Unrest Spreads as George Floyd Grief Morphs Into Looting and Violence

Tom Ozimek
By Tom Ozimek
June 1, 2020US News
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Unrest Spreads as George Floyd Grief Morphs Into Looting and Violence
Demonstrators vandalize a car as they protest the death of George Floyd, near the White House in Washington on May 31, 2020. (Evan Vucci/AP Photo)

Anger raged across America this weekend, as an outpouring of grief over the death of George Floyd in police custody devolved into riots, looting, and violence against property and people.

Fires burned near the White House, stores were looted across the country, and disturbing footage of violent acts flooded social media, including of a mob beating an elderly female shop owner in Rochester, New York.

The unrest began with peaceful protests over the May 25 death of Floyd, a black man, who communicated trouble breathing as Derek Chauvin, a white police officer, restrained him with a knee to the neck and head area for nearly 9 minutes.

Derek Chauvin
Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin in a booking photograph (L) and Chauvin, when still an officer (R). (Hennepin County Jail; Darnella Frazier via AP)

Chauvin, fired from the Minneapolis Police Department, was charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter, though that did little to stem the fury.

“I understand the pain that people are feeling. We support the right of peaceful protesters, and we hear their pleas,” said President Donald Trump, at a speech following Saturday’s launch of a rocket that sent two NASA astronauts into space.

“But what we are now seeing on the streets of our cities has nothing to do with justice or with peace,” Trump continued, saying that “the memory of George Floyd is being dishonored by rioters, looters, and anarchists.”

The weekend’s unrest saw the Nashville City Hall set on fire, and stores along Beverly Hills’s famed Rodeo Drive and along Chicago’s Magnificent Mile looted and vandalized.

“The violence and vandalism is being led by Antifa and other radical left-wing groups who are terrorizing the innocent, destroying jobs, hurting businesses, and burning down buildings,” Trump said.

A Molotov cocktail hits a police car
A Molotov cocktail hits a police car during a protest in Ferguson, Missouri, on May 31, 2020. (Lawrence Bryant/Reuters)

Struggling to cope with the civil unrest, local law enforcement was reinforced by around 5,000 members of the National Guard, which deployed to 15 states and Washington, D.C., according to Air Force Gen. Joseph Lengyel, chief of the National Guard Bureau.

“The hardest mission we do is responding in times of civil unrest,” Lengyel said in a statement.

Guard members performed various tasks, including putting out fires set ablaze by rioters.

“Aircrews were using forest fire equipment, including helicopter water buckets, to put out building fires at protests last night,” Lengyel said.

Among the early casualties of the riot-fueled fires was a six-story building under construction in Minneapolis, the epicenter of the violence, which was to provide nearly 200 apartments of affordable housing.

A multi-story affordable housing complex burns
A burning multi-story affordable housing complex under construction near the Third Precinct, in Minneapolis, Minn., on May 27, 2020. (Mark Vancleave/Star Tribune via AP)

“We’re burning our own neighborhood,” said a distraught Deona Brown, a 24-year-old woman standing with a friend outside the precinct station, where a small group of protesters was shouting at a dozen or so stone-faced police officers in riot gear. “This is where we live, where we shop, and they destroyed it.”

Elsewhere in the country, a protest along the historic Route 66 into downtown Albuquerque, New Mexico, turned violent early Monday after police reported demonstrators setting small fires and officers said they were fired upon.

A Sunday afternoon of mostly peaceful protests in Boston broke at nightfall when protesters clashed with officers, throwing rocks, breaking into several stores, and lighting a police vehicle on fire.

Boston police tweeted that at least 40 people had been arrested as of 3 a.m. Monday. Police said seven police officers had been hospitalized and 21 police cruisers were damaged.

Destroyed vehicles are seen amid nationwide unrest
Destroyed vehicles are seen amid nationwide unrest following the death in Minneapolis police custody of George Floyd, in Washington on June 1, 2020. (Jim Bourg/Reuters)

Trump, in separate remarks on Saturday ahead of his departure for Cape Canaveral, Florida, aboard Marine One, called on law enforcement to get tougher on violent protesters.

“They’ve got to be tough. They’ve got to be strong. They’ve got to be respected, because these people, the Antifa—there’s a lot of radical-left, bad people. And they’ve got to be taught that you can’t do this,” Trump said.

“The main victims of this horrible, horrible situation are the citizens who live in these once lovely communities. The mobs are devastating the life’s work of good people and destroying their dreams,” the president said in a speech after the launch.

“Right now, America needs creation, not destruction; cooperation, not contempt; security, not anarchy,” the president said.

“And there will be no anarchy. Civilization must be cherished, defended, and protected,” he added.

Trump also said he spoke to Floyd’s family to express sorrow for his death. He added that the officers involved in the incident have been fired, one of them had been charged with murder, and that charges could be brought against the other three.

“I stand before you as a friend and ally to every American seeking justice and peace,” he said. “And I stand before you in firm opposition to anyone exploiting this tragedy to loot, rob, attack, and menace.”

“Healing, not hatred, justice, not chaos are the mission at hand,” Trump said.

Meanwhile, protests spread around the globe, with events in London and Berlin on Sunday and others on Monday including in New Zealand, Australia, and the Netherlands.

From The Epoch Times

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