, calling protestors "Antifa terrorists."[59] The same day, Cotton tweeted "No quarter for insurrectionists, anarchists, rioters, and looters."[60] Many legal experts said this would violate the Department of Defense Law of War Manual, the ICRC, and Additional Protocol II to the Geneva Conventions.[60] Cotton later said he was using "no quarter" in a colloquial sense, but Mark Zaid and Tom Nichols responded that the legal definition of the term is a war crime.[60] Massachusetts Representative Seth Moulton said that federal troops should "lay down [their] arms" if deployed in the United States.[61]

Violence and controversies

Deaths

As of June 8, 2020, at least 22 people have died during the protests, of which 19 were due to gunshot wounds:[62][63][64][65]

May 27

  • In Minneapolis, Calvin Horton Jr. died after being fatally shot during a protest. A local shop owner was arrested, and police sources claimed that Horton was involved in looting of his store.[66]

May 29

  • In Detroit, a 21-year-old man was killed when his car was fired upon in Downtown Detroit.[64][67] Although police believed the incident had no connection to the protests,[68] he was nevertheless fatally shot in the middle of the demonstrations against police brutality.[64]

May 30

  • In Oakland, California, amid unrest, a Federal Protective Service officer, David Patrick Underwood, was fatally shot outside a federal courthouse in a drive-by attack that also wounded another guard.[69] At the time of the shooting, Underwood was providing security at the courthouse during a protest.[64] The Department of Homeland Security has labeled the shooting an act of domestic terrorism. The FBI is investigating but had not yet identified a motive or a suspect as of May 31.[70] Although initially the police were not sure that the shooting was connected to the protests, on June 2, investigators said they believed the attackers were targeting uniformed officers, but were not clear who carried out the attack.[71]
  • In St. Louis, Missouri, 29-year-old protester Barry Perkins died after being run over by a FedEx truck that was fleeing from looters.[72][73]
  • In Omaha, Nebraska, 22-year-old protester James Scurlock was fatally shot outside of a bar.[74] The shooter was the owner of the bar, who had a scuffle with a group of protesters and ended up firing several shots, one of which struck Scurlock in the clavicle, killing him.[74] Two days later, it was announced by authorities that there will be no charges for the bar's owner and that he had opened fire in self-defense.[75]
  • In Kettering, Ohio, 22-year-old Sarah Grossman, a recent graduate of Ohio State University, died in hospital from acute respiratory issues after she was in a group sprayed with tear gas at a demonstration in Columbus, Ohio.[76] An autopsy is pending.[77]

May 31

  • In Indianapolis, two people were fatally shot in the vicinity of protests or riots downtown.[64][78] One of them was 18-year-old African-American man Dorian Murell, killed around 2:30am on June 1; a 29-year-old white man turned himself in to the police, maintaining Murell had pushed him down, and was subsequently charged with murder on June 2.[79][80] The other was 38-year-old Chris Beaty, a local business owner, who was shot shortly before midnight May 31.[79]
  • In Kansas City, Missouri, 50-year-old Marvin Francois was shot and killed by robbers while picking up one of his sons from a protest.[81]
  • In Chicago, 32-years-old John Tiggs was fatally struck in the abdomen by shots fired inside a Metro by T-Mobile store while walking into the building to pay his bill during lootings in the city's South Side.[82]

June 1

  • In Louisville, local restaurateur David McAtee was killed as a Louisville Metro Police and Kentucky National Guard curfew patrol fired at him.[83] Authorities allege that the patrol returned gunfire after McAtee fired at them.[83] However, McAtee's alleged gunshot occurred after the patrol appeared to fire a pepper ball into McAtee's restaurant, nearly striking his niece in the head.[83] According to the victim's sister, the gathering was not a protest but rather a regularly scheduled social gathering at which McAtee served food from his barbecue restaurant.[84] An investigation of the killing is ongoing.[85][86] LMPD Chief Steve Conrad was fired later that day, as officers and troops involved in the shooting did not wear or failed to activate body cameras.[87] Louisville Mayor Greg Fischer admitted that the city had shown an "inability to apply [curfew] evenly."[83]
  • In Davenport, Iowa, two people were fatally shot on a night with significant rioting.[88] One of the victims was 22-year-old Italia Marie Kelly in an apparent random shooting as she was leaving a demonstration.[88]
  • In Cicero, Illinois, two men were fatally shot in separate incidents following an "afternoon of unrest"; this was confirmed by Cicero Police.[89] Town spokesman Ray Hanania said the shots were fired by "outside agitators."[90] The two men were both described as bystanders and were identified as 28-year-old Jose Gutierrez and 27-year-old Victor Cazares Jr.[91][92]
  • In Las Vegas, police shot and killed Jorge Gomez. Gomez was walking among protesters as a demonstration was coming to an end and reportedly reached for his firearm when he was shot.[93] In a separate incident in Las Vegas, police officer Shay Mikalonis was hospitalized in critical condition with a head wound after being shot by Edgar Samaniego while Mikalonis and other offers were arresting protesters near Circus Circus Hotel and Casino.[94][95]

June 2

  • In Philadelphia, a man was fatally shot by the owner of the gun shop Firing Line Inc., while trying to break into the store in the south section of the city.[96] Mayor Jim Kenney said he was "deeply troubled" by the killing and that he did not condone vigilantism.[97]
  • In Philadelphia, during the fourth day of unrest, a 24-year-old man was severely injured after attempting to use an explosive device to destroy an ATM machine. He was rushed to a local hospital before being pronounced dead.[98]
  • In St. Louis, 77-year-old retired police captain David Dorn was shot and killed by looters at a pawn shop.[99] The shooting was reportedly streamed on Facebook live.[78]
  • In Vallejo, California, Sean Monterrosa, a 22-year-old man, was shot and killed by police while on his knees. Monterrosa lifted his hands, which revealed a 15-inch hammer tucked in his pocket that was mistaken for a handgun. A police officer in a vehicle then fired on him five times through the windshield.[100] Monterrosa later died at a local hospital. The police were responding to a call over alleged looting at a Walgreens, according to police chief Shawny Williams. The day after his death police revealed that "there had been an 'officer-involved shooting'" at a press conference, yet declined to offer further details, including the name of the officer involved. The event reportedly sparked intense outrage in the Bay Area, particularly in Vallejo, which was identified as having a long history of police violence, excessive force complaints, and high-profile killings like the shooting of Willie McCoy.[101]

June 3

  • In Bakersfield, California, Robert Forbes, a 50-year-old man was killed after being struck by a vehicle while marching between California Avenue and Oak Street.[102] The incident was caught on video and distributed widely on social media.[102] Forbes was transported to Kern Medical Center, where he remained in critical condition for three days before dying.[102] Police deny that Forbes was hit intentionally, while others dispute this claim.[102] The police did not restrain the driver with handcuffs and allowed him to smoke a cigarette, which caused indignation on social media.[102] A candlelight vigil was held for Forbes on June 6.[103]

June 6

  • In Oakland, California, 23-year-old Erik Salgado was shot dead by California Highway Patrol officers during a vehicle pursuit that ended less than a block from his mother’s house. Salgado’s girlfriend, a passenger in the vehicle, was wounded. According to a police source, investigators believed that Salgado's Dodge Challenger was one of 72 cars that were recently stolen from a Dodge dealership in San Leandro, California when looting broke out across the Bay Area.[104]

Violence by police

Flushing the eyes of a protestor in Minneapolis with milk after exposure to tear gas

There have been numerous reports and videos of aggressive police actions using physical force as well as "batons, tear gas, pepper spray and rubber bullets on protesters, bystanders and journalists, often without warning or seemingly unprovoked."[105] These incidents have provoked "growing concern that aggressive law enforcement tactics intended to impose order were instead inflaming tensions."[105] Police responded that such tactics are necessary to prevent vandalism and arson, and that police officers themselves have been assaulted with thrown rocks and water bottles.[105] In response to the violence, Amnesty International issued a press release calling for the police to end excessive militarized responses to the protests.[106][107] Police have been found "overwhelmingly responsible for attacking journalists."[108]

Several African American politicians, including State Senator Zellnor Myrie, U.S. Rep. Joyce Beatty, Columbus City Council President Shannon Hardin and Franklin County Commissioner Kevin Boyce, have been pepper sprayed by the police.[109][110][111][112] Police have attacked medical workers and destroyed medical equipment.[113][114] A Washington, D.C. man was praised worldwide for sheltering, in his home, over 70 protesters fleeing arrest for protesting peacefully in front of the White House on June 1, 2020.[115]

Lawyer T. Greg Doucette and mathematician Jason Miller compiled a list of videos posted on Twitter showing police brutality, which as of June 6 contains 428 videos.[116][117][118]

May 30

External videos
video icon Two NYPD vehicles driving into a crowd of protesters, @pgarapon on Twitter[119]
video icon Grand Rapids police pepper spraying a protester and then firing a tear gas canister at their head on YouTube
Miami protesters react to police firing chemical irritants on May 30
Arrests in New York City, May 30
Miami protesters react to police firing chemical irritants on May 30 (top); Arrests in New York City, May 30

Two New York City Police Department (NYPD) vehicles were recorded ramming into protesters surrounding and throwing objects at the vehicles;[120] New York City mayor Bill de Blasio defended the officers' actions and an investigation into the event was initiated.[121]

On May 29, an NYPD office shoved a woman to the ground at a protest in Brooklyn.[122] The officer was recorded throwing down the female protester with both hands while allegedly calling her a "stupid fucking bitch"; the protester was hospitalized after the assault and said she suffered a seizure.[123] Separately, on May 30, an NYPD officer approached a protester, ripped off the protester's mask, and pepper-sprayed the protester in the face.[122] On June 5, the NYPD said that its Internal Affairs Bureau had finished an investigation, suspended both officers without pay, and referred them to an internal disciplinary process.[122]

On May 30, a Salt Lake City police officer was filmed pushing an unarmed, 67-year-old man walking with a cane to the ground. After the video was widely circulated, the officer was removed from patrol duties pending an internal affairs investigation, and the chief of police also asked the Civilian Review Board to conduct a review.[124]

On May 30, multiple incidents of police violence occurred during protests.[125] One video was posted online showing police officers in Minnesota ordering residents on their porches to go inside and after a few demands, they fired paint rounds at the residents after shouting "Light 'em up!"[126]

In Atlanta, two police officers broke the windows of a vehicle, pulled a woman out of the car and tased a man. The two victims were identified as Taniyah Pilgrim and Messiah Young.[127] The two police officers were fired after a video showed them using "excessive force."[128] Arrest warrants were issued for four other officers involved.[129] One of officers explained in a police report that the actions were taken under the belief that either Pilgrim or Young were armed.[129] Young's attorney Mawuli Davis Pilgrim called this explanation as an "attempt to assassinate the character of these young people."[127] Pilgrim described it as "the worst experience of my life," and Young was seen wearing a cast on his arm at a press conference on Tuesday.[129] On June 3 the two officers were charged alongside four other officers involved in the violence, for using excessive force during an arrest.[129]

A woman participating in a protest in La Mesa, California was shot by the police with a less-lethal bean-bag round between her eyes.[130] At a protest in Grand Rapids, Michigan, a viral video showed Grand Rapids Police pepper spraying a protester and then immediately firing a tear gas canister into their head.[131][132][133] The Grand Rapids Police Department announced on June 2 that they would conduct an internal investigation on the incident.[131]

In Seattle, an officer placed his knee on the back of the neck of a looting suspect; after onlookers shouted for him to remove his knee from the man's neck his partner pulled it off.[105] The Seattle Office of Police Accountability received about 12,000 individual complaints regarding the police department's conduct during that weekend, including complaints about "[p]epper spraying a young girl," "[p]unching a person on the ground who was being arrested," "[p]lacing a knee on the neck area of two people who had been arrested," "[f]ailing to record law enforcement activity on body-worn video," and "[breaking] windows of a Target store."[134]

In Erie, Pennsylvania, a seated 21-year old protester was filmed being kicked to the ground by an officer.[135]

An American of Indian origin is being complimented worldwide for sheltering over 70 protesters fleeing arrest for protesting peacefully in front of the White House in his House in Washington DC on 1 June 2020.[136]

May 31

On May 31, 20-year-old African American Texas State University student Justin Howell was shot in the head with a less lethal bean bag round by an APD officer while protesting outside the police headquarters in Austin, Texas. Chief of Police Brian Manley stated that they were aiming at another protester and shot Howell by mistake. Fellow protesters were instructed by police to carry the injured Howell toward them for medical aid, however, those protesters were then also fired upon by police. Howell was left in critical condition, with a fractured skull and brain damage.[137][138]

Authorities in Washington D.C. dispersing protesters with tear gas ahead of President Donald Trump's visit to St. John's Episcopal Church, June 1 (in Spanish)

In Minneapolis, police cruisers were filmed spraying a chemical on crowds of protesters as they drove by.[139]

June 1

Trump visited the historic St. John's Episcopal Church, whose basement had been damaged by fire, and posed for pictures in front of it holding up a Bible. To clear the route so that he could walk there, police and national guardsmen had used tear gas, rubber bullets, and flash grenades to clear a crowd of peaceful protesters from Lafayette Square, resulting in significant news coverage and denunciation by the bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington.[140][141][142]

June 2

On June 2, 22-year-old Latino protester Sean Monterrosa was shot and killed with five bullets by a police officer. Monterrosa was on his knees with his hands up. When he lifted his hands, a 15-inch (38 cm) hammer tucked in his pocket was revealed, which was allegedly mistaken for a handgun.[100]

In Los Angeles, a wheelchair-bound man was shot in the face with a rubber projectile; pictures of the man's bloody face were widely shared.[143]

In Richmond Virginia, a group of officers were filmed as one of them appeared to repeatedly spit at a woman in handcuffs.[144]

June 4

On, June 4, police shot tear gas at an unarmed couple waiting at a traffic stop in Denver. When the man came out of the vehicle to confront the officers because his pregnant wife was in the vehicle, the officers ordered him to move along. He refused and the officers opened fire on him and the vehicle with pepper balls.[145]

External videos
video icon Buffalo police officers shove 75-year-old man to the ground, Mike Desmond for WBFO on Twitter
video icon San Diego woman arrested and bystanders threatened

In Buffalo, a 75-year-old man with a cane was left bleeding from the head after approaching police officers and being shoved to the ground by the police. A video of the encounter shows an officer leaning down to examine him, but another officer then pulls the first officer away. Several other officers are seen walking by the man, motionless on the ground, without checking on him.[146] Initially, a police press statement claimed that the man "tripped and fell" which led to further criticism. As of Thursday, the victim, identified as Martin Gugino, is in a serious condition. Two of the officers were suspended, as they yelled "move!” and “push him back!" against the victim, before they hit him.[147] On June 5, 57 officers of the Buffalo Police Department resigned from the department's Emergency Response Team, either in solidarity with the two officers who were suspended for this event, or because the union was no longer willing to provide legal support for the officers.[148][149] The two officers involved were charged with second-degree assault.[150]

After a June 4 civil rights protest, a woman in downtown San Diego was forcibly dragged into an unmarked car by unidentified law enforcement officers. One of the officers could be heard saying to the protestors, "You follow us, you will get shot. Do you understand me?" San Diego police department later confirmed the individuals were law enforcement officers and claimed the woman had hit police with her protest sign.[151]

Violence by protestors

Against police

A building burning in Minneapolis on May 29
Vehicles are seen on fire during a riot in Washington, D.C., May 30
A building burning in Minneapolis on May 29 (top); Vehicles are seen on fire during a riot in Washington, D.C., May 30
May 29

In Washington, DC several United States Secret Service agents suffered broken bones due to rocks and bottles of urine and alcohol thrown at them by rioters.[152][153]

May 30

In Chicago, 20 officers were hospitalized while trying to contain riots, many with broken bones.[154][155][156]

May 31

Albany, New York, protests turned violent and rioters turned "commercial grade fireworks" on police officers. Nine were arrested for charges ranging from second-degree riot and second-degree attempted assault to unlawful assembly. Four of the arrested were from outside of Albany.[157][undue weight? ]

June 1

In Lynchburg, Virginia, two Lynchburg officers were hospitalized after being assaulted by a crowd of rioters Monday evening.[158]

In Davenport, Iowa, at around 3:00 a.m., three Davenport police officers were ambushed by gunfire while on patrol. Two of the officers were injured while the third returned fire. Two civilians in Davenport were shot to death during the same riot in separate shootings.[159]

June 2

In St. Louis, four police officers were shot during violent protests just after midnight on Tuesday, June 2.[160][161] In Winchester, Nevada, around 2:00 AM local time, police officer Shay Mikalonis was shot in the head while attempting to disperse rioters on the Las Vegas Strip.[162] The officer remains in critical condition. Edgar Samaniego, a 20-year-old male, was taken into custody.[163]

June 3

In Brooklyn, New York, two New York Police Department officers were shot and one was stabbed in the neck while guarding against looting during a protest.[164]

Against non-police

Rioters break windows in businesses in Saint Paul, Minnesota, May 28
Rioters burning a police car in Pittsburgh on May 30
Rioters break windows in businesses in Saint Paul, Minnesota, May 28 (top); Rioters burning a police car in Pittsburgh on May 30

On the night of May 30, a video posted online showed a man being beaten up by a group of protesters in Dallas. According to Fox Business, the man appeared to defend a store and was reportedly armed with a machete and has skirmished with rioters, who were throwing rocks at him.[165] The man was injured, but was able to sit up and was treated at the scene before being taken away in an ambulance, where he was considered to be in a stable condition.[166] Trump called the act of violence "terrible" and demanded arrests and "long term jail sentences" for protesters.[166] According to protesters, they acted in self-defense, and the video was edited to give "false impression" about protests.[167] According to BlackSportsOnline.com, Charles Shoultz later claimed to be the man who was attacked by the crowd of protesters, blaming himself for instigating the fight, explaining that he was merely "trying to protect the bar he likes to drink at."[168][169] Dallas Police said that the incident is part of an ongoing investigation.

On June 1, in Bethesda, teens were hanging racial justice posters when they were accosted by a bicyclist, later identified as Anthony Brennan III by the Maryland-National Capital Park Police.[170][171] In footage of the encounter, the man is seen to grapple with a girl over her posters and to use his bicycle as a weapon to ram the person filming the encounter. Park Police had requested the help of the public in identifying the unknown assailant. The suspect was arrested and charged with three counts of second-degree assault.[172][173]

Violence against journalists

U.S. Press Freedom Tracker recorded at least 49 arrests, 192 assaults (160 by police), and 42 incidents in which equipment was damaged during the protests.[174][175][176] In comparison, the U.S. Press Freedom Tracker documented between 100 and 150 such incidents per year for the past three years.[177] Many journalists described being intentionally targeted by police even after they identified themselves as press.[178] One journalism professor suggested that the unusual aggressiveness toward journalists might relate to Trump's repeated public attacks on the press as "enemies of the people"; in a May 31 tweet, Trump blamed the "lamestream media" for the protests and said that journalists are "truly bad people with a sick agenda."[178]

From police

External videos
video icon CNN reporter Omar Jimenez and his filming crew arrested by police during a live television report, CNN
video icon Officer fires pepper bullets at WAVE reporter in Louisville, MSNBC
video icon Australian 7News reporter attacked by police on live television in Washington DC, 7 News

Journalists at several protests were injured and arrested by police while trying to cover the story, being shot by rubber bullets, or sprayed by tear gas.[179][180] As of May 31, Bellingcat had identified and documented at least 50 separate incidents where journalists were attacked by law enforcement officials during the protests.[181] According to Bellingcat, "law enforcement across multiple cities, but especially in Minneapolis, are knowingly and deliberately targeting journalists with less lethal munitions, arrests and other forms of violence."[181]

May 28

On the evening of May 28, officers fired pepper bullets at several employees of The Denver Post who were reporting on protests in Denver, Colorado. A photographer was struck twice by pepper bullets, sustaining injuries on his arm. The photographer believed it was not accidental, saying, "If it was one shot, I can say it was an accident. I'm very sure it was the same guy twice. I'm very sure he pointed at me." Another journalist said an officer shot at least one pepper bullet at her feet.[182]

May 29

Omar Jiménez, a black Latino CNN reporter, and his filming crew were arrested while giving a live television report on May 29 in Minneapolis by the Minnesota State Patrol, and then released about an hour later.[183] After the incident took place, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz said that he deeply apologizes for what happened and would work to have the crew released, calling the event "unacceptable" and adding that there was "absolutely no reason something like this should happen."[183][184]

CNN called the arrests a "clear violation of their First Amendment rights" in a tweet posted the same day.[184] After the incident the Minnesota State Patrol tweeted that "In the course of clearing the streets and restoring order at Lake Street and Snelling Avenue, four people were arrested by State Patrol troopers, including three members of a CNN crew. The three were released once they were confirmed to be members of the media," however the CNN crew had already informed the troopers that they were members of the media before and during the arrest and carried the relevant paperwork and identification with them.[185][186] The Minneapolis Police Department falsely stated both while performing the arrest and via Twitter that his crew had not adequately responded when asked what they were doing.[187]

Linda Tirado, a freelance photo journalist, was hit in the eye with a rubber bullet or a pellet by the police in Minneapolis, and following surgery was left permanently blind in that eye.[188][189] Also on May 29 in Louisville, Kentucky, an officer fired pepper bullets at a reporter from NBC affiliate WAVE who was reporting live on air for her station. The station manager issued a statement strongly condemning the incident, saying there was "no justification for police to wantonly open fire."[190] A 29-year-old mother of two was peacefully protesting in Sacramento when police shot her in the right eye with a rubber projectile; she was permanently blinded in one eye.[191]

May 30

On May 30, members of a Reuters crew were fired on with rubber bullets in Minneapolis shortly after a curfew they were reporting on began. One reporter was hit in the arm and neck while another was hit in the face, which deflected off his gas mask.[192] Also in Minneapolis, France 2's U.S. correspondent Agnès Varamian said her photojournalist, Fabien Fougère, was hurt by non-lethal bullets as she shouted "press" to the police.[193] Expressen's U.S. correspondent Nina Svanberg was also hit in the leg with rubber bullets.[194] Meanwhile Deutsche Welle journalist Stefan Simons and his team were shot at by police in Minneapolis.[195] In another incident that day, police also threatened to arrest Simons.[195]

May 31

Adolfo Guzman-Lopez, a reporter for Los Angeles NPR/PRI affiliate KPCC was hit in the throat with a rubber bullet, on May 31.[196][197] Ali Velshi and his MSNBC crew were hit with rubber bullets live on air in Minneapolis.[198] CBC News correspondent Susan Ormiston was also hit by rubber bullets during live coverage there. Michael George from the same network also reported his sound engineer being hit by a rubber bullet in the same city.[198] Sarah Belle, an independent journalist, was hit by a rubber bullet in Oakland.[198]

Los Angeles Times reporter Molly Hennessy-Fiske reported reporters and camera crews being at the receiving end of tear gas by Minnesota State Patrol, while the same happened to an KABC-TV news crew in Santa Monica.[198] Several Detroit Free Press journalists were pepper sprayed by the city's police, as was KSTP reporter Ryan Raiche along other journalists.[198] Michael Adams from Vice News also reported that happening to him and other journalists present.[198] HuffPost journalist Christopher Mathias was arrested in Brooklyn, as were independent journalist Simon Moya-Smith in Minneapolis, and CNN's Keith Boykin in New York.[198]

A BBC cameraman, Peter Murtaugh, was purposely attacked by police on May 31 outside the White House. Murtaugh filmed a line of police officers charging without warning, whereby a shield-wielding officer tackled Murtaugh to the ground. A fellow BBC journalist stated that the attack had occurred before a curfew was imposed.[199][200]

In Minneapolis, for the second day in a row, police shot at Deutsche Welle journalist Stefan Simons and his crew.[195]

June 1

During a live television broadcast for the Seven Network covering protests near the White House on June 1, Australian journalist Amelia Brace and cameraman Tim Myers were assaulted by a charging United States Park Police line as the area was cleared for Trump to visit St. John's Church.[201][202] Brace was clubbed with a police baton while Myers was hit in the chest by a riot shield and then punched.[203] Brace said she and Myers were also shot by rubber bullets.[202] Brace said at the time, "You heard us yelling there that we were media but they don't care, they are being indiscriminate at the moment."[202] In response, the Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison announced Australia would launch an investigation into the incident.[204][205] White House Press Secretary Kayleigh McEnany defended the actions of the police and said they had "a right to defend themselves."[206] Park Police acting Chief Gregory Monahan announced that two officers involved had been assigned to administrative duties while an investigation took place.[206]

June 2

On June 2, The Manhattan District Attorney's Office announced that they would be investigating the alleged assault of a Wall Street Journal reporter, that took place on May 31, by members of the New York Police Department.[207]

From protesters

In Atlanta, the CNN Center, which houses the downtown Atlanta police precinct,[208] was attacked and damaged by protesters on May 29.[209][193] In the District of Columbia on May 30, a Fox News crew was attacked outside the White House by a group of protesters while reporting on the scene.[210] The crew was chased for several hundred meters until the police intervened.[193]

Pittsburgh Public Safety said that three local journalists were injured on May 30 when protesters "stomped and kicked" them and destroyed their camera.[211] One said he was rescued by other protesters,[212] reportedly including David Morehouse.[213] He and another were transported to a hospital.[214]

Criminal activity

In Philadelphia a bike officer was run over by a group of looters in a car. He suffered broken bones and is recovering in Jefferson Hospital.[215][216][217]

In Oakland, California, two Federal Protective Service officers were shot while responding to protests at the Ronald V. Dellums Federal Building. Officer David Patrick Underwood died from the gunfire.[218][219]

In Atlanta, around 10:30 p.m., APD officer Maximilian Brewer was struck by an ATV.[220] He was taken to the intensive care unit at Grady Hospital. The driver was identified as 42-year-old Avery Goggans.[220] Three Denver, CO police officers were hospitalized after being struck by a vehicle during late night protests on May 30. Driver Anthony Knapp was taken into custody in relation to the incident.[221]

In Buffalo, New York, a car rammed a police line near where protesters had gathered. Two officers were seriously injured and subsequently hospitalized, with three people being arrested.[222] 30-year-old Deyanna Davis was arrested.[223] In St. Louis, a Missouri State Trooper responding to a riot was struck by a bullet that lodged in his helmet's face-shield. The Missouri State Highway Patrol (MSHP) shared images of a bullet hole in the shield Tuesday, saying the trooper “narrowly averted serious injury.”[224]

In St. Louis, around 2:30 a.m., retired police Captain David Dorn, 77, was murdered by a looter outside a pawn shop.[225][226][227] In New York City in the early hours of June 2, two NYPD officers were struck in two separate hit-and-run incidents while responding to looting.[228][229][230]

Reports of extremist activities

Georgia National Guard forming a shield wall in Atlanta, June 1
Georgia National Guard in Atlanta, June 1
Georgia National Guard form a shield wall in Atlanta's Centennial Olympic Park while enforcing curfew on June 1 (top); A guardsman directs his soldiers during protests in Atlanta, June 1 (bottom). The National Guard were deployed in multiple states during the height of the unrest.

There have been accusations of various extremist groups using the cover of the protests to foment general unrest in the United States. According to CNN, "although interference in this way may be happening, federal and local officials have yet to provide evidence to the public."[231] For instance, there are claims that groups are placing bricks and other materials nearby areas of unrest to escalate protester action; it has also been suggested that these were left by the police.[232]

Far-left and anarchist involvement

President Trump, FBI Director Christopher Wray,[233] New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio,[234] U.S. Attorney General William Barr, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms,[235] Seattle Police Guild President Mike Solan,[236] and Huntsville Police Chief Mark McMurray[237] blamed "anarchists" and "far-left extremist" groups, like Antifa, for inciting and organizing violent riots.[238][239][240] According to a Justice Department spokesperson, Barr came to this conclusion after being provided with information from state and local law enforcement agencies.[241] On May 31, Trump announced that he planned to designate Antifa as a terrorist organization. Various government and non-government officials have stated that designating domestic terrorist groups is prohibited by the First Amendment and federal law restricting the designation of terrorist organizations to foreign entities due to concerns pertaining to the First Amendment's speech and assembly rights.[242]

On June 4, FBI Director Christopher A. Wray stated that "anarchists like Antifa" are "exploiting this situation to pursue violent, extremist agendas."[243][244] During a press conference, Pittsburgh Police Chief Scott Schubert said he's "willing to bet his check" that "there's a lot of people who are anarchists" who cause "damage and injury." He added, "It's just a damn shame that they took advantage of the situation, for ... something [that] happened in another state where somebody died who shouldn't have died, and they hijacked that message for their own."[245] In Pittsburgh, a man was arrested for allegedly starting riots over the weekend that ended in violence. The police chief said that "'anarchists' likely hijacked peaceful protests downtown."[246] Deputy Commissioner for Intelligence and Counterterrorism of the NYPD John Miller said there is a high level of confidence within the department that unnamed "anarchist groups" had planned to commit vandalism and violence in advance.[247] On June 3, the Washington Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation cited having "no intelligence indicating Antifa involvement/presence" in violent protests on May 31 in DC.[248]

Far-right and white supremacist involvement

On May 29, Minnesota Governor Tim Walz noted then-unconfirmed reports of white supremacists as well as drug cartels taking advantage of the protests.[249] Although reports that all or most of the individuals arrested were not from Minnesota turned out to be false, the presence of white supremacist groups aiming to exploit the protests to incite violence was confirmed the following day by Department of Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington.[250]

On May 30, Minnesota officials including Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, Governor Tim Walz, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, and St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter stated they believed that white nationalists were using the protests as cover for inciting violence,[251] and that Minnesota officials were monitoring the ongoing far-right online effort to incite violence.[252] On the other hand, Howard Graves, an analyst at the SPLC stated on May 31 that he did not see clear evidence of "white supremacists or militiamen" heading out to "burn and loot."[253] The University of St. Thomas' Lisa Waldner, an analyst of the American white supremacist and anarchist movements, has noted that the goal of many of the individuals involved in the destruction of Minneapolis was to create chaos so as to pursue their own agendas.[254] White nationalist Facebook groups reportedly began urging members to "get their loot on."[251] In at least 20 cities across the country as of May 31, members of hate groups and far-right organizations filmed themselves at the demonstrations.[253]

Vice and New York University's Reiss Center[252] reported that far-right accelerationists, who aim to exacerbate tensions and speed up the supposed coming of a "civil war," have urged followers online to use the protests as an occasion to carry out violence; an eco-fascist Telegram channel with almost 2500 subscribers posted on the 28th that "a riot would be the perfect place to commit a murder."[255] Analysis by Vice and the New York Times[253] also noted the proliferation of chatter on 4chan hailing the violence as the beginning of a "race war." Such tactics match a long running history of accelerationists exploiting moments of political and/or civil unrest[255] to, in the words of historian Stuart Wexler, "produce racial polarization and eventual retaliation" which would then swell the ranks of whites supporting white supremacist violence, ultimately leading to a race war that they hope will "purify" America through ethnic cleansing.[256] Analogous tactics were used by their ideological forebears in the 1960s,[256] and accelerationist ideas are proliferated on web forums and have inspired various white supremacist acts of violence, being featured also in the manifesto of the perpetrator of the Christchurch massacre.[252][257]

The presence of Boogaloo Bois, an armed anti-government far-right extremist movement that seeks a Second American Civil War, noticeable for their Hawaiian shirts, have also been reported at the protests.[255] Administrators of the Facebook page Big Igloo Bois, a splinter of the Boogaloo movement, called for members to attend the protests with one administrator stating, "come in peace, prepare for there to be violence."[258] While some of the Boogaloo Bois have espoused white supremacist views, other groups, such as the Big Igloo Bois, have aimed to make common cause with the Black Lives Matter movement due to their shared mistrust of the police.[259][252]

According to a Twitter spokesperson, an account pretending to belong to a national “antifa” organization and pushing violent rhetoric related to ongoing protests has been linked to the white nationalist group Identity Evropa, which also calls itself the American Identity Movement; Identity Evropa denied the claims.[260]

On June 3, three men who identified with the Boogaloo movement were arrested in Las Vegas and charged by the Joint Terrorism Task Force for reportedly plotting to commit violent acts to incite a riot and terrorism charges. The three men also had military experience, and were plotting to attack economic targets prior to the protests in May.[261][262]

According to an internal FBI situation report obtained by The Nation, individuals from a far-right social media group had “called for far-right provocateurs to attack federal agents, use automatic weapons against protesters”.[263]

On the evening of June 7, in Lakeside, Virginia, witnesses reported that a truck-driver deliberately drove into protesters. No one was seriously injured; a suspect was arrested. The county attorney described the suspect as "an admitted leader of the Ku Klux Klan and a propagandist for Confederate ideology" and said he may be charged with a hate crime.[264]

Allegations of foreign involvement

There have been allegations of foreign influence stoking the unrest online, with the role of outside powers being additive rather than decisive as of May 31.[265] The founder and CEO of Graphika, which helped the U.S. Senate form its report on Russian social media influence during the 2016 elections, noted "very active engagement" from account clusters from Russia, Iran, and China, and as of May 31 noted that his team was launching an investigation on the matter of possible foreign influence.[265]

Republican Senator Marco Rubio, the current acting Senate Intelligence Committee chairman, asserted "very heavy" social media activity linked to "at least three foreign adversaries," noting that while they "didn't create these divisions," they are "actively stoking and promoting violence."[266] National security advisor Robert C. O'Brien said that there may be Russian activists who are exploiting the situation, but also, in reference to Chinese officials posting on social media, that the difference is that "... it's open. It's coming straight from the government."[267][268] For instance, the Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying tweeted "I can't breathe" in response to U.S. State Department spokeswoman Morgan Ortagus's criticism over the situation in Hong Kong.[269][270] Former national security advisor Susan Rice stated that the violence that was emerging was "right out of the Russian playbook," drawing angry responses from Russian officials with Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova saying that Rice is trying to blame Russia again for the United States' own domestic problems instead of facing her own people.[271]

Analysts have said that there was a lack of evidence for foreign meddling, whether to spread disinformation or sow divisiveness, but suggest that the messaging and coverage from these countries has more so to do with global politics.[272] For instance, on June 3, 2020, Graphika released a report concluding that "State-controlled media outlets and official public diplomacy accounts in China, Iran, and Russia are focusing on the anti-racism protests in the United States, but they are primarily doing so in a way that furthers their existing narratives, rather than stoking American divisions,"[273] adding that "there is no evidence as yet to suggest a large-scale, covert interference campaign."[274]

Nathaniel Gleicher, head of security policy at Facebook, stated that they found no evidence of foreign interference on their site, even though its security teams were actively searching for signs of it.[275][276]

In a virtual press conference on June 4, Mayor of Miami-Dade Carlos A. Giménez and the head of the County Police Freddy Ramírez announced that the FBI has taken over work on the question of foreign financing of the protests, as it is a federal, not state, matter. The FBI announced on June 3 that it had arrested in Miami and elsewhere groups of Venezuelans, Haitians (from "Little Haiti"), Cubans, and Hondurans who were being paid to cause violence at demonstrations. Those arrested admitted they had been hired by unidentified "activists," who even provided funds for transportation to the demonstrations. Two carried large quantities of cash; the FBI is trying to determine the origin of the money, and "Cuban and Venezuelan intelligence agencies" is a possibility they are investigating. The presence of the [Bolivian] "Che Guevara Brigade" was noted. Those arrested allegedly included a sandinista from Nicaragua, Venezuelan supporters of President Hugo Chávez (who died in 2013), and a supporter of revolution in Bolivia.[277][278]

Mick Mulroy, a former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense and a retired CIA senior official stated in the Washington Post that, "Foreign intelligence services, especially the Russians, often use domestic unrest in the United States to their advantage by exaggerating that unrest through social media and influence operations. The operations often take advantage of legitimate protests, hijacking them by advocating destructive acts such as the burning and destruction of property that reduce the American people's confidence in their own government. If there is evidence that any other countries are doing this, he said, there needs to be direct and real consequences for them."[279]

Use of social media

George Floyd protests in Miami on June 6

Many individuals of the general population and celebrities used social media to document the protests, spread information, promote donation sites, and post memorials to George Floyd. Following Floyd's death, a 15-year-old started a Change.org petition titled "Justice for George Floyd," demanding that all four police officers involved be charged.[280] The petition was the both the largest and fastest-growing in the site's history,[280] reaching over 13 million signatures.[281] During this time, multiple videos of the protests, looting, and riots were shared by journalists and protestors with many videos going viral. One such was footage of a destroyed and smoky Target store interior that the poster claimed was in Minneapolis and damaged during the protests.[282]

A remix of Childish Gambino's song "This is America" and Post Malone's "Congratulations" was used heavily by protesters sharing footage of protests and police action on TikTok.[283] Others used personal Twitter pages to post video documentation of the protests to highlight police and protestors actions, and points of the protests they felt would not be reported.[284] One example was a viral photo that appears to show white women protestors standing with their arms locked between Louisville Metro Police Officers and protestors, with the caption describing the image and "This is love. This is what you do with your privilege."[285]

Viral images of officers "taking a knee" with protestors and engaging in joint displays against police brutality, highlighted by hashtags such as #WalkWithUs,[286] have circulated widely on social media.[287] These acts have been identified by some cultural critics as copaganda, or "feel-good images" to boost public relations.[288][289][290] Official social media accounts of police departments boosted positive images of collaboration.[289] In some cases, these displays of solidarity, such as police kneeling, have been recognized as occurring moments before police teargassed crowds or inflicted violence on them.[288][290] An article in The Fader characterized these acts as public relations tactics which were being undermined by police violence, "It feels like we go past the point of no return several times each day."[289]

Cardi B used her social media to comment on the police brutality and looting during the protests stating; "Police brutality been going on even way before I was born, but it has been more visual ever since social media" and "How many peaceful protests have we seen? How many trending hashtags have we seen? People are tired. Now this [looting] is what people have to resort to."[291][relevant?] Director Spike Lee posted a short film on his social media to support the protests and highlighted the deaths Floyd, Eric Garner and fictional character Radio Raheem from his film Do the Right Thing. The short uses footage of the deaths of all three men and opens with the words "Will history stop repeating itself?"[292]

K-pop fan accounts hijacked rightwing and pro-Trump hashtags on social media, flooding trending hashtags with images and videos of their favorite artists. Users attempting to look up the hashtags #WhiteLivesMatter, #WhiteoutWednesday and #BlueLivesMatter were met with anti-racist messages and video clips of dancing idols.[293] After the Dallas Police Department asked Twitter users to submit videos of protesters' illegal activity to its iWatch Dallas app, submissions of K-pop videos lead to the temporary removal of the app due to "technical difficulties."[294][295]

Misinformation

Misinformation and disinformation has been spread across social media since hours prior to the beginning of the first protests. Internet users and celebrities spread images of men wearing MAGA hats that were falsely identified as Chauvin.[296] Social media users claimed a man videoed breaking the windows of an AutoZone in Minneapolis on May 27 was an undercover Saint Paul Police officer; the Saint Paul Police Department denied these claims through a statement on Twitter.[297][298] Others spread images of damage from other protests or incidents, falsely attributing the damage to the George Floyd protests.[296]

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz speculated that there was "an organized attempt to destabilize civil society," initially stating that as many as 80% of the individuals had possibly come from outside the state,[299] and the mayor of St. Paul, Melvin Carter, said that everyone arrested in St. Paul on May 29 was from out of state.[300] However, this was shown to be incorrect, as records proved that the majority of those arrested were in-state.[301] At a press conference later the same day, Carter explained that he had "shared... arrest data received in [his] morning police briefing which [he] later learned to be inaccurate."[302]

Twitter suspended hundreds of accounts associated with spreading a false claim about a communications blackout during protests in Washington DC, or a claim that authorities had blocked protesters from communicating on their smartphones.[303] Also, some accounts shared a photo of a major fire burning near the Washington Monument, which was actually an image from a television show.[304][305]

On the night of May 31, exterior lights on the north side the White House went dark as protesters were demonstrating outside.[306] The Guardian mistakenly reported that "in normal times, they are only ever turned off when a president dies."[307] A 2015 stock photograph of the White House, edited to show the lights turned off, was shared tens of thousands of times online,[308] including by Hillary Clinton.[309] While the photograph did not depict the building at the time of the protests, Deputy White House Press Secretary Hogan Gidley confirmed that the lights "go out at about 11 p.m. almost every night."[306]

The New York Post reported that a NYPD source said $2.4 million of Rolex watches had been looted during protests from a Soho Rolex store.[310] However, the store in question was actually a Watches of Switzerland outlet that denied anything was stolen.[310] Rolex confirmed that "no watches of any kind were stolen, as there weren't any on display in the store."[311]

Despite widespread eyewitness accounts and news reports of the use of tear gas to clear Lafayette Square for Trump to visit St. John's Church. Trump claimed the use of tear gas was fake, and his presidential campaign team demanded news outlets "correct" their claim.[b]

Concerns over COVID-19 transmission

A protest in Philadelphia

The mass protests occurred during the global COVID-19 pandemic and health experts warned that the protests will likely facilitate an accelerated or rebounding spread of COVID-19.[312][313][17][314][315][18][316] On June 4, CDC Director Robert Redfield warned lawmakers that the protests could be a "seeding event" for more coronavirus outbreaks.[317] Keith Neal, Nottingham University's emeritus professor of the epidemiology of infectious diseases states that there is "clear evidence that banning mass gatherings was one of the most effective and important parts of the lockdowns across European countries" and warned that "any mass gathering risks significant numbers of further cases."[318]

Minnesota Governor Tim Walz expressed worries over a spike in COVID-19 cases.[319] New York Governor Andrew Cuomo shared similar worries describing the protests as "inherently dangerous in the context of this pandemic,"[17] and that people have the right to protest but that they don't have the "right to infect other people," or the "right to act in a way that's going to jeopardize public health."[17] Later he stated that he would recommend assuming exposure to the virus if one has attended a protest and announced that the state is opening COVID-19 testing facilities to all people who were at a protest.[320] Mayor of Washington, D.C. Muriel Bowser stated that "We've been working hard to not have mass gatherings. As a nation, we have to be concerned about rebound."[313] Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms stated that "I am extremely concerned when we're seeing mass gatherings. We know what's happening in our community with this virus,"[17] She also said "If you were out protesting last night, you probably need to go get a Covid test this week."[321] Maryland Governor Larry Hogan shared a similar sentiment, saying that "There's no questions that when you put hundreds or thousands of people together in close proximity when we've got this virus all over the streets is not healthy."[17] Australia's Health Minister Greg Hunt said that "[a]ny mass gathering at this time is a lottery with peoples' lives."[322]

The use of tear gas may increase the spread of the virus due to coughing and lung damage.[323] Smoke and pepper spray may also increase its spread.[314] Outdoor events have a far lower risk of spreading the disease than indoor ones.[324] Shouting and speaking loudly, which are common to both violent and non-violent protests, may also cause infections at distances greater than 6 feet (1.8 m).[325] British Health Secretary Matt Hancock urged people to not to attend large gatherings, including protests, if there were more than six people present as the United Kingdom's death toll passed 40,000.[326][318] Protests in Paris were banned by the city's police department because of the pandemic-related health dangers from large gatherings and other reasons.[327]

The problems inherent to mass gatherings during the COVID-19 pandemic have been communicated widely and were a rationale for measures such as lockdowns worldwide before George Floyd's death and the protests. Irish doctors have issued a stark warning against mass gatherings and asked people to exercise judgement.[328]

Mathias Cormann states that for "families who haven't been able to attend funerals for their loved ones because they were doing the right thing by taking the health advice" it must be awful to watch these "people going recklessly to these sorts of demonstrations" and called their behaviour "incredibly selfish and "incredibly self-indulgent."[329] In New Zealand, several figures including microbiologist and health adviser Siouxsie Wiles, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, Deputy Prime Minister Winston Peters, Opposition Leader Todd Muller, and ACT Party leader David Seymour criticized participants at local Black Lives Matters solidarity rallies held in several urban centers including Auckland, Wellington, Christchurch, and Dunedin for flouting the country's COVID-19 lockdown restrictions banning public gatherings of over 100 people. Dr Wiles also called for people who attended the BLM marches and gatherings to self-isolate for 14 days.[330][331][332]

Preventive measures

Protester in Vancouver, Canada with "Please give me space. I am diabetic and more suseptible to COVID-19"[sic] written on their shirt

Philadelphia Mayor Jim Kenney requested that citizens protest according to social distancing guidelines.[333] New York Governor Andrew Cuomo asked protesters to wear masks.[17] Minnesota's governor stated that "too many" protesters were not applying physical person-to-person distances or wearing masks.[316] Some police officers were not adhering to protective rules and norms such as wearing masks.[316] Floyd's family encouraged those attending the official public memorial to wear masks and gloves.[334] Experts have mixed views of the potential efficacy of properly used, non-N95 masks and note that using a face mask does not warrant stopping other protective practices such as keeping sufficient physical distance from others.[335] Ashish Jha, director of the global health institute at Harvard's TH Chan School of Public Health, believes masks are critical as part of protesting safely and in accordance to COVID-19 guidelines.[321] Theodore Long, a doctor affiliated with New York's contact tracing strategy, echoed Jha's point and advocated "proper hand hygiene and to the extent possible, socially distance."[321]

Hundreds of people arrested by police in New York City (including both peaceful demonstrators and persons accused of violence) were detained in overcrowded, sometimes unsanitary holding cells, sometimes without face masks, prompting concerns over jail-spread COVID cases.[336] The Legal Aid Society sued the New York City Police Department, accusing it of detaining people for extended periods (up to three days) in violation of New York state law requiring that arrests receive arraignments within 24 hours. The department acknowledged that "it was common for up to two dozen people to be held for hours on buses before being taken to be booked" due to large backlogs and paperwork delays and that social distancing was impossible within jails, but a state trial court denied Legal Aid's request, given the "crisis within a crisis."[336]

Consequences

Preventive measures against COVID-19 such as social distancing and the avoidance of mass gatherings are meant to not only protect the individual employing these measures from the virus but also to protect society and others – especially at-risk groups – from contracting the virus or being unable to get sufficient, life-saving treatment.[337][338][better source needed] Scott Gottlieb, the former commissioner of the U.S. Food and Drug Administration under Trump said that "There's going to be a lot of issues coming out of what's happened in the last week, but one of them is going to be that chains of transmission will have become lit from these gatherings."[17]

An Oklahoma State football player tweeted that he has tested positive for COVID-19 "after attending a protest in Tulsa AND being well protective of myself."[339][340] In Columbus, Ohio, the first case of a protester testing positive for COVID-19 was announced on June 3. The person had been attending protests in the city's downtown, despite feeling coronavirus symptoms prior to attending.[341] In several other cities participants have tested positive as well – including an asymptomatic local commissioner in Athens, Georgia and an individual who did not wear a face mask in Lawrence, Kansas.[340] No city has yet attributed a major outbreak to the protests as of June 6 and it could take weeks until early effects are known.[340][314] A study showed that average time from symptom onset to death was about 18 days[342][343][344] – circulation of the virus from the protests to vulnerable individuals may take additional time.

Megan Ranney, an emergency room physician and researcher at Brown University called for people to examine the racial disparities of the COVID-19 spread and their relation to the protests.[17] The mortality due to COVID-19 was expected and shown to be higher among African Americans as this population is starting out with health outcomes that are disproportionately poor.[345][346]

Legal consequences

While expressing disappointment at the flouting of social distancing rules, Police Minister Stuart Nash indicated that New Zealand Police were not seeking to prosecute protest organisers and participants.[347] Laws temporarily prohibiting physical mass-gatherings of more than a limited number of people due to public health concerns have been broken in several countries and cities including in the United Kingdom,[348][349] Australia,[322] New York City,[350] Germany,[351] and France.[352][353][354][355][additional citation(s) needed]

Impact and effects

Economic impact

A looted Cub Foods supermarket in Minneapolis on May 28

Insurance claims arising from property damage suffered in rioting is still being assessed, but is thought to be significant, perhaps record-breaking.[356]

The City of Minneapolis' Community Planning & Economic Development Department gave an early estimate of at least 220 buildings damaged and $55 million in property damage in the city from fires and vandalism, with an epicenter in the Lake Street area; city and state officials have requested state and federal aid to rebuild and repair.[357][358] Among the losses was Minnehaha Commons, an under-construction, $30 million redevelopment project for 189 units of affordable housing, which was destroyed by fire after being torched on May 28.[359][360]

A community organization in Atlanta's Buckhead neighborhood said that between $10 million and $15 million in property damage (excluding losses from looting) was incurred over the weekend of May 29–31, mostly along storefronts along Peachtree Street and Phipps Plaza.[361]

A number of small businesses, already suffering from the economic impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, were harmed by vandalism, property destruction, and looting.[362][363]

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti said he will seek up to $150 million in cuts to the Los Angeles Police Department budget.[364]

Monuments

Vandalized J. E. B. Stuart Monument in Richmond, Virginia on May 31, 2020.

Scrutiny of, discussion of removal, and removal of civic symbols or names relating to the Confederate States of America (frequently associated with segregation and the Jim Crow era in the United States) has regained steam as protests have continued.[365] On June 4, 2020, Virginia governor Ralph Northam announced the Robert E. Lee Monument in Richmond would be removed.[366] On June 5, making specific reference to events in Charlottesville in 2017, the United States Marine Corps banned the display of the Confederate Battle Flag at their installations.[367][368]

Birmingham Mayor Randall Woodfin ordered the removal of the Confederate Soldiers and Sailors Monument in Linn Park, Birmingham. The Alabama Attorney General has filed suit against the city of Birmingham for violating the Alabama Memorial Preservation Act.[369]

Vandals defaced the statue of Winston Churchill in London's Parliament Square.[370] The Lincoln Memorial, the World War II Memorial and the statue of General Casimir Pulaski were vandalized during the George Floyd protests in Washington, D.C.[371] On June 7, the statue of Edward Colston was toppled and thrown into Bristol Harbour by demonstrators during the George Floyd protests in the United Kingdom.[372]

Changes to police policies

In the wake of Floyd's killing, state and local governments evaluated their own police department policies, and the response to protests, for themselves. For example, California Governor Gavin Newsom called for new police crowd control procedures for the state, and the banning of the police use of carotid chokeholds, which starve the brain of oxygen.[373] The Minneapolis police department banned police from using chokeholds;[374] Denver's police department also banned the use of chokeholds without exception, and also established new reporting requirements whenever a police officer holds a person at gunpoint.[375]

In June 2020, Democrats in Congress introduced the Justice in Policing Act of 2020, a police reform and accountability bill that contains measures combat police misconduct, excessive force, and racial bias in policing. The impetus for the bill were the killings of Floyd, Breonna Taylor, and other African Americans at the hands of police.[376][22][377][377][22]

Abolition of police forces

Nine members of the Minneapolis City Council — a veto-proof majority — including Jeremiah Ellison, pledged on Sunday to dismantle the Police Department, despite opposition from Mayor Frey. [378][379]

Reactions

Domestic

Federal

Donald J. Trump Twitter
@realDonaldTrump

Replying to @realDonaldTrump

....These THUGS are dishonoring the memory of George Floyd, and I won't let that happen. Just spoke to Governor Tim Walz and told him that the Military is with him all the way. Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts. Thank you!

May 29, 2020[380]

Utah National Guard soldiers from the 19th Special Forces Group in front of the White House on June 3

On May 27, 2020, Trump tweeted "At my request, the FBI and the Department of Justice are already well into an investigation as to the very sad and tragic death in Minnesota of George Floyd...."[381]

On May 29, Trump responded to the riots by threatening that either "the very weak Radical Left Mayor Jacob Frey get his act together and bring the City under control" or he will send in the National Guard, adding that "Any difficulty and we will assume control but, when the looting starts, the shooting starts."[382][383][384][385] The tweet was interpreted as quoting former Miami Police Chief Walter Headley, who said "when the looting starts, the shooting starts" in December 1967, as Miami saw escalating tensions and racial protests aimed at the 1968 Republican National Convention.[386][387] Trump's use of the quote was seen by Twitter as an incitement of violence; Twitter placed the tweet behind a public interest notice for breaching its terms of service in regards to incitement of violence.[388] The next day, Trump commented on his original tweet, saying, "Looting leads to shooting, and that's why a man was shot and killed in Minneapolis on Wednesday night - or look at what just happened in Louisville with 7 people shot. I don't want this to happen, and that's what the expression put out last night means...."[389]

In a series of tweets on May 31, Trump blamed the press for fomenting the protests and said that journalists are "truly bad people with a sick agenda."[178]

On June 1, in a teleconference with governors, Trump said they had been "weak" and insisted that they "have to dominate ... You've got to arrest people, you have to track people, you have to put them in jail for 10 years and you'll never see this stuff again."[390] He later proclaimed in the White House Rose Garden, "I am your president of law and order" and said he was "dispatching thousands and thousands of heavily armed soldiers, military personnel, and law enforcement officers" to deal with rioting in Washington, D.C.[391] Trump and an entourage subsequently departed the White House and walked to St. John's Episcopal Church, whose basement had been damaged by fire, and posed for pictures in front of it holding up a Bible. Police and national guardsmen had used tear gas and rubber bullets to clear a crowd of peaceful protesters from Lafayette Square to clear a route for Trump, an event that drew widespread condemnation from military and religious leaders.[392] Four days after this event Washington D.C. renamed the street corner in front of St. John's Church "Black Lives Matter Plaza" and painted "BLACK LIVES MATTER" in large, yellow letters stretching from Lafayette Square north for two blocks.[393]

Surgeon General Jerome Adams said, in relation to the protests, that the U.S. "must acknowledge & address the impact of racism on health"[1] and, via Twitter:

U.S. Surgeon General Twitter
@Surgeon_General

Replying to @Surgeon_General

5/ We won't fix or remove all the obstacles and stressors that are affecting people's health and well-being – especially ones like racism – over night. That doesn't mean we mustn't try at all. Change happens over time and there needs to be meaningful progress.

May 30, 2020[394]

Senator Marco Rubio (R-FL) argued that extremists from the far-left and the far-right wanted to take aim at civil society and could potentially start a Second American Civil War.[395][396] Republican Senators Ben Sasse, Susan Collins, Tim Scott and Lisa Murkowski; Congressional Democrats, including Speaker of the House of Representatives Nancy Pelosi and Senate Democratic Leader Chuck Schumer; and several military officials associated with various presidential administrations—including three former Trump appointees, ex-Secretary of Defense and retired Marine Corps general Jim Mattis, former White House Chief of Staff and Secretary of Homeland Security John F. Kelly, and former Assistant Secretary of Defense Mick Mulroy—criticized Trump's handling of the protests. Many other Congressional Republicans either defended the Trump administration's actions or avoided directly responding to questions about the military clearance.[397][398][399][400][401]

States

Anti-police graffiti at the Utah State Capitol on May 30
George Floyd Protest Against Police Brutality in Dallas

On May 30, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo stated that the riots have exposed the "inequality and discrimination in the criminal justice system" and that "When you have one episode, two episodes maybe you can look at them as individual episodes. But when you have 10 episodes, 15 episodes, you are blind or in denial if you are still treating each one like a unique situation,"[402]

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms called for protesters to express their anger through "non-violent" means. She decried the riots as illegitimate and accused them of harming Atlanta rather than helping.[403]

Iowa Governor Kim Reynolds and Des Moines Mayor Frank Cownie, while sympathizing with the anger of protesters, asked for citizens to stop the violence and have a "Respectful, peaceful dialogue."[404]

General public

An opinion poll indicates the majority (64%) of American adults are "sympathetic to people who are out protesting right now" and a slight majority (55%) disapprove of Trump's handling of the protests.[405] Polls indicate that among American voters, 46% approve of the protests, 38% disapprove and 16% were neutral; 76% of voters disapprove of looting and property destruction during the protests, while 17% approve.[406]

Industry

On the morning of May 29, Target temporarily closed 24 of its locations in the Twin Cities area, and reopened all but six the same day.[407][408] Target later announced that they would be closing 73 of their Minnesota stores until further notice and made a commitment to rebuilding the store on Lake Street.[409] On May 31, Target closed 49 stores in California and 12 stores in New York.[410]

On May 31, Walmart temporarily closed several hundred of its stores as a precaution. Amazon announced it would redirect some delivery routes and scale back others as a result of the widespread unrest.[411] Meanwhile, Amazon Studios issued a statement supporting Black Lives Matter.[412]

Entertainment industry

The entertainment industry has been overwhelmingly supportive of the protests, exhibited by corporations voicing support for Black Lives Matter causes and a number of celebrities attending protests and making donations. Actors such as Jamie Foxx,[413] Nick Cannon,[414] and Kendrick Sampson[415]—among others—attended protests, while Blake Lively and her husband Ryan Reynolds donated a record $200,000 to the NAACP.[416] Much of the music industry called for an organized "blackout" on June 2[417][418] while prominent musicians such as Ariana Grande,[419] Beyonce,[420] Chance the Rapper,[421] Halsey,[422] and J. Cole[423] attended protests or otherwise voiced support for the cause. Jay-Z spoke to the Governor of Minnesota to weigh in on justice for George Floyd,[424] Drake[425] and The Weeknd[425] donated to pro-Black Lives Matter causes, Taylor Swift made headlines by denouncing Trump for "stoking the fires of racism."[426] Additionally, Kanye West donated $2,000,000 to the families of George Floyd, set up a 529 college fund for George Floyd's daughter as well as, fund Breonna Taylor, and Ahmaud Arbery attorney fees. He was also seen protesting along with other protesters in Chicago.[427]

Television networks owned by ViacomCBS, including BET, CBS Sports Network, CMT, Comedy Central, Logo TV, MTV, Nickelodeon, Paramount Network, the Smithsonian Channel, TV Land, and VH1 suspended regular programming for 8 minutes and 46 seconds on June 1 at 5:00 p.m. Eastern Time as a tribute to George Floyd. The networks aired a video with the caption "I can't breathe" accompanied with breathing sounds, while Nickelodeon aired a separate scrolling video containing language from the Declaration of Kids' Rights, which the network first created on June 7, 1990.[428]

Netflix was the first major studio to issue a statement in support of Black Lives Matter in the wake of protests.[429] YouTube pledged $1,000,000 to combat social injustice in response to the protests.[430] Lego announced that they would cease advertising White House and police-related toys and pledged $4 million to help African American children and to educate all children about racism.[431][432] The Walt Disney Company pledged $5 million in support of nonprofit organizations that advance social justice, including a $2 million donation to the NAACP.[433] CEO Bob Chapek and executive chairman Bob Iger released a statement to Disney employees promising "real change" in the wake of George Floyd's death. The cast of Brooklyn Nine-Nine, a police comedy series, along with showrunner Dan Goor, donated $100,000 to The National Bail Fund Network while also condemning the death of Floyd.[434] Stephanie Beatriz, who plays Rosa Diaz on Brooklyn Nine-Nine, made a personal donation to the fund while encouraging actors who portray police on television to do so as well.[435]

The video game industry as a whole supported the protests and Black Lives Matter, with companies like Electronic Arts, 2K Games and Humble Bundle committing US$1 million in funds towards black-oriented charities and foundations, and others like Ubisoft, Square Enix, and The Pokemon Company also making similar significant financial commitments.[436][437][438]

Sports industry

The sports industry has been supportive of the protestors demanding justice for George Floyd. A number of footballers across different leagues including Jadon Sancho, Romelu Lukaku, Marcus Rashford, among other have showed full solidarity towards the issue.[439]

International

Protest in Vancouver on May 31

Countries

Protest at the U.S. embassy in Berlin on May 30, 2020
Protest at Königsplatz in Munich on June 6, 2020
  •  Australia – Prime Minister Scott Morrison stated his beliefs that violent protests would not create change. He warned against Australian demonstrations taking a similar course as "there's no need to import things happening in other countries."[206]
  •  Canada – Prime Minister Justin Trudeau called for Canada to "stand together in solidarity" against racial discrimination. He said Canadians are watching the police violence in the United States in "shock and horror."[440] When Trudeau was asked about Trump's threats to use military force against protesters, he paused for 21 seconds before responding diplomatically.[441][442]
  •  China – The Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that "black lives matter and their human rights should be guaranteed" and hoped that "the U.S. government would take all necessary measures to deal with the violent law enforcement of police, so as to protect and safeguard the legitimate interests of racial minorities."[443] However, both state media and individual officials also criticized the United States government and accused it of hypocrisy.[269][444] For instance, the Foreign Ministry spokesman Zhao Lijian accused the United States of having a 'double standard' for labeling U.S. protesters disappointed with racism as rioters while glorifying the Hong Kong protesters as heroes, and for shooting U.S. protesters and mobilizing the National Guard while criticizing the Hong Kong police.[445]
    •  Hong Kong – Chief Executive Carrie Lam decried what she perceived as a 'double standard' in America's reaction to protests in Hong Kong and their protests at home.[446] Student activist Joshua Wong offered his solidarity with the Black Lives Matter movement.[447]
  •  Cuba – Foreign Minister Bruno Rodríguez Parrilla tweeted that George Floyd "did not 'pass away.' He was brutally murdered. Unfortunately this is a well known story for African-Americans. He was unarmed and shouting 'I can't breathe,' but that wasn't enough to prevent an injustice. Our skin color should not define us. #BlackLivesMatter."[448]
  •  France – Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said that "any act of violence committed against peaceful protesters or journalists is unacceptable, in the United States or elsewhere."[449]
  •  Germany – Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said on Twitter that the peaceful protests in the United States following the death of George Floyd are "understandable and more than legitimate," and that peaceful protests must always be allowed.[450]
  •  Ghana – President Nana Akufo-Addo said that "black people the world over were shocked and distraught" by Floyd's killing, and expressed his condolences to Floyd's family and his hope that there would be "lasting change" in how America "confronts the problems of hate and racism."[451]
  •  Holy SeePope Francis called for "national reconciliation" in the U.S. saying that racism is "intolerable" and that the violence that erupted on the streets is "self-destructive and self-defeating."[452]
Protest in Tehran, Iran, June 3, 2020
  •  Iran – On May 30, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs condemned "the tragic murder of black people and deadly racial discrimination in the United States." It added that "the voices of the protesters must be heard ... (and) the repression of suffering Americans must be stopped immediately."[453] Two days later, a Ministry spokesman said at a news conference, speaking in English, "To the American officials and police: stop violence against your people and let them breathe."[454] In a televised speech on June 3, Supreme Leader Ali Khamenei stated that in the United States, "they kill people in an open crime, and they do not offer an apology while claiming [to support] human rights... Apparently, the African American man who was killed there was not a human being."[455]
  •  Ireland– On June 4, Irish Taoiseach Leo Varadkar expressed "genuine revulsion" at the "heavy-handed response" of the US government towards the free press and protesters, and stated "And we've witnessed the absence of moral leadership or words of understanding, comfort or healing from whence they should have come." Many other political leaders in Ireland, such as Mary Lou McDonald of Sinn Féin, Alan Kelly of the Labour Party and Richard Boyd Barrett of People before Profit denounced racism both in the US and Ireland, and criticised the Trump administration's handling of it in the US. The Irish Parliament, the Dáil observed a minute's silence in respect for those impacted by racism around the world, including George Floyd. Varadkar said that Ireland must take note from the issues coming out of America and address racism in Ireland as well.[456][457]
  •  Netherlands – On June 4, during a press conference about whether the Dutch could go on foreign holiday that year, Prime Minister Mark Rutte called the death of George Floyd "unacceptable." Rutte also commented on the recent George Floyd protests in the Netherlands, saying that racism is not only an American and that racism in the Netherlands is a "systemic problem."[458]
  •  New Zealand – Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern has stated that she was "horrified" by the situation around the death of George Floyd. Ardern had been criticized by local Black Lives Matter solidarity protesters for remaining silent about Floyd's death for a week.[459][460]
  •  Russia – The Foreign Ministry condemned the police violence and arrest of journalists amid the protests, remarking that "this incident is not the first in the string of incidents exposing lawlessness and unjustified violence by 'guardians of law and order' in the United States."[461] Maria Zakharova, the ministry's spokeswoman, further commented that in light of the protests, the US 'no longer had the authority' to criticize others regarding human rights.[462]
    •  ChechnyaHead of the Chechen Republic Ramzan Kadyrov said Trump needs to "end the mayhem" and "illegal actions against citizens." He continued, "Police are lynching people right on the streets of American cities....They are strangling citizens, beating them up, ramming them with cars." Kadyrov called on the United Nations to intervene.[463]
  •  Spain – Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez expressed his solidarity with the protests and his concern about the "authoritarian" ways in which the protests have been responded to during a parliamentary session.[465] His Second Deputy Prime Minister, Pablo Iglesias, posted a tweet with the word "ANTIFA" in response to Trump's intentions to declare Antifa a terrorist organization.[466] Sánchez has considered that everyone must unite to combat what he considers "the evil of our time," the extreme right, and has supported some demonstrations that, he said, "have in their genesis some of the most difficult elements in construction of a great country," the United States, to which he has expressed his respect.[citation needed]
  •  Turkey – President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said a "racist and fascist" approach led to Floyd's death and said that "[we] will be monitoring the issue."[467] The Foreign Minister added on June 3 that "it is unacceptable for police to kill any person in such a way, regardless of race or religion... Justice must be done," but also that "No matter who it is, we do not support such vandalism, not just in the US but also in other countries."[455]
  •  United Kingdom – The Foreign Office reacted to the arrest of a journalist and said that "journalists all around the world must be free to do their job and hold authorities to account without fear of retribution."[467] Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab commented that the footage of Floyd's arrest was "very distressing" but said that it is "not his job" to comment on the U.S. president's response to the protests.[468] Prime Minister Boris Johnson told Parliament that "black lives matter," and added, "I also support, as I've said, the right to protest. The only point I would make... is that any protest should be carried out lawfully and in this country protests should be carried out in accordance with our rules on social distancing."[469] On June 5, the British embassy in the U.S. raised the issue of the treatment of British journalists by U.S. police, a spokesman for the Prime Minister said.[470]

Organizations

  •  African Union – Head of the African Union Commission, Moussa Faki Mahamat, described Floyd's death as a "murder," stating that the African Union condemned the "continuing discriminatory practices against black citizens of the USA."[474]
  • Amnesty International – The organization released a press release statement calling the police in the United States to end excessive militarized responses to the protests.[106][107] It also called on the UK to review exports of security equipment, including tear gas or rubber bullets, to US police forces.[475][476]
  •  European Union – European Union Foreign Policy chief Josep Borrell stated that the EU is "shocked and appalled" by Floyd's death and attributed it to "abuse of power" by law enforcement. He also warned against further "excessive use of force."[477]
  • Human Rights Watch said they were "appalled" by the footage of the arrest and said that "no one should ever be subject to such gratuitous violence." It also added that "George Floyd's cruel and pointless death, and the litany of black lives that were lost before, reconfirms our commitment to combat these injustices."[478]

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ See Deaths section for more details and citations.
  2. ^ See Donald Trump photo op at St. John's Church § Tear gas and denial for more information on the veracity of this claim.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e Robertson, Nicky (May 30, 2020). "US surgeon general says "there is no easy prescription to heal our nation"". CNN. Retrieved May 30, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ Pham, Scott (June 2, 2020). "Police Arrested More Than 11,000 People At Protests Across The US". BuzzFeed News.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  3. ^ Taylor, Derrick Bryson (June 2, 2020). "George Floyd Protests: A Timeline". The New York Times. Archived from the original on June 2, 2020. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  4. ^ Rumpf, Sarah (May 29, 2020). "Derek Chauvin Had Knee on George Floyd's Neck for Almost 3 Minutes AFTER Floyd Was Unresponsive: Officials". Mediaite. The defendant had his knee on Mr. Floyd's neck for 8 minutes and 46 seconds in total. Two minutes and 53 seconds of this was after Mr. Floyd was non-responsive, concludes the complaint.
  5. ^ Lovett, Ian (June 4, 2020). "1992 Los Angeles Riots: How the George Floyd Protests Are Different". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved June 7, 2020.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ Betz, Bradford (May 31, 2020). "George Floyd unrest: Riots, fires, violence escalate in several major cities". Fox News. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  7. ^ "Widespread unrest as curfews defied across US". BBC News. May 31, 2020. Retrieved June 7, 2020.
  8. ^ Kindy, Kimberly; Jacobs, Shayna; Farenthold, David (June 5, 2020). "In protests against police brutality, videos capture more alleged police brutality". Washington Post. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  9. ^ Taylor, Derrick Bryson (June 8, 2020). "George Floyd Protests: A Timeline". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved June 9, 2020.
  10. ^ Warren, Katy; Hadden, Joey (June 4, 2020). "How all 50 states are responding to the George Floyd protests, from imposing curfews to calling in the National Guard". Business Insider. Retrieved June 8, 2020.
  11. ^ Browne, Ryan; Lee, Alicia; Rigdon, Renee. "There are as many National Guard members activated in the US as there are active duty troops in Iraq, Syria and Afghanistan". CNN. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  12. ^ Brantley, Max (June 1, 2020). "Governor reveals National Guard activated and participated in shutdown of Sunday demonstration". Arkansas Times. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
  13. ^ Cite error: The named reference auto2 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  14. ^ "Associated Press tally shows at least 9,300 people arrested in protests since killing of George Floyd". Associated Press. June 3, 2020. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
  15. ^ Condon, Bernard; Richmond, Todd; Sisak, Michael R. (June 3, 2020). "What to know about 4 officers charged in George Floyd's death". ABC7 Chicago. Retrieved June 6, 2020.
  16. ^ For criticism of the Trump administration's response, see:
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h i Silverman (June 1, 2020). "Health experts and state leaders fear coronavirus could spread rapidly during mass protests in US". CNN. Retrieved June 1, 2020.
  18. ^ a b Beer, Tommy. "Experts Fear Minneapolis Protests Will Trigger Spike In Coronavirus Cases". Forbes. Retrieved May 31, 2020.
  19. ^ Alberight, Amanda (May 31, 2020). "George Floyd protests hammer cities as they reopen from coronavirus lockdowns". Fortune. Retrieved June 6, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
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Further reading

External links

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