MINNEAPOLIS
— Earlier in his career, the African-American chief of the Minneapolis police
sued his own department, accusing the leadership of tolerating racism. Once he
took charge, he vowed to make mending relations with the city’s black residents
a priority.
But
the department, with its long history of accusations of abuse, finds itself
under siege again after a video captured a black man suffocating beneath the
knee of a white officer, with three other officers failing to intervene.
Medaria
Arradondo, the chief, swiftly fired all four men on Tuesday and called for an
F.B.I. investigation once the video showed that the official police account of
the arrest of the man, George Floyd, bore little
resemblance to what actually occurred.
But
quelling the community rage has been a challenge.
Hundreds
of protesters poured into the Minneapolis streets for a second night on
Wednesday, with officers using tear gas and firing rubber bullets into the
crowds. Images on television and social media revealed at least one business,
an auto parts store, on fire and people carrying goods out of a store that had
been vandalized.
A
police spokesman told reporters that Wednesday’s protests were not as peaceful,
and that one person in the area had been fatally shot, although it was unclear
if the death was directly related to the protests. “Tonight was a different
night of protesting than it was just the night before,” said the spokesman,
John Elder.
The
chaos continued into Thursday morning, with additional reports of businesses
burning. The Star Tribune posted video showing
residents hosing down nearby homes in an effort to prevent them from catching
fire.
Some
demonstrators gathered at the house of the officer who detained Mr. Floyd and
the house of the local prosecutor, according to The Star Tribune.
There were also protests in Memphis and Los Angeles, where law
enforcement faced off with those who had blocked the 101 Freeway downtown.
Mr.
Floyd’s death — and the recent shooting death of Ahmaud
Arbery in Georgia — has also prompted comparisons to previous
killings involving the police and black people, including those of Eric Garner and Michael Brown.
Chief
Arradondo, who as a lieutenant joined a lawsuit that portrayed his department
as a cauldron of racist behavior, has struggled to overhaul the department.
Community activists are now calling for it to be federally reviewed, and for
murder charges against the officers involved in Mr. Floyd’s arrest and death.
Excessive
force complaints against Minneapolis officers have become commonplace,
especially by African-American residents. One of the officers involved in Mr.
Floyd’s death, a 19-year veteran of the department identified as Derek Chauvin, 44,
had several complaints filed
against him, three of which led to reprimands for his language and tone.
Mr.
Chauvin shot a man who was trying to grab an officer’s gun in 2008, according to The Pioneer Press.
He was also present at two other shootings, one of them fatal, but it was
unclear if he fired his weapon in those cases, according to Communities United
Against Police Brutality, a local organization advocating police reform.
African-Americans
account for about 20 percent of the city’s population, but they are more likely
to be pulled over, arrested and have force used against them than white
residents, Police Department data shows. And black people accounted for more
than 60 percent of the victims in Minneapolis police shootings from late 2009
through May 2019, data shows.
The
tension between the community and the 800-plus-officer force has unfolded in a
predominantly white and progressive metropolis, where the white mayor openly
discusses systemic racism, the police chief is a black man who embraces a
community-oriented approach and residents elected two black transgender
people to a City Council that has taken aggressive action to curb
racial segregation.
Yet
there is a deep rift between the city’s police force — which also is predominantly
white — and the community, one that seems to grow larger with each killing.
There
was Justine Ruszczyk, a white woman who was fatally shot by a black police
officer in 2017, and whose family was awarded $20 million in
a settlement with the city three days after the officer was convicted of murder.
There
was Thurman Blevins, a black man who begged two white police officers closing
in on him, “Please don’t shoot me. Leave me alone,” in a fatal encounter captured on body-camera footage.
His death two years ago led to protests across the city.
And
there was Chiasher Fong Vue, a Hmong man who was killed in December during a
shootout with nine officers, who fired more than 100 bullets, according to The Star Tribune.
“The
truth is we do not have a good history,” said Jamar B. Nelson, 41, a longtime
community activist. “The biggest complaint is that the community feels the Police
Department is racist, bigoted and uncaring about the black community.”
The
graphic video of Mr. Floyd’s death took Tiffany Roberson back nearly 20 years,
she said, to when an officer pinned her to the hood of a car, his forearm
across her neck as she gasped for air.
It
also reminded her of five years ago, when her brother Jamar Clark, the youngest
of her nine siblings, was shot and killed during an altercation with the police
on the city’s North Side.
“Watching
the video, I saw my brother’s face,” Ms. Roberson, who is black, said as she
broke down in tears. “The relationship that the black community has with
Minneapolis police is just to stay away. There is no trust. There is no
rapport.”
Mr.
Clark’s killing was something of an eruption of long-simmering tensions between
the community and the police. Protesters camped outside of a precinct for 18
days and were dismayed when police officers with riot gear and pepper spray
tore down their encampment at the direction of city leaders. Police union
leaders were upset it had taken that long for officers to get the green light
to clear out the demonstrators.
Mr.
Nelson pointed to one factor that he said had helped shape the tension: Most
police officers do not live within the city limits, he said, raising questions
about how well officers reflect or understand the communities they patrol.
“The
current police chief has been trying to repair the relationship,” Mr. Nelson
said of Mr. Arradondo, who was sworn in three years ago after his predecessor
was forced out in the wake of the controversial killing of
Ms. Ruszczyk. “He is the
first one to make it his business to hold his officers accountable for
inappropriate behavior. Him firing the four officers expeditiously is a big
deal.”
On
Wednesday, politicians spoke out against Mr. Floyd’s death. President Trump
called it a “very, very sad event,” and Joseph R. Biden Jr., the presumptive
Democratic presidential nominee, said it was “part of an ingrained, systemic
cycle of injustice that still exists in this country.”
Mr.
Floyd had moved to Minneapolis about five years ago from Houston, his hometown.
He was remembered in his Third Ward neighborhood as a star high school football
and basketball player, and had told relatives that he found the Minnesota city
to be a welcoming place.
“He
was happy there,” said Tera Brown, a cousin who was raised with him. “He had
made friends and had talked about training to become a truck driver.”
Those
pleasant feelings stood in stark contrast to what his family witnessed on the
video, filmed by a bystander, in which Mr. Floyd pleaded with officers, telling
them several times that he could not breathe.
Another
cousin, Shareeduh Tate, said she did not recognize Mr. Floyd the first time she
saw the video but thought “how horrible this was that a family’s loved one was
murdered in the streets.”
Then
she got a phone call that the man in the video was her cousin.
“First
I was numb,” she said. “Then shocked, then hurt, then angry. It was painful to
watch before I knew the person in the video was related to me. Now that I know
this person is my flesh and blood, the pain is magnified a trillion times.”
Ms.
Tate and many others, including Mayor Jacob Frey of Minneapolis, have called on
the authorities to charge the officers involved with crimes.
About
1 percent of complaints against police officers that have been adjudicated
since 2012 have resulted in disciplinary action, according to city records.
“The
fact that these officers were being filmed by bystanders and still continued to
engage in that conduct shows you everything about the culture of the Minneapolis
Police Department,” said Michelle Gross, the president of Communities United
Against Police Brutality. “They feel they’re immune to any kind of
accountability. They feel they can get away with it.”
While
politicians and activists in Minneapolis embrace the language of racial
justice, some critics say they often fail to put those words into action.
There
have been some hard-won police reforms, including a change to the use-of-force
manual requiring that officers intervene when they see colleagues using
excessive force.
One
of the biggest challenges to reforming the department, analysts say, is the
city’s powerful police union. It established its power in local politics in the
1970s, when Charles A. Stenvig, a former head of the Police Officers Federation
of Minneapolis, served three terms as mayor on a “law and order” platform.
Lt.
Bob Kroll, the head of the union, was accused in Chief Arradondo’s lawsuit
of calling a black congressman who was Muslim a “terrorist” and of wearing a
motorcycle jacket with a badge that said “white power.” Lieutenant Kroll did
not respond to messages seeking comment.
Mr.
Floyd was arrested and pinned to the ground in front of a building that is a
community hub, with a corner store, a check cashing business, apartments and a
mosque in the basement. A memorial popped up on the sidewalk with black
balloons and purple flowers.
Thomas
Adams, born and raised in northeast Minneapolis, skipped a job interview to pay
his respects on Wednesday.
“When
someone’s out cold like that, you stop,” said Mr. Adams, 37. “You don’t
continue on. It’s so upsetting. I came down here to speak my piece.”
Matt
Furber reported from Minneapolis, John Eligon from Kansas City, Mo., and Audra
D.S. Burch from Hollywood, Fla. Manny Fernandez contributed reporting from
Houston, and Neil MacFarquhar from New York. Susan Beachy contributed research.
Source Article
MeghansUncle2 Comment:
And the looting and firey riots begin. This is NOT an opportunity to burn it all down. Yet here it comes. This is sad on so many levels.
No comments:
Post a Comment