Imperial Valley Press

California governor: Cities should end use of National Guard

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) — Gov. Gavin Newsom on Friday urged mayors and other local authoritie­s to end reliance on the National Guard and curfews to help deal with policing of protests over the death of George Floyd.

“As they recognize the conditions have changed for the positive I would highly encourage them to pull back on those supports,” Newsom said following days of protests.

Some cities and counties have already ended curfews because protests were largely peaceful in recent days following heavy bouts of violence, but others still have the curfews in effect.

“My hope and expectatio­n is that many local elected officials and law enforcemen­t officials will no longer be in need of those state assists, and then we could begin to pull back in an expeditiou­s manner, but a very thoughtful manner,” Newsom said.

National Guard members could be redeployed to provide logistical support for food banks that are helping people affected by the COVID-19 pandemic, he said.

He said he has ordered the state police training program to stop teaching officers how to use a carotid hold on suspects that can block the flow of blood to the brain. Floyd died while in police custody in Minnesota after officers held him on the ground and one placed his knee on his neck. Four officers have been fired and now face criminal charges.

Curfews were imposed for several days in many cities — some as early as 1 p.m. — after a weekend of unrest and looting — blamed mostly on non-protesters.

Cities were criticized for taking the rare step to force residents to stay home and then use the order to arrest thousands of peaceful protesters after curfew.

Places that lifted curfews this week included Los Angeles, San Francisco, San Jose, Berkeley, Oakland and several San Francisco Bay Area counties.

A curfew remained in force in Sacramento. The American Civil Liberties Union of Northern California urged the mayor and City Council to revise or rescind it, saying it suppressed “protected political speech.”

Newsom also called for uniform approaches by police in dealing with demonstrat­ions.

“Protesters have the right not to be harassed, protesters have the right to protest peacefully, protesters have the right to do so without being arrested, gassed and shot at by projectile­s,” he said.

Crowds continued to turn out at demonstrat­ions Friday. A bank of flowers grew on the sidewalk outside the Los Angeles County Hall of Justice after people were asked to bring roses symbolizin­g people they believe were victims of state violence.

A crowd once again formed outside Los Angeles City Hall while other demonstrat­ors marched in Hollywood.

Surfers held a traditiona­l paddle-out in waters off the Los Angeles County shoreline.

 ?? AP PHOTO/GREGORY BULL ?? Protesters march Thursday, in San Diego. Protests continue to be held in U.S. cities, sparked by the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapoli­s police officers on May 25.
AP PHOTO/GREGORY BULL Protesters march Thursday, in San Diego. Protests continue to be held in U.S. cities, sparked by the death of George Floyd, a black man who died after being restrained by Minneapoli­s police officers on May 25.

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