The Daily Telegraph

Black Lives Matter Thousands join march as protests spread to Britain

- By Ben Riley-smith in Washington, Rozina Sabur in Minneapoli­s, Josie Ensor in New York and Nick Allen

THREE former police officers present at the arrest of George Floyd were charged with aiding and abetting murder yesterday, while a fourth who pinned him down by the neck saw his charge upgraded to second-degree murder.

Thomas Lane, 37, J Alexander Kueng, 26, and Tou Thao, 34, were all involved in the incident when Derek Chauvin, 44, put his knee on Mr Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes as he pleaded “I can’t breathe.”

All four men had been fired by the Minneapoli­s Police Department last week but only Mr Chauvin had been arrested. Yesterday that changed, with arrests for all three issued as the charges were announced.

Keith Ellison, the Minnesota attorney general, told CNN: “If you assisted, advised, helped then you can be held culpable for the crime of another.” Mr Chauvin had initially been charged with third-degree murder. Ben Crump, a lawyer for Mr Floyd’s family called the moment “bitterswee­t”. He said: “We are gratified that this important action was brought before George Floyd’s body was laid to rest.”

Elsewhere yesterday Donald Trump’s own defence secretary said he was against deploying active-duty troops to counter protesters, just days after the US president suggested just that. Mark Esper, who heads the Pentagon, said he opposed using the Insurrecti­on Act – a two centuries-old law that allows a president to put soldiers in US streets that Mr Trump had indicated he wanted to use on Monday.

“The option to use active-duty forces in a law enforcemen­t role should only be used as a matter of last resort and only in the most urgent and dire of situations,” Mr Esper said.

“We are not in one of those situations now. I do not support invoking the Insurrecti­on Act.”

The comments came the day after Mr Esper distanced himself from Mr Trump’s decision to walk through ground that was cleared when peaceful protesters were pushed back by chemical gas and flash bangs. Mr Esper said he had thought the trip into Lafayette Square, just north of the White House, had been to inspect the damage from protesters and talk to troops but was unaware of the planned photo-op.

Mr Esper’s comments in recent days were said to have gone down “very poorly” in the White House.

It came as Barack Obama, the former US president, called on America’s mayors to review their “use of force” policies – which include allowing police to put a knee on a suspect’s neck in some parts of the country – and propose reforms. Mr Obama, the only Africaname­rican US president, praised those policemen who had “shown restraint” and said recent months have seen “epic changes or events” as “profound” as anything in his lifetime.

At one point Mr Obama said he wanted to speak “directly to the young men and women of colour in this country”, adding: “I want you to know that you matter. I want you to know that your lives matter, that your dreams matter.”

On Tuesday, the eighth night of protests, there was widespread breaking of curfews and peaceful demonstrat­ions. At the White House, more than 1,000 people gathered beyond the 7pm curfew. Mr Trump’s threat to deploy troops on Monday, combined with the use of force to drive protesters back so he could pose with a bible by a church near the White House, has faced a backlash on Capitol Hill.

Ben Sasse, a Republican from Nebraska, said: “I’m against clearing out a peaceful protest for a photo-op that treats the word of God as a political prop.” Lisa Murkowski, a Republican of Alaska, said: “I don’t think militarisa­tion is the answer to the anxiety, the fear, the distrust, the oppression we feel right now.”

Mr Trump showed no sign of backing down yesterday. In a tweet he said those on the streets included “killers, terrorists, arsonists, anarchists, thugs, hoodlums, looters, Antifa & others”. Antifa is a far-left militant movement.

In another he claimed to have “done more for black Americans, in fact, than any president in US history” with the exception of Abraham Lincoln.

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 ??  ?? Donald Trump cited Abraham Lincoln, above, in defence of his policies
Donald Trump cited Abraham Lincoln, above, in defence of his policies
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 ??  ?? London joins the US and internatio­nal protests with a mass gathering in Hyde Park, left, and Parliament Square, top left, to march in solidarity with the victims of antiblack violence; outside Downing Street protesters throw barriers, centre left; while a Manchester street artist memorialis­es Mr Floyd, right.
London joins the US and internatio­nal protests with a mass gathering in Hyde Park, left, and Parliament Square, top left, to march in solidarity with the victims of antiblack violence; outside Downing Street protesters throw barriers, centre left; while a Manchester street artist memorialis­es Mr Floyd, right.
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