Albany Times Union (Sunday)

Protests ignoring curfew in NYC

Politician­s, civil liberties groups call for end to limit

- By Brian Mahoney Associated Press

New York Demonstrat­ions over the death of George Floyd continued in New York

City on Saturday with thousands taking to the streets and parks to protest police brutality, as the city continued to enforce an 8 p.m. curfew that has created tensions between protesters and police.

At protests in Manhattan, volunteers handed out snacks, first aid kits and plenty of water bottles on a muggy afternoon. One person carried a sign listing nearby open buildings for those seeking to escape the heat — which some soon did when a rain storm arrived.

Thousands of people crossed the Brooklyn Bridge into lower Manhattan, where other groups numbering in the hundreds to thousands marched or gathered in places like Foley Square, home to state and federal court buildings, and Washington Square Park, in Greenwich Village.

Further uptown, police had erected barriers to all but closed off Times Square to vehicle and foot traffic.

Julian Arriola-hennings said he didn’t expect the movement to slow down anytime soon.

“I’m never surprised by people taking action because inaction, it really hurts the soul,” he said as he told protesters at Washington Square Park that they would soon march from there to City Hall.

“People’s feet get tired, their souls get re-energized for the right purpose.”

Local politician­s and civil liberties advocates have called for an end to the 8 p.m. curfew, complainin­g that it causes needless friction when officers try to enforce it.

But Mayor Bill de Blasio has insisted the curfew will remain in place throughout the weekend.

Images on social media on Friday night about an hour after a Brooklyn protest ended showed officers surroundin­g a group of protesters and chasing down some with batons. And officers on Manhattan’s East Side also used force to break up remnants of a march that started near the mayor’s official residence.

There were about 40 arrests citywide Friday and no obvious signs of the stealing that marred protests earlier in the week.

On Saturday, Antoinette Henry wasn’t surprised people were still marching after more than a week, even though she said she had seen violence from police earlier in the week.

She added she thinks protests could continue next week, even as some will go back to work when New York City begins its reopening.

Also Saturday, police announced charges against a man who allegedly stabbed a police officer in the neck in Brooklyn Wednesday. Dzenan Camovic, 20, is hospitaliz­ed in critical condition with multiple gunshot wounds. The Brooklyn resident faces charges including attempted murder of a police officer, robbery, assault of a police officer and a weapons charge.

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