Protesters invoke different names to decry police treatment
Source: Associated Press
Protesters invoke different names to decry police treatment
By DON BABWIN
June 1, 2020
CHICAGO (AP) In Baltimore, protesters shouted the name of Freddie Gray. In Topeka, Kansas, T-shirts were emblazoned with the name of Dominique White. In Tulsa, Oklahoma, people gathered in a spot where white mobs killed hundreds of blacks a century ago and chanted the name of Terence Crutcher.
Across the U.S. as protesters poured into the streets to voice anger about last weeks death of George Floyd, they also marked the occasion with reminders that the handcuffed black man who pleaded for air as on officer pinned him to the pavement with his knee on his neck is simply the latest addition to a grim roster.
Their stories have substantial differences, but protesters used their names and faces on posters to drive home the point that Floyd is part of a larger story about the dangers of being black in the United States.
George Floyd is causing people in their own communities to recall, reflect and then get angry all over again about their own police killings, said Marshall Hatch, a Chicago minister who eulogized Bettie Jones, who was struck by a bullet from an officer responding to a domestic dispute at a neighbors house that also left 19-year-old Quintonio LeGrier dead in 2015.
Hatch said Floyds death has served as a reminder to continue to push for justice in deaths throughout the country. He said that on Wednesday, he and other religious leaders plan to gather outside police headquarters to demand the officer who was fired after fatally shooting Jones and LeGrier also face criminal charges.
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Read more: https://apnews.com/3455d2830afbf08f8f28879f177b5037