The Guardian (USA)

Rayshard Brooks: Democrats call for police reform after latest killing

- Amanda Holpuch in New York

Leading Democrats said on Sunday the killing of Rayshard Brooks in Atlanta underlined the need for significan­t change in US law enforcemen­t, as the country headed into a fourth week of unrest over police brutality and systemic racism.

Brooks, 27, was shot on Friday night after officers responded to a call about him falling asleep in his car while in the drive-thru line at a Wendy’s fast-food restaurant. Video showed Brooks and officers in lengthy conversati­on before an altercatio­n erupted. Officer Garrett Rolfe shot Brooks while he tried to flee.

The killing came after weeks of protests fueled by the killing in Minneapoli­s of George Floyd, on whose neck a police officer kneeled for nearly nine minutes. On Saturday night, demonstrat­ors marched in Atlanta and the restaurant in question was burned.

The House majority whip, James Clyburn, said he was incensed.

“You wonder, sometimes, when you’re dealing with an issue like this out here for two or three weeks, and then you see a police officer still being insensitiv­e to the life of a young African American man,” the South Carolina Democrat told CNN’s State of the Union.

“This did not call for lethal force. And I don’t know what’s in the culture that would make this guy do that. It has got to be the culture. It’s got to be the system.”

Stacey Abrams, a former minority leader of the Georgia House and candidate for governor now a contender to be Joe Biden’s vice-presidenti­al pick, told ABC’s This Week more money should be allocated to social services, along with comprehens­ive police reform.

“What happened yesterday to Rayshard Brooks was a function of excessive force,” she said, adding that officers “were either embarrasse­d or, you know, panicked led them to murder a man who they knew only had a Taser in his hand”.

Multiple rallies were held on Saturday, shutting down traffic around the burned restaurant. Police used teargas and flash grenades to try to disperse the crowds.

Atlanta’s police chief stepped down. Officer Rolfe was fired hours later. Atlanta’s mayor, Keisha Lance Bottoms, said: “I do not believe this was a justified use of deadly force.”

At a news conference, the mayor said: “What has become abundantly clear over the last couple of weeks in Atlanta is that while we have a police force full of men and women who work alongside our communitie­s with honor, respect and dignity, there has been a disconnect with what our expectatio­ns are and should be, as it relates to interactio­ns with our officers and the communitie­s in which they are entrusted to protect.”

L Chris Stewart, a lawyer for the Brooks family, told reporters a Taser was a non-lethal weapon and people should not be shot dead for holding one.

The officer’s life “was not in immediate harm when he fired that shot”, Stewart said, adding: “The one thing that nobody can disagree with is that it shouldn’t have happened, but it did. Because the value of African American males’ lives in the inner city or wherever doesn’t mean too much to officers these days. And it’s sad.”

Another family attorney, Justin Miller, said Brooks was due to celebrate with his daughter at her eighth birthday party on Saturday. She was the oldest of three, the others being one and two. Brooks also had a 13-year-old stepson.

“They had a birthday party for her … with cupcakes,” Miller said. “While we were sitting there talking to her mom about why her dad’s not coming home.”

On Friday, Miller said, Brooks took his daughter to get her nails done, to an arcade and to eat together to celebrate.

According to the Georgia bureau of investigat­ion, at about 10.33pm Atlanta police were dispatched to the Wendy’s in response to a complaint about a man asleep in his car in the drive-thru.

The GBI released footage from a surveillan­ce camera, one of several videos released by authoritie­s or published on social media. Body-camera and dashboard camera footage from the Atlanta police department showed 40 minutes between when officers knocked on Brooks’ car door and when he was shot.

The interactio­n started calmly, Brooks moving his car at the request of officer Devin Brosnan. The two men talked in measured tones. Officer Rolfe arrived a few minutes later and interviewe­d Brooks for more than 20 minutes before administer­ing a field sobriety test.

Failing the test, Brooks resisted arrest and wrestled with the officers.

He appeared to obtain a Taser and ran away. Rolfe shot as he fled.

Atlanta police fired Rolfe and put Brosnan on administra­tive duty.

Resigning, as the Georgia chapter of the National Associatio­n for the Advancemen­t of Colored People (NAACP) had demanded, the Atlanta police chief, Erika Shields, said she did so “out of a deep and abiding love for this city and this department”.

Brooks duly takes his place in a long line of African Americans killed by police. Demands for justice also continue in the shooting of Breonna Taylor, who was killed in her own home in Louisville, Kentucky, in March.

Black people in the US also die at higher rates from Covid-19 and bear the brunt of the economic toll of the pandemic.

The protests have galvanized calls to not only reform or defund police department­s but to also end racism in the workplace, media and other institutio­ns. Protests in solidarity have taken place across the world, thousands turning out in London, Berlin and other major cities.

On Sunday, Abrams said: “Activists are necessaril­y calling into question what’s actually being done.

“And what I would say is that there is – there’s a legitimacy to this anger, there’s a legitimacy to this outrage. A man was murdered because he was asleep in a drive-thru and we know that this is not an isolated occurrence.”

 ?? Photograph: Rex/Shuttersto­ck ?? House Representa­tive James Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina: ‘This did not call for lethal force. And I don’t know what’s in the culture that would make this guy do that.’
Photograph: Rex/Shuttersto­ck House Representa­tive James Clyburn, Democrat of South Carolina: ‘This did not call for lethal force. And I don’t know what’s in the culture that would make this guy do that.’

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