Calgary Herald

Floyd’s brother makes plea to Congress

- DAVID MORGAN AND RICHARD COWAN

WASHINGTON • A U.S. congressio­nal panel confrontin­g racial injustice and police violence on Wednesday heard an impassione­d plea from a brother of George Floyd not to let his death in Minneapoli­s police custody to have been in vain, lamenting that he “didn’t deserve to die over $20.”

More than two weeks after George Floyd died when a Minneapoli­s police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes, the U.S. House of Representa­tives Judiciary Committee held its first formal proceeding­s to examine issues underlying weeks of U.S. civil unrest as it consider sweeping reform legislatio­n.

Floyd, a Houston native who had worked security at nightclubs, was unarmed when taken into custody outside a corner market where an employee had reported that a man matching his descriptio­n tried to pay for cigarettes with a counterfei­t bill.

“George wasn’t hurting anyone that day. He didn’t deserve to die over $20. I’m asking you, is that what a Black man’s worth? $20? This is 2020. Enough is enough,” Philonise Floyd, 42, of Missouri City, Texas, near Houston, told the lawmakers. “It is on you to make sure his death is not in vain.”

He buried his brother on Tuesday and broke down at the witness table while describing how they had not been able to say goodbye.

“I’m here to ask you to make it stop. Stop the pain,” Floyd testified. “George called for help and he was ignored. Please listen to the call I’m making to you now, to the calls of our family and the calls ringing on the streets of all the world.”

The emotionall­y charged hearing had lawmakers and witnesses expressing sorrow over Floyd’s May 25 death, the latest in a long string of killings of African-american men and women by police that have sparked anger on America’s streets and fresh calls for reforms

But the hearing also highlighte­d divisions in Congress and the country between those advocating sweeping changes to policing practices and those defending the work of law enforcemen­t and blaming any problems on, as one Republican lawmaker put it, a “few bad apples.”

The Judiciary Committee is preparing to shepherd a broad package of legislatio­n, aimed at combating police violence and racial injustice, to the House floor by July 4, and is expected to hold further hearings next week to prepare the bill for a full House vote.

“While we hold up human rights in the world, we obviously have to hold them up in our country,” said Representa­tive Karen Bass, chairwoman of the Congressio­nal Black Caucus, which crafted the legislatio­n.

Representa­tive Jim Jordan, the committee’s top Republican, said “the American people understand it’s time for a real discussion, real debate, real solutions about police treatment of African-americans.”

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 ?? MICHAEL REYNOLDS / POOL VIA REUTERS ?? George Floyd’s brother Philonise Floyd attends the House Judiciary Committee hearing on policing practices and law enforcemen­t accountabi­lity at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday.
MICHAEL REYNOLDS / POOL VIA REUTERS George Floyd’s brother Philonise Floyd attends the House Judiciary Committee hearing on policing practices and law enforcemen­t accountabi­lity at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday.

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