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May 30, 2020

George Floyd death: Chicago protests escalate, State Street businesses vandalized downtown; police injured, 108 arrests made

[ABC NEWS]

“I will code what I really want to say to Donald Trump,” Lightfoot said. “It’s two words. It begins with F, and it ends with U.”

Demonstrators took to the streets in Chicago’s Loop to protest in solidarity with those in Minneapolis calling for justice in the death of George Floyd.CHICAGO (WLS) — As the anger and protests continue in Minneapolis after the death of 46-year-old George Floyd at the hands of police, Chicago activists, as well as city and state leaders, took a strong stance in support of justice for Floyd.

RELATED: Arresting officer charged with murder in death of George Floyd

Over 100 were arrested after large crowds of protesters clashed with Chicago police overnight in the Loop.

Late Friday night, a crowd gathered near Trump Tower before moving down State Street into the Loop about midnight. Marchers carried signs and chanted to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody.

Demonstrators took to the streets in Chicago’s Loop to protest in solidarity with those in Minneapolis calling for justice in the death of George Floyd, while city and state leader

Several protesters could be seen throwing bottles, climbing onto cars and damaging property early Saturday near State and Harrison streets before officers took multiple people into custody.

Chicago Police Superintendent David Brown said 108 people were arrested, and 12 squad cars were damaged in the incident. Most of those arrested face disorderly conduct charges, but one individual was armed and faces additional charges, Brown said.

He also said about a dozen officers were injured. One broke a wrist, as protesters advanced on police, Brown said.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Brown spoke at My Block, My Hood, My City’s “Senior Viral Response” event Saturday morning.

“This is hard and it’s not easier when we have a president who is inciting, I think, violence. Let’s be better than him. Let’s be better than those who want to see us turn on ourselves, but do it in a way that’s respectful,” Lightfoot said.

Brown agreed.

“We believe in first amendment rights, but we also believe this is a nation of laws, but lawlessness has no place in this country,” he said.

Lightfoot recalled the killing of Laquan McDonald as a painful period for the city but also a time of peaceful protest.

“This moment that we are in really has unearthed generations of pain and anger and frustration among black folks, communities of color and others around their experience of policing in America and their experience of policing in Chicago,” she said.

Brown said Floyd’s arresting officers are not representative of police across the country.

“We don’t want our officers treating anyone like that. It’s always the right time to do the right thing. Everyone deserves a measure of respect and that type of behavior in our department will not be tolerated,” he said.

Earlier on Friday, marchers shut down several downtown streets as protests in response to the killing of Floyd were spreading to dozens of cities across the nation.

Emotional protesters took over quieter-than-usual city streets and outmaneuvered patrolling police officers, briefly shutting down traffic to the Eisenhower Expressway.

African American residents in Chicago said they understand the pain and anger fueling the demonstrations a couple states over.

“You get tired of police brutality,” said Edward Vaughn. “I think it’s about time people started standing up for themselves.”

“I am extremely frustrated, but I think at this point I am kind of numb to the situation,” said Shaliah Ramsey.

Lightfoot called out President Trump for his controversial tweet about the protests, saying “when the looting starts, the shooting starts.”

As protesters marched in solidarity with Minneapolis demonstrators, Mayor Lightfoot and Governor Pritzker pulled no punches addressing President Trump’s comments.

The phrase originates with the Miami police chief in 1967, who was talking about cracking down on African Americans during protests around the Republican National Convention.

Miami policemen, one holding the man’s arm and the other with an arm lock on his neck, drag away a man during a protest in Liberty City district in Miami, Aug. 8, 1968.Miami policemen, one holding the man’s arm and the other with an arm lock on his neck, drag away a man during a protest in Liberty City district in Miami, Aug. 8, 1968.
Bettmann Archive via Getty images

Mayor Lightfoot was direct in her response.

“I will code what I really want to say to Donald Trump,” she said. “It’s two words. It begins with F, and it ends with U.”

“I think the state response, particularly the tweets by the president about shooting looters, also, for me, harken back very strongly to the 1960s here in Chicago,” said Elizabeth Todd-Breland, UIC history professor.

Many in Chicago are relieved that charges have been filed against the former Minneapolis police officer for Floyd’s killing, but journalist Jamie Kalven, who broke the Laquan McDonald story, said holding police officer accountable isn’t enough.

“It was a matter of historical importance that officer Jason Van Dyke was found guilty of the murder of Laquan McDonald,” Kalven said. “That didn’t change the underlying system that produced Jason Van Dyke and that terrible murder.”

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker responded to the protests and events, saying, “The threat that comes to every black American under color of law that they see in a video like that, we’re lucky that that video was ever taken because that is happening around America, probably every day.”

Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker spoke out Friday against President Donald Trump’s response to the George Floyd case and the protests that have erupted in Minneapolis and across the U.S.

Pritzker further condemned President Trump’s response to the George Floyd case and the protests that have erupted in Minneapolis and across the U.S.

“From the very moment that I announced my decision to run for governor 3+ years ago, I said that this president was a racist, misogynist, homophobe, a xenophobe, and I was right then and I’m right now,” Pritzker said. “His tweets, his reaction, his failure to address the racism that exists in America, it is stoking of the flames in sometimes subtle and sometimes not-so-subtle ways.”

Lightfoot said the city had a plan to protect demonstrators at Friday’s protest and did remind everyone coming out to protest to make sure they remember that COVID-19 is still spreading in the city, and to take precautions to keep themselves and those around them safe.

CHICAGO ACTIVIST TRAVELS TO MINNEAPOLIS TO SUPPORT PROTESTERS

Cell phone video taken by Chicago activist Ja’mal Green shows a Minneapolis police station lit on fire by protestors.

Chicago activist Ja’mal Green traveled to Minneapolis to support the demonstrators, and cell phone video he took shows a police station lit on fire by protestors.

Green spoke with ABC 7 Chicago from Minneapolis Friday morning as buildings were still smoldering.

“They want to demonize these people because they’re angry,” Green said. “After being contained in communities with no opportunities, with no resources and dealing with a police department that are treating them like dogs and killing them with no accountability of justice. How do you expect people to feel? Have to continue to watch the brothers and sister be killed in front of them on tape? How do you expect them to feel? They’re fighting like they have nothing to lose.”

Reverend Jesse Jackson is also in Minneapolis, meeting with local faith leaders to encourage peaceful protesting.

By Diane Pathieu, Will Jones and Liz Nagy

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