Boston Herald

‘Time for a change’

Protesters call for an end to police brutality

- By Lisa kashinsky

Hope Coleman’s voice still quavers when she talks about the day her son was shot to death by police.

She recounted the heartbreak­ing loss with purpose Sunday to thousands of protesters who gathered on City Hall Plaza to denounce police brutality and call for defunding the force just hours after the the mayor said he’d reallocate “some” of the police budget.

“It’s time for a change,” she cried.

Terrence J. Coleman, a 31year-old black man, was shot and killed in October 2016 when authoritie­s say he attacked medics and police with a knife while they were responding to her call for an ambulance. The district attorney at the time said the use of force was justified.

But protesters want his case reopened — along with those of other black people killed at the hands of police officers, calling for “justice, now” as protests in the wake of the death of George Floyd, a black man, at the hands of Minneapoli­s Police in late May continued Sunday.

Mayor Martin Walsh said Sunday on WCVB’s “On the Record” that the city is working on change. “We are going to look at the police budget, certainly, and reallocate some of it,” Walsh said.

Protesters at the “Unite against racist police terror!” event called for shifting police funds toward other services to help black people dealing with systemic racism — from housing, to health care, to education. They also called for the National Guard, which again blocked streets leading to Downtown Crossing, to leave the city.

Brock Satter, an organizer with Mass. Action Against

Police Brutality, slammed cops for taking a knee and said politician­s who “all of a sudden they’ve found a voice” are “hypocrites” — directing criticism at Gov. Charlie Baker, Mayor Walsh, Boston Police Commission­er William Gross, state Attorney General Maura Healey, Suffolk DA Rachael Rollins, U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren and U.S. Rep. Ayanna Pressley.

At the protest, John Griffith, who is white, stood next to his black wife and daughter while clad in his military fatigues with a mask that read “I can’t breathe.”

“It’s time for white people to look at how we have been complicit in this and how we’ve kept the system of racism in place,” he said.

As protesters marched through downtown Boston, Simone-Marie, a black woman who declined to give her last name, elbowbumpe­d two National Guard members. She said she’s been targeted by police before, but “if we can break the barrier” progress can be made. “Not everyone is against the police.”

Demonstrat­ors took a knee outside the Ruggles MBTA station before organizers recounted gains that have been made over the nearly two weeks of national protests, including the charging of the officers involved in Floyd’s death and Minneapoli­s Police banning choke holds.

 ?? NAncy lAnE pHoToS / HErAld STAFF FIlE ?? TAKING A STAND: Jay E marches against police violence from City Hall to the Ruggles T station near police headquarte­rs on Sunday.
NAncy lAnE pHoToS / HErAld STAFF FIlE TAKING A STAND: Jay E marches against police violence from City Hall to the Ruggles T station near police headquarte­rs on Sunday.
 ??  ?? LOOK AT ‘SYSTEM OF RACISM’: Veteran John Griffith stands with his wife, Aina Adler, and daughter Lily, 2, at City Hall before marching to the Ruggles T station near police headquarte­rs to protest police violence on Sunday.
LOOK AT ‘SYSTEM OF RACISM’: Veteran John Griffith stands with his wife, Aina Adler, and daughter Lily, 2, at City Hall before marching to the Ruggles T station near police headquarte­rs to protest police violence on Sunday.
 ??  ?? SHOWING UNITY: Protesters take a knee and raise their fists in the air at the end of a march against police violence on Sunday.
SHOWING UNITY: Protesters take a knee and raise their fists in the air at the end of a march against police violence on Sunday.

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