Miami Herald

Attorneys join protesters to call for oversight of police force, reforms

- BY ADRIANA BRASILEIRO AND BIANCA PADRÓ OCASIO abrasileir­o@miamiheral­d.com bpadro@miamiheral­d.com

A group of public defense attorneys joined protesters in downtown Miami on Monday afternoon to demonstrat­e against police brutality and support the black community.

About a hundred protesters gathered in front of the Miami-Dade Public Defender’s office downtown and marched around the block to the office of Miami-Dade State Attorney Katherine Fernandez Rundle, who has been a frequent target of protests for being too lenient with cops accused of using excessive force.

Monday marked the 10th consecutiv­e day of protests in Miami-Dade, as mostly peaceful demonstrat­ions against police brutality raged in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd, an unarmed 46-year-old black man who died after a Minneapoli­s police officer pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes on Memorial Day.

“We all work in the system,” said Nicole Almeida Sinder, an attorney who is the president of the Greater Miami chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union of Florida.

Calls for police reforms, which have set the tone for demonstrat­ions across the country and in many parts of the world, are growing louder two weeks after the world watched a videotape of the police officer, Derek Chauvin, driving his knee into Floyd’s neck while he lay face down on the ground, uttering, “I can’t breathe.”

Over the weekend, protesters in Wynwood, Homestead and even in suburban Miami Lakes gathered to appeal for an end to abusive police tactics and systemic racism. While the demonstrat­ions were largely peaceful, there were a few tense moments: Sunday night, scores of protesters climbed onto Interstate 95 from an embankment near Wynwood but couldn’t get down. A line of police officers had to escort the group to a safe exit spot near Northwest 27th Street.

A few clashes occurred on Saturday in Miramar, Wynwood and around Florida Internatio­nal University, but the demonstrat­ions were far more calm than the previous weekend, when several Miami police cars were set ablaze, some stores were looted at Bayside Marketplac­e and cops used tear gas to disperse protesters in Fort Lauderdale. One protester, LaToya Ratlieff, was shot in the eye with a rubber bullet.

Still, protests were mostly peaceful, leading MiamiDade Mayor Carlos Gimenez to lift a countywide curfew that’s been in effect for over a week. His office also announced that beaches in Miami-Dade will reopen on Wednesday after a more than two-month closure.

The mood in downtown Miami on Monday was calm, as Sinder talked to the group of protesters about how police in Florida must prosecute police officers accused of brutality.

She said that a group of public attorneys had planned the protest in support of the black community.

While police oversight in Miami-Dade is already in the works in the form of a proposed police civilian oversight board, Sinder said that’s not enough.

“It’s never going to have the county teeth we want it to so long as the Policeman’s Bill of Rights is law in Florida,” she said, explaining that the law undermines police accountabi­lity in the state.

Sinder added that Florida is one of 14 states that has these protection­s, which she says must be repealed.

“You need to reach out. You need to send emails. You need to call; it doesn’t end here, please,” Sinder told the crowd.

Protesters, many of whom were affiliated with the public defender’s office, called out Fernandez Rundle’s leniency toward police officers during her tenure.

The longtime MiamiDade state attorney has been severely criticized for a track record of not prosecutin­g police officers accused of brutality, including fatal shootings.

“Hey, hey! Ho, ho! KFR has got to go,” protesters chanted.

 ?? HERALD STAFF Bianca Padró Ocasio ?? Nicole Almeida Sinder, an attorney and president of the Greater Miami chapter of the ACLU of Florida, said the state needs more police accountabi­lity. She took part in a protest in downtown Miami on Monday. Many of the protesters were lawyers from the Miami-Dade Public Defender’s office.
HERALD STAFF Bianca Padró Ocasio Nicole Almeida Sinder, an attorney and president of the Greater Miami chapter of the ACLU of Florida, said the state needs more police accountabi­lity. She took part in a protest in downtown Miami on Monday. Many of the protesters were lawyers from the Miami-Dade Public Defender’s office.

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