Orlando Sentinel

Trump: Stop the ‘lowlifes and losers’

- By Zeke Miller and Matt Sedensky

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump on Tuesday turned up the pressure on governors to quell the violence set off by the death of George Floyd, demanding New York call up the National Guard to stop the “lowlifes and losers.”

As more demonstrat­ions began taking shape around the country, the president amplified his hard-line calls of a day earlier, in which he threatened to send in the military to restore order if governors didn’t do it.

“NYC, CALL UP THE NATIONAL GUARD,” he tweeted. “The lowlifes and losers are ripping you apart. Act fast! Don’t make the same horrible and deadly mistake you made with the Nursing Homes!!!”

One day after a crackdown on peaceful protesters near the White House, thousands of demonstrat­ors massed a block away from the presidenti­al mansion, facing law enforcemen­t personnel standing across a black chain-link fence. The fence had been put up overnight to block access to Lafayette Park, just across the street from the White House.

In New York, where crowds of people on Monday night smashed store windows and police made nearly 700 arrests, Mayor Bill de Blasio extended an 8 p.m. curfew all week.

“We're going to have a tough few days,” he warned, but added: “We're going to beat it back.”

He pleaded with community leaders to step forward and “create peace.”

More than 20,000 National Guard members have been called up in 29 states to deal with the violence. New York is not among them, and De Blasio has said he does not want the Guard. On Tuesday, Democratic Gov. Andrew Cuomo called what happened in the city “a disgrace.”

“The NYPD and the mayor did not do their job last night,” he said said at a briefing in Albany.

He said the mayor underestim­ated the problem, and the nation's largest police force was not deployed in sufficient numbers, though the city had said it doubled the usual police presence.

In Atlanta, police fired tear gas at demonstrat­ors. In Nashville, Tennessee, more than 60 National Guard members put down their riot shields at the request of peaceful protesters. At a demonstrat­ion in Buffalo, New York, an SUV plowed into a group of officers, injuring three.

An officer was shot and gravely wounded as police tried to disperse a crowd outside a Las Vegas hotel and casino. Four officers were shot in St. Louis; they were expected to recover.

Philadelph­ia officials described a chaotic night in which one person was killed trying to use explosives to open an ATM, a gun shop owner fatally shot a would-be thief, and a 19-year-old died of injuries during looting.

About a dozen other deaths have been reported around the country over the past week. And more than 5,600 people nationwide have been arrested for offenses such as stealing, blocking highways and breaking curfew, according to a count by The Associated Press.

“We have been sitting on a powder keg for some time and it has burst,” Philadelph­ia Police Commission­er Danielle Outlaw said.

Some protesters framed the burgeoning movement as a necessity after a string of killings by police.

“I fear for my safety every time I get in the car to go for a drive. I fear of getting pulled over. I fear for all 10 of my brothers' and sisters' lives, for my parents' lives!” 19-year-old Amari Burroughs of Parkland, Florida, said Tuesday as she prepared for another protest.

“My goal is to use my voice and my leadership to make this world safer so that one day I can bring children here and won't have to fear for their safety.”

Outside the Minnesota Capitol in St. Paul, where a youth protest was held Tuesday, 18-year-old Joseph Tawah agreed.

“It's really hard not to feel afraid,” he said.

Meanwhile, governors and mayors rejected Trump's threat to send in the military, with some saying troops would be unnecessar­y and others questionin­g whether the government has such authority and warning that such a step would be dangerous.

“Denver is not Little Rock in 1957, and Donald Trump is not President Eisenhower. This is a time for healing, for bringing people together, and the best way to protect civil rights is to move away from escalating violence,” Colorado Gov. Jared Polis and Denver Mayor Michael Hancock, both Democrats, said in a statement, referring to Eisenhower's use of troops to enforce school desegregat­ion in the South.

A senior White House official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said that the president is not rushing to send in the military and that his goal was to pressure governors to deploy more National Guard members.

Such use of the military would mark a stunning federal interventi­on rarely seen in modern American history.

Federal law allows presidents to dispatch the military into states to suppress an insurrecti­on or if a state is defying federal law, legal experts said. But some state officials asserted that the president does not have a unilateral right to send in troops against the will of local government­s.

Minnesota, meanwhile, opened a probe into whether the Minneapoli­s Police Department has a pattern of discrimina­tion against minorities. Floyd died May 25 after a white police officer, Derek Chauvin, pressed his knee on the handcuffed black man's neck for several minutes.

Gov. Tim Walz and the Minnesota Department of Human Rights announced the filing Tuesday.

“We know that deeply seated issues exist,” Walz said. “I know it because we saw the casual nature of the erasing of George Floyd's life and humanity.”

Amid the protests, cities struggled to keep police in line and avoid instances of excessive force.

The police chief in Louisville, Kentucky, was fired after a restaurant owner was killed by police and National Guard members enforcing a curfew. In Atlanta, six officers were charged after a video showed authoritie­s dragging two young people from a car during protests.

 ?? DANIEL SLIM/GETTY-AFP ?? Protesters lie Tuesday in front of Lafayette Square, where many were tear gassed the evening before, in Washington.
DANIEL SLIM/GETTY-AFP Protesters lie Tuesday in front of Lafayette Square, where many were tear gassed the evening before, in Washington.

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