Several hundred peaceful demonstrators gathered Wednesday evening on the state Capitol Mall in St. Paul to protest a Kentucky grand jury’s decision not to charge three Louisville police officers in the death of Breonna Taylor.
Taylor, an unarmed Black woman, was shot and killed in her apartment during a March drug raid after her boyfriend shot and wounded one of the officers, all of whom then returned fire. But the no-knock warrant used to search her home was connected to a suspect who did not live there, and no drugs were found inside.
One of the officers involved was charged Wednesday with wanton endangerment for shooting into neighboring units, but not for killing Taylor, a 26-year-old emergency medical technician.
Protesters who gathered at the Minnesota Capitol about 6 p.m. decried what they called as the criminal justice system’s failure to hold the officers accountable for Taylor’s death.
Leslie Redmond, president of the Minneapolis NAACP, called it “a troubling day.”
Redmond said she and 86 others who were arrested in July as they protested outside the Louisville home of Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron received harsher treatment under the law than the officers who killed Taylor.
“I have a court date and the cops who killed Breonna Taylor don’t,” she said.
Michelle Gross, president of Minneapolis-based Communities United against Police Brutality, called for all police shootings to be investigated by independent prosecutors, rather than district attorneys who she said are too closely allied with law enforcement.
Following a roughly hourlong rally, the demonstrators began marching west along University Avenue, delaying some Green Line rail service, according to Metro Transit. By 8 p.m., the marchers appeared to be headed toward Interstate 94.
Taylor was among several Black Americans to die in recent months at the hands of police, galvanizing a wave of protests that swept across the United States this summer.
The death of George Floyd, who died in May after being pinned to the ground by the knee of Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, sparked nearly a week of protests and riots in the Twin Cities and across the country.
The Wednesday rally in St. Paul was organized via social media by Black Lives Matter Minnesota, the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations and a handful of local racial justice organizations.
tinyurlis.gdu.nuclck.ruulvis.netshrtco.de
مقالات مشابه
- With new shops, street improvements in mind, Saturday’s ‘Rice and LarpenTOUR’ showcases three cities
- رزویل مرد متهم به تهدید به سوزاندن خانه های همسایگان 'در حالی که شما خواب در آن بیش از سیاه و سفید زندگی می کند توجه به علائم
- ویسکانسین گزارش 500 ویروس جدید موارد به عنوان اقامت در خانه ادامه بحث
- ترفند های خانه داری و زندگی - سیاره ترفند ها
- دانشمندان: تقویت کننده آنتی بادی ها را تقویت می کند، محافظت در برابر Omicron را بهبود می بخشد
- شرکت صادرات و واردات کالاهای مختلف از جمله کاشی و سرامیک و ارائه دهنده خدمات ترانزیت و بارگیری دریایی و ریلی و ترخیص کالا برای کشورهای مختلف از جمله روسیه و کشورهای حوزه cis و سایر نقاط جهان - بازرگانی علی قانعی
- مهمان نظر: عرضه مواد غذایی زنجیره لینک کلیک کنید همه ما - Fri, 15 May 2020 PST
- کرم ضد آفتاب و شایع ترین عوارض احتمالی آن که نمی دانید
- هیچ اجماع و در عین حال در NBA بازگشت-به-بازی بازی های برنامه ریزی منابع می گویند
- من و ما: حقوق فردی مشترک خوب و coronavirus - Mon, 18 مارس سال 2020 PST