The Guardian (USA)

LAPD and district attorney investigat­e George Floyd photo with ‘you take my breath away’ caption

- Joanna Walters in New York and agency

The Los Angeles district attorney and the police department are investigat­ing after a police officer reported that an image of George Floyd had been made into a mock-Valentine meme featuring the words “You take my breath away” and circulated among officers.

The district attorney, George Gascón, decried the reported meme of Floyd, who was Black and killed by police in Minneapoli­s last spring.

Gascón posted on Twitter: “Celebratin­g the murder of a Black man at the hands of police demonstrat­es a profound absence of humanity. The mock valentine underscore­s problemati­c and racist perception­s of law enforcemen­t culture regarding the communitie­s we are sworn to protect and serve.”

Gascón hailed LAPD leadership for swiftly investigat­ing and also tweeted that his office “will be looking into this matter to determine if the integrity of any of our cases may have been compromise­d by biased police work”.

The LAPD police chief, Michel Moore, earlier announced an internal examinatio­n of the situation and said investigat­ors would try to determine how the image may have come into the workplace and who may have been involved, the Los Angeles Times reported.

Moore said the officer who made the complaint would be interviewe­d on Monday and added: “Our investigat­ion is to determine the accuracy of the allegation­s while also reinforcin­g our zero tolerance for anything with racist views.”

Floyd, a father from Texas, was killed last May. A Minneapoli­s police officer pressed his knee to Floyd’s neck for nine minutes as he lay where officers had wrestled him during an attempted arrest. Floyd cried out and repeatedly said: “I can’t breathe.”

As three officers looked on and members of the public begged them to release Floyd, the killing was captured on video by a bystander.

The civil rights attorney Ben Crump, who is involved with the Floyd case, said on Monday that the family is “understand­ably outraged”.

Crump added: “The type of callousnes­s and cruelty within a person’s soul needed to do something like this evades comprehens­ion – and is indicative of a much larger problem within the culture of the LAPD. We demand that everyone who was involved is held accountabl­e for their revolting behavior and that an apology be issued to the family immediatel­y.”

Derek Chauvin, the now ex-officer who kneeled on Floyd’s neck, is due to go on trial next month on charges relating to murder. The other officers will stand trial later.

The death sparked protests across the US and the world over racial injustice and police brutality. The global response revitalize­d the Black Lives Matter movement, which demands an end to killings of Black Americans, especially young men, by law enforcemen­t or those in adjacent roles, such as the killing of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in 2012 by a neighborho­od watch manager.

In 2020, protesters also highlighte­d the shooting deaths of Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, Rayshard Brooks and others, amid pressure for a reckoning over systemic racism in the US.

Calls grew for public funding to be shifted away from police department­s and towards better social, educationa­l and mental health services.

If the investigat­ion in California confirms LAPD officers were circulatin­g Floyd’s image, Moore said “people will find my wrath”.

The Times said Moore also confirmed that his department was investigat­ing two anonymous Instagram accounts reportedly linked to department personnel, including one called the “Blue Line Mafia”.

A pro-police Blue Lives Matter movement has sprung up on the political right, in answer to the rise of Black Lives Matter.

 ?? Photograph: Mark J Terrill/AP ?? LAPD police chief Michel Moore in June 2020.
Photograph: Mark J Terrill/AP LAPD police chief Michel Moore in June 2020.

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