The Guardian (USA)

‘Aren’t our lives worth more?’: Daunte Wright mourned at Minneapoli­s funeral

- Chris McGreal in Minneapoli­s

Two days after the streets of Minneapoli­s filled with people celebratin­g the conviction of a former police officer for murdering George Floyd, the city held a funeral on Thursday for Daunte Wright, a young Black man shot dead by police during a traffic stop.

The killing of Wright, 20, two weeks ago by a police officer who said she mistook her gun for a Taser shocked a city still reeling from Floyd’s death and anxiously watching the trial of his killer, Derek Chauvin. The shooting of Wright, the father of a one-year-old boy, in the Minneapoli­s suburb of Brooklyn Center sparked days of protests and led to dozens of arrests.

Wright’s white coffin was covered in red roses as hundreds of mourners, including Representa­tive Ilhan Omar, whose district includes Minneapoli­s, and Senator Amy Klobuchar, paid respects at Shiloh Temple Internatio­nal Ministries.

The service began with gospel songs and prayers before Keyon Harrold, a renowned jazz trumpeter whose son was falsely accused by a white woman of stealing her phone in a New York hotel earlier this year, performed while an artist drew a likeness of Wright.

Wright’s mother, Katie, wept as she remembered her son.

“I never imagined I’d be standing here. The roles should be completely reversed. My son should be burying me,” she said.

Floyd’s relatives were among the mourners at the funeral as was the veteran civil rights leader the Rev Al Sharpton, who gave a eulogy that picked up on the competing claims for why Wright was stopped. The police said it was because the licence tags on his car had expired.

His mother, Katie, said her son called her and said he had been pulled over because he had an air freshener hanging from the rear-view mirror, which is an offence in Minnesota.

“We’ve come today as the air fresheners for Minnesota,” said Sharpton, who also gave the eulogy at Floyd’s funeral last year. “We’re trying to get the stench of police brutality out of the atmosphere. We’re trying to get the stench of racism out of the atmosphere. We’re trying to get the stench of racial profiling out of the atmosphere.

“We’ve come to Minnesota as air fresheners because your air is too odorous for us to breathe. We can’t breathe in your stinking air no more.”

When the police attempted to arrest Wright after the traffic stop on outstandin­g warrants, he tried to get back in his vehicle and leave. But he was unarmed and evidently not a threat.

The police officer who shot him, Kim Potter, has been charged with second-degree manslaught­er after claiming she meant to reach for her Taser but instead fired her gun. Potter and Brooklyn Center’s police chief resigned after the shooting.

Ben Crump, the lawyer for the Wright and the Floyd families, led the mourners in a chant of “Daunte Wright’s life mattered”.

Crump turned to Minnesota’s attorney general, Keith Ellison, and said that he hoped the state would pursue “full justice”.

“Too often traffic stops end up as death sentences,” he said.

On Wednesday, the public paid respects to Wright who lay in an open casket dressed in a jean jacket decorated with red and green buttons, and blanketed with red roses.

Minnesota’s governor, Tim Walz, issued a proclamati­on calling for a statewide two minutes of silence at noon to remember Wright.

 ??  ?? Wright family lawyer Benjamin Crump, right, with Daunte’s uncle, Bobby McGee, at the funeral on Thursday. Photograph: Chelsea Lauren/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Wright family lawyer Benjamin Crump, right, with Daunte’s uncle, Bobby McGee, at the funeral on Thursday. Photograph: Chelsea Lauren/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
 ??  ?? Aubrey and Katie Wright receive a flag presented by Ilhan Omar during the funeral. Photograph: Stephen Maturen/Getty Images
Aubrey and Katie Wright receive a flag presented by Ilhan Omar during the funeral. Photograph: Stephen Maturen/Getty Images

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