New York Daily News

Another day of anger flares across nation

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MINNEAPOLI­S — Protests formed across America again Sunday, even as glass and graffiti from the previous night’s unrest were still being cleaned up, with some violence and crime flaring in pockets of largely peaceful demonstrat­ions fueled by the killings of black people at the hands of police.

From Boston to San Francisco, protesters took to the streets once more, and some signs of trouble emerged in cities that have closed streets and imposed curfews after days of turmoil. People robbed stores in Philadelph­ia and Santa Monica, Calif., and a semitruck drove into a crowd of people that took over a portion of a highway in Minneapoli­s.

Protesters crawled on the truck, and police came in force to clear the highway in the city where the turbulence emerged after the death last week of George Floyd — a black man who pleaded that he couldn’t breathe after a white Minneapoli­s police officer pressed a knee into his neck. The protests quickly became national, spreading to dozens of cities large and small.

The officer who pressed his knee onto Floyd’s neck has been arrested and charged with murder, but protesters are demanding charges against all four officers at the scene. All four were fired.

In neighborin­g St. Paul, thousands gathered peacefully in front of the state Capitol, pledging to keep up the protests.

“We’re Minnesota nice, but we’re not Minnesota dumb, and we’re not done,” St. Paul Black Lives Matter organizer Darnella Wade said. “They sent us the military and we only asked them for arrests.”

Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz brought in thousands of National

Guard soldiers to help quell violence that had damaged or destroyed hundreds of buildings in Minneapoli­s over days of protests. The immense deployment appeared to have worked Saturday night.

On Sunday, state patrolmen and National Guard soldiers were lined up in front of the Capitol, facing the demonstrat­ors, with perhaps a dozen military-style armored vehicles behind them.

Across America, demonstrat­ors called again for an end to police violence.

“They keep killing our people,” said Mahira Louis, 15, who marched with her mother and several hundred others through downtown Boston. “I’m so sick and tired of it.”

Many also joined police in pleading for a stop to violence.

“It only hurts the cause,” said Danielle Outlaw, head of the police force in Philadelph­ia, where more than 200 people were arrested as fires and looting engulfed the heart of the city.

Disgust over generation­s of racism combined with a string of recent racially charged killings to stoke the anger. Adding to that was angst from months of lockdowns brought on by the coronaviru­s pandemic, which has disproport­ionately hurt communitie­s of color, not only in terms of infections but in job losses.

“Maybe this country will get the memo that we are sick of police murdering unarmed black men,” said Lex Scott, founder of Black Lives Matter Utah. “Maybe the next time a white police officer decides to pull the trigger, he will picture cities burning.”

The protests, sweeping from coast to coast and unfolding on a single night, rivaled the historic demonstrat­ions of the civil rights and Vietnam War eras.

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