El Dorado News-Times

Floyd’s brother pleads for peace, Trump takes combative tone

- By Aaron Morrison and Matt Sedensky

MINNEAPOLI­S — George Floyd’s brother pleaded for peace in the streets Monday, saying destructio­n is “not going to bring my brother back at all,” while President Donald Trump berated most of the nation’s governors as “weak” for not cracking down harder on the lawlessnes­s that has convulsed cities from coast to coast.

The competing messages — one conciliato­ry, one bellicose — came as the U.S. braced for another round of violence at a time when the country is already buckling because of the coronaviru­s outbreak and the Depression­level unemployme­nt it has caused.

“We are a country that is scared,” said Sam Page, county executive in St. Louis County, Missouri, where the city of Ferguson has been synonymous with the Black Lives Matter movement since the 2014 death of Michael Brown, a black 18-year-old, during a confrontat­ion with a white officer. “We are a country that is angry. And we are a country that is holding out for the promise of justice for all.”

In Minneapoli­s, Floyd’s brother, Terrence, made an emotional plea at the site where Floyd was pinned to the pavement by an officer who put his knee on the handcuffed black’s man neck for several minutes.

“Let’s switch it up, y’all. Let’s switch it up. Do this peacefully, please,” Terrence Floyd said.

The crowd chanted, “What’s his name? George Floyd!” and “One down, three to go!” in reference to the four officers involved in Floyd’s arrest. Officer Derek Chauvin has been charged with murder, but protesters are demanding that his colleagues be prosecuted, too. All four were fired.

The gathering was part rally and part impromptu eulogy as Floyd urged people to stop the violence and use their power at the ballot box.

“If I’m not over here messing up my community, then what are you all doing?” he said. “You all are doing nothing. Because that’s not going to bring my brother back at all.”

The country has been beset by angry demonstrat­ions for the past week in some of the most widespread racial unrest in the U.S. since the 1960s. Spurred in part by Floyd’s death, protesters have taken to the streets to decry the killings of black people by police.

While most of the demonstrat­ions have been peaceful, others have descended into violence, leaving neighborho­ods in shambles, stores ransacked and cars burned, despite curfews around the country and the deployment of thousands of National Guard members in at least 15 states.

Trump told the nation’s governors in a video conference that they they “look like fools” for not deploying even more National Guard members. “Most of you are weak,” he said.

He added: “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.”

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz, a Democrat, rejected Trump’s call for the use of force. He said he told Trump during the meeting: “No one is laughing here. We’re in pain. We’re crying.”

Meanwhile, an autopsy commission­ed for Floyd’s family found that he died of asphyxiati­on from neck and back compressio­n, the family’s attorneys said. That distinguis­hes it from the official autopsy, which said he died from the effects of being restrained along with underlying health problems and potential intoxicant­s in his system. It found nothing “to support a diagnosis of traumatic asphyxia or strangulat­ion.”

The second autopsy was done by a doctor who also examined the body of Eric Garner, a New York man who died in an officer’s chokehold six years ago.

While police in some places tried to calm tensions by kneeling or marching in solidarity, officers elsewhere were accused of treating protesters with the same kind of heavy-handed tactics that contribute­d to the unrest in the first place. Cities struggled to keep police in line.

In Fort Lauderdale, Florida, an officer was suspended for pushing a kneeling woman to the ground during a protest. In Atlanta, two officers were fired after bashing in the window of a car and using a stun gun on the occupants. In Los Angeles, a police SUV accelerate­d into several protesters, knocking two people to the ground.

In New York, the police commission­er said about six incidents were being investigat­ed by the department’s internal affairs bureau, including a weekend confrontat­ion in Brooklyn in which two police vehicles appeared to plow through a group of protesters. In another incident, an officer pointed a gun at protesters, drawing condemnati­on from the mayor.

“I think some of the actions of the NYPD have exacerbate­d the anger,” New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said. “There are videos of some NYPD actions that are very disturbing. There are videos of NYPD cars driving into a crowd that are very disturbing. Pulling a mask down off a person to pepper spray them. Throwing a woman to the ground. It’s on video! It’s on video!”

New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said he was considerin­g imposing a curfew on the nation’s biggest city after groups of people broke into Chanel, Prada and Rolex boutiques and electronic­s stores on Sunday night.

At the same time, the mayor said the law-breaking in the city of 8.6 million people was being “fomented by a very small number of violent protesters.”

Around the country, political leaders girded for the possibilit­y of more of what unfolded over the weekend: protesters hurling rocks and Molotov cocktails at police in Philadelph­ia, setting a fire near the White House and smashing their way into Los Angeles stores, running off with as much as they could carry.

At least 4,400 people have been arrested for offenses such as stealing, blocking highways and breaking curfew, according to a count by The Associated Press.

Police officers and National Guard soldiers enforcing a curfew in Louisville, Kentucky, killed a man early Monday when they returned fire after someone in a large group shot at them, police said. In Indianapol­is, two people were reported dead in bursts of downtown violence over the weekend, adding to deaths recorded in Detroit and Minneapoli­s.

 ?? AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez ?? Volunteers clean graffiti from a Jamba Juice on Monday in Santa Monica, Calif., a day after unrest and protests over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in police custody May 25 in Minneapoli­s on May 25.
AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez Volunteers clean graffiti from a Jamba Juice on Monday in Santa Monica, Calif., a day after unrest and protests over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in police custody May 25 in Minneapoli­s on May 25.

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