I can't BREATHE!!!!! 4 Minneapolis cops fired after video shows one kneeling on neck of black man who later died
Four
Minneapolis police officers have been fired for their involvement in
the death of a black man who was held down with a knee as he protested
that he couldn't breathe, officials said Tuesday.
The
FBI is investigating the incident, which drew widespread condemnation
of the officers after a video showing part of the encounter circulated
on social media.
Mayor Jacob Frey said the technique used to pin George Floyd's head to the ground was against department regulations.
After
several minutes of pleading with an officer pressing a knee to the back
of his neck, the man appeared motionless, his eyes shut, his head
against the pavement.
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Officers
responding to an alleged forgery in progress Monday evening were
initially told that a person later described as the suspect was sitting
on a car and appeared to be under the influence, police said.
A
pair of officers located the man, who was at that point inside the car
and who police said "physically resisted" the officers when ordered to
get out. Officers handcuffed the man, who "appeared to be suffering
medical distress," according to police. He died at a hospital a short
time later, police said.
The four officers were "separated from employment," Officer Garrett Parten, a police spokesman, said Tuesday.
"I
support your decisions, one hundred percent," Frey, in a statement,
said of police Chief Medaria Arradondo's firing of the officers. "It is
the right decision for our city. The right decision for our community,
it is the right decision for the Minneapolis Police Department."
Frey,
speaking later during a town hall streamed on Facebook, said the
officer had no reason to employ the hold on the man's neck.
"The
technique that was used is not permitted; is not a technique that our
officers get trained in on," he said. "And our chief has been very clear
on that piece. There is no reason to apply that kind of pressure with a
knee to someone's neck."
The
video shows two officers by the man on the ground -- one of them with
his knee over the back of the man's neck. The video did not capture what
led up to the arrest or what police described as the man resisting
arrest.
"Please, I can't breathe,"
the man said, screaming for several minutes before he became silent.
Bystanders urged the officer to release the man from his hold.
Civil
rights attorney Benjamin Crump, in a statement, identified the man as
Floyd and said he was representing his family. The mayor also identified
him on Twitter.
"We all watched
the horrific death of George Floyd on video as witnesses begged the
police officer to take him into the police car and get off his neck,"
Crump said. "This abusive, excessive and inhumane use of force cost the
life of a man who was being detained by the police for questioning about
a non-violent charge."
Floyd's
cause and manner of death remains pending and is being investigated by
local, state and federal law enforcement, the Hennepin County Medical
Examiner's Office said in a statement.
News
footage showed small clusters of protesters waving signs and chanting
"No justice, no peace" outside a Minneapolis police precinct Tuesday
afternoon. Some motorists honked in support.
Another
protest was planned near a makeshift memorial to Floyd at the scene of
the incident Tuesday night, CNN affiliate WCCO TV reported. It was being
organized by local activists groups, including the Minneapolis NAACP.
Minnesota
Sen. Amy Klobuchar via Twitter called the incident "yet another
horrifying and gutwrenching instance of an African American man dying."
Frey
on Tuesday offered his condolences to the man's family, adding that
"what we saw was horrible, completely and utterly messed up."
"For five minutes, we watched as a white officer pressed his knee to the neck of a black man," Frey told reporters.
"When
you hear someone calling for help, you are supposed to help. This
officer failed in the most basic human sense. What happened on Chicago
and 38th this last night is simply awful. It was traumatic and it serves
as a clear reminder of just how far we have to go."
"Being black in America," Frey said, should not be "a death sentence."
The Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis said in a statement the officers were cooperating in the investigation.
"Now
is not the time rush to (judgment) and immediately condemn our
officers," the statement said. "Officers' actions and training protocol
will be carefully examined after the officers have provided their
statements."
In a Facebook video
posted Monday, bystanders urged the officer to get off the man. Two
officers handled the man on the ground while another stood nearby with
his eyes on the bystanders as traffic passed in the background.
"My stomach hurts," the man told the officer. "My neck hurts. Everything hurts."
At one point the man said, "Give me some water or something. Please. Please."
"His nose is bleeding," a woman said of the man.
"He's not even resisting arrest," one man said. "He's not responding right now, bro."
Frey
said he understood the anger in the community but reminded potential
protesters that "there is another danger out there right now which is
Covid-19."
"We need to make sure
that everyone that is protesting and that is voicing their opinion stays
safe and their families are protected as well," he said. "So please,
practice safe distancing, please use a mask."
Minnesota
Gov. Tim Walz tweeted Tuesday, "The lack of humanity in this disturbing
video is sickening. We will get answers and seek justice."
St.
Paul, Minnesota, Mayor Melvin Carter called the video of the incident
"one of the most vile and heartbreaking images I've ever seen."
"The
officer who stood guard is just as responsible as his partner; both
must be held fully accountable," Carter tweeted. "This must stop now."
Paige Fernandez, policing policy adviser for the ACLU, said the incident recalled the 2014 New York death of Eric Garner,
who repeated "I can't breathe" several times after a police officer
held him in a chokehold. Garner died during the arrest, the incident
also caught on video.
"Even in
places like Minneapolis, where chokeholds are technically banned, Black
people are targeted by the police for low-level offenses and are
subjected to unreasonable, unnecessary violence," Fernandez said in a
statement. "Make no mistake: George Floyd should be alive today. The
officers responsible must be held accountable."
The
Hennepin County Attorney's office said in a statement Tuesday that the
Minnesota Department of Public Safety Bureau of Criminal Apprehension
was investigating, along with the FBI. There was no immediate response
from the FBI.
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