The Guardian (USA)

FBI investigat­es death of black man after footage shows officer kneeling on his neck

- Kenya Evelyn in Washington Maanvi Singh contribute­d reporting

The FBI and authoritie­s in Minnesota have launched investigat­ions into the death of an African American man after an incident, captured on video, in which a white Minneapoli­s police officer knelt on his neck as he lay on the ground.

In the footage the man, later identified as George Floyd,46, can be heard to shout “I cannot breathe” and “Don’t kill me!” He then becomes motionless, eyes closed, face-first on the road.

On Tuesday, hundreds of protesters, many in face masks, lined the Minneapoli­s intersecti­on where Floyd died. Some carried signs reading “I can’t breathe” and “jail killer KKKops”, chanting: “Prosecute the police.”

Protesters marched through the neighborho­od to a city police precinct, where windows were damaged and squad cars sprayed with graffiti. Police in riot gear fired teargas and deployed stun grenades at demonstrat­ors.

Speakers at the demonstrat­ion welcomed news that four police officers involved in the incident had been fired. The FBI is investigat­ing the incident for possible civil rights violations.

“For five minutes we watched as a white officer pressed his knee to the neck of a black man,” Jacob Frey, the Minneapoli­s mayor, said in a press conference earlier in the day. “For five minutes. This officer failed in the most basic human sense.

“[Floyd] should not have died,” Frey added, apologizin­g to the family and the black community in Minneapoli­s.

The incident happened late on Monday, when officers responded to a call from a grocery store that claimed Floyd had used a forged check. When located in his car, police said, he “physically resisted officers” while possibly under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

In a press conference on Tuesday, the Minneapoli­s police department confirmed he “died a short time” after a “medical incident”, after being transporte­d to hospital.

“[They] were able to get the suspect into handcuffs and realized that the suspect was suffering a medical distress,” a spokesman said, saying officers “called for an ambulance”.

In the video footage, witnesses can be heard shouting at officers to get off Floyd’s neck. One yells: “Bro, he’s not even fucking moving!” Another asks if “you’re going to just sit there with your knee on his neck?”

Another witness says: “Did you kill him?”

On Tuesday afternoon, Frey announced that four police officers had been fired.

In a Facebook video, a witness, Darnella Frazier, said she stopped to record the incident as she was on her way to meet friends. Officers had already pinned Floyd to the ground, she said, when one began kneeling on him.

“They was pinning him down by his neck and he was crying. They wasn’t trying to take him serious,” she said. “The police killed him, bro, right in front of everybody.”

Floyd’s family retained the prominent civil rights attorney Benjamin Crump, who in a statement said Floyd’s death was the result of “abusive, excessive and inhumane use of force”.

“We will seek justice for the family of George Floyd, as we demand answers from the Minnesota police department,” Crump said. “How many ‘while black’ deaths will it take until the racial profiling and undervalui­ng of black lives by police finally ends?”

Outrage continued to grow on Tuesday, locally and online. The mayor of St Paul, Melvin Carter, called the footage of “a defenseles­s, handcuffed man one of the most vile and heartbreak­ing images” he had ever seen.

Law enforcemen­t officials in Minnesota have come under fire in recent years. Protests erupted in the state in 2016, after 32-year-old Philando Castile, who was black, was shot and killed by a St Anthony police officer during a traffic stop. Footage of the incident also went viral online.

The officer, Jeronimo Yanez, who is Latino, was acquitted of a seconddegr­ee manslaught­er charge and two counts of dangerous discharge of a firearm.

On Tuesday, the Minneapoli­s city council member Andrea Jenkins said in a statement the community “must demand answers” as it “continues to be traumatize­d again, and again and again”.

The Democratic Minnesota senator Amy Klobuchar demanded “a complete and thorough outside investigat­ion”, saying in a statement: “Those involved in this incident must be held accountabl­e.”

Klobuchar, a former 2020 presidenti­al candidate, has faced criticism for not prosecutin­g controvers­ial police killings of black people when she was a county district attorney.

Body camera footage was turned over to the Minnesota bureau of criminal apprehensi­on (MBCA).

The MBCA said the officers’ names would be released after initial interviews with the people involved and witnesses. It also confirmed FBI officials were conducting a separate federal civil rights investigat­ion, at the request of Minneapoli­s police.

The MBCA did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

 ?? Photograph: Kerem Yucel/AFP/Getty Images ?? A protester prays in front of the memorial of George Floyd who died in custody on 26 May 2020 in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota.
Photograph: Kerem Yucel/AFP/Getty Images A protester prays in front of the memorial of George Floyd who died in custody on 26 May 2020 in Minneapoli­s, Minnesota.
 ?? Photograph: Richard Tsong-Taatarii/AP ?? Protesters march in Minneapoli­s on Tuesday.
Photograph: Richard Tsong-Taatarii/AP Protesters march in Minneapoli­s on Tuesday.

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