Dayton Daily News

Chanting ‘seven bullets, seven days,’ many march in Kenosha

- By Stephen Groves and Amy Forliti

KENOSHA, WIS. — Roughly a thousand people gathered Saturday in Kenosha for a march and rally against police violence, about aweek after an officer shot Jacob Blake in the back and left the 29-year- old Black man paralyzed.

Marchers chan ted “No justice, no peace !” and “Seven bullets, seven days”— a reference to the number of times Blake was shot on Sunday. Those leading the march carried a banner reading “Justice for Jacob” as they made their way toward the Kenosha County Courthouse, where several speakers encouraged demonstrat­ors to vote for change in November.

“There were seven bullets put in my son’s back. ... Hell yeah, I’m mad,” said Blake’s father, Jacob Blake, Sr. He said he wants to ask the police “what gave them the right to attempted murder on my child? What gave them the right to think that my son was an animal? What gave them the right to take something that was not theirs? I’m tired of this. I’m tired of this.”

Blake Sr. asked members of the crowd to raise their fists in the air with him.

“We are not going to stop going in the right direction. We’re going to the top ... we’re gonna make legislatio­n happen because that’s the only thing that they recognize,” he said.

He also referred to the May 25 death of George Floyd, a handcuffed Blackman who died after a Minneapoli­s officer pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck. “It’s not going to be easy y’all. But there doesn’t need to be any more Georges,” Blake Sr. said. “We all have a knee on the back of our necks, every day.”

Several speakers referenced voting for change in the November election, as well as a special session that starts Monday in Wisconsin to discuss police reforms.

“Justice is a bare minimum,” said Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes. “Justice should be guaranteed to everybody in this country.”

One of Blake’s sisters, Letetra Widman, sarcastica­lly thanked the police department “for showing their true colors.” She also talked about how she felt recharged with energy “to stand up not just for Jacob but for all the people who have not gotten justice.”

Kenosha Police Officer Rusten Sheskey and two other officers were responding to a domestic abuse call Sunday when Sheskey shot Blake seven times in the back. Blake is paralyzed from the shooting, his fam-ily said, and is recovering in a Milwaukee hospital.

The shooting, which was captured on cellphone video, sparked new protests against racial injustice and police brutality. It came just three months after the death of Floyd, which touched off a wider reckoning on race.

Protesters have marched on Kenosha’s streets every night since Blake’s shooting, with some protests devolving into unrest with damage to buildings and vehicles. On Tuesday, two people were killed by an armed civilian. The commander of the National Guard said Friday that more than 1,000 Guard members had been deployed to help keep the peace, and more were on the way.

Aniyah Ervin, a 16-year-old from Kenosha who is Black, said Saturday that theweek has been surreal. Although she is part of a group that held protests against racial injustice over the summer, she said there had been a feeling that police brutality was not a problem in their community, but the shooting of Blake “shows it can happen anywhere.”

Investigat­ors have said little aboutwhat led to Blake’s shooting. The Kenosha police union said Blake had a knife and fought with officers, putting one of them in a headlock as two efforts to stun himwith a Taser were unsuccessf­ul. State investigat­ors have said only that officers found a knife on the floor of the car.

In the cellphone footage recorded by a bystander, Blake walks from the sidewalk around the front of an SUV to his driver-side door as officers follow him with their guns drawn and shout at him. As Blake opens the door and leans into the SUV, an officer grabs his shirt from behind and opens fire.

 ?? MORRY GASH / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jacob Blake’s father, Jacob Blake Sr., talks to a crowd at a rally Saturday in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
MORRY GASH / ASSOCIATED PRESS Jacob Blake’s father, Jacob Blake Sr., talks to a crowd at a rally Saturday in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

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