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2020–2023 Minneapolis–Saint Paul racial unrest

In the early 2020s, the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area in U.S. state of Minnesota experienced a wave of civil unrest, comprising peaceful demonstrations and riots, against systemic racism toward black Americans, notably in the form of police violence. A number of events occurred, beginning soon after the murder of George Floyd, an unarmed black man, by a white Minneapolis police officer on May 25, 2020.[3] National Public Radio characterized the events as cultural reckoning on topics of racial injustice.[4]

2020–2023 Minneapolis–Saint Paul
racial unrest
Part of the United States racial unrest (2020–present)
Protesters march in downtown Minneapolis on May 28, 2020, three days after the murder of George Floyd.
DateMay 26, 2020 – May 2, 2023
(2 years, 11 months and 1 week)
Location
Caused by
Goals
MethodsProtests, demonstrations, civil disobedience, civil resistance, riots
Casualties
Death(s)
  • Calvin Horton Jr. (May 27, 2020)
  • Oscar Lee Stewart Jr. (May 28, 2020)
  • Deona Marie Knajdek (June 13, 2021)
  • Deshaun Hill Jr. (February 9, 2022)
Damage$500 million for the period of May 26 to early June 2020

Many specific protests over Floyd's murder were described as peaceful events, but Minneapolis–Saint Paul experienced widespread rioting, looting, and property destruction over a three-night period in late May 2020 that resulted in $500 million in property damage, the second-most destructive period of local unrest in U.S. history, after the 1992 Los Angeles riots.[5][6] Local protests sparked a global protest movement over police brutality and racial justice, and affected state and local policies, local economic conditions, and residents' well-being.

Unrest over Floyd's murder continued as protesters sought justice for Floyd and made broader calls to address structural racism in Minnesota and residents reacted to other incidents, with many protest events part of the larger Black Lives Matter movement.[7] While some demonstrations were violent and generated controversy, protesters from varying backgrounds came to rally against what they perceived as the normalization of the killings of innocent black people.[8][9][10][11]

Events in 2020 edit

Arrangement is chronological by the beginning date of each notable event series; timelines for some topics overlap.

George Floyd protests, May 26, 2020–May 2, 2023 edit

 
Protesters marching in Minneapolis on May 26, 2020, the day after Floyd's murder. A protester's sign reads, "Justice for George Floyd" and "#I CANT BREATHE".

Protests began in Minneapolis on May 26, the day after the murder of George Floyd, when a video of the incident had circulated widely in the media. By midday, people had gathered by the thousands at the location of Floyd's murder and set up a makeshift memorial.[12][13] Organizers of the rally emphasized keeping the protest peaceful.[14] Protesters and Floyd's family demanded that all four officers at the scene of his arrest and death be charged with murder and that judicial consequences be swift.[15][16] That evening, the protest rally turned into a march to the Minneapolis Police Department's third precinct station, where the officers were believed to work. After the main protest group disbanded, a small skirmish the night of May 26 resulted in minor property damage at the station and the police firing tear gas at demonstrators.[5][7][13][14]

Protests were held at several locations in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area in subsequent days. The situation escalated on the nights of May 27 to 29, when widespread arson, rioting, and looting took place, which were noted as a contrast to daytime protests that were characterized as mostly peaceful.[5] Some initial acts of property destruction on May 27 by a 32-year-old man with ties to white supremacist organizations, who local police investigators said was deliberately inciting racial tension, led to a chain reaction of fires and looting.[17] The unrest, including demonstrators overtaking the Minneapolis third precinct police station and setting it on fire the night of May 28, garnered significant national and international media attention.[7] After state officials mobilized Minnesota National Guard troops in its largest deployment since World War II,[18][19] the violent unrest subsided and mostly peaceful protests resumed.[7]

Violence and property destruction in May 2020 resulted in two deaths,[20][21] 617 arrests,[22][23] and more than $500 million in property damage to 1,500 locations, making it the second-most destructive period of local unrest in U.S. history, after the 1992 Los Angeles riots.[6][24][25][23]

George Floyd Square occupation protest, May 26–ongoing edit

 
George Floyd Square, August 2020.

On May 26, the day after George Floyd's murder, an occupation protest emerged at the intersection of East 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis, where Floyd was murdered.[26][27] Protesters turned the area into a makeshift memorial and erected barricades to keep automobile traffic out, and police officers largely avoided the area in the following months. Thousands of visitors protested and grieved at the site, which was adorned with public art installments and described as like a "shrine".[28] When Minneapolis city officials attempted to negotiate reopening the intersection in August 2020, protesters demanded that the city meet a list of 24 demands before removing cement barricades around it.[29]

The Minneapolis Planning Commission recommended to the city council that Chicago Avenue between 37th and 39th streets be named "George Perry Floyd Jr Place",[30] and the city designated the intersection as one of seven cultural districts in the city.[31] The city also allocated $4.7 million to establish a permanent memorial at the site, though by the end of 2020, it was unable to reach agreement with community organizations that had presented officials with a list of demands before opening the intersection back up.[32][33] The occupation protests persisted in 2021.[34][35] City crews removed cement barricades at the intersection on June 3, 2021, as part of a phased reopening process,[36] and vehicular traffic resumed on June 20, after having been closed for over a year.[37][38]

Despite the intersection reopening to vehicular traffic, by the end of 2021, the occupied protest at George Floyd Square had persisted for 19 months.[39] Tension persisted between organizers of the occupied protest, neighborhood residents, and city officials into 2023.[40]

Michael Freeman protests, May 27–late 2020 edit

 
A volunteer campaigns to recall Michael O. Freeman, June 11, 2020.

In the aftermath of Floyd's murder, protests were held regarding Hennepin County Attorney Michael Freeman, with several taking place outside his Minneapolis home, beginning on May 27, 2020.[41] Freeman was the attorney for Hennepin County and the initial prosecutor of the four Minneapolis police officers involved in Floyd's murder. Protesters were outraged by comments Freeman made on May 28, 2020, when he said, "There is other evidence that does not support a criminal charge", referencing how officials were reviewing evidence about whether to charge the police officers with crimes. Freeman later said the remarks were misinterpreted and were meant to convey a thorough review of all available evidence.[41]

The Hennepin County Sheriff's Office deployed deputies and the county paid for private security to protect Freeman and his home against alleged threats.[41] On May 30, more than 1,000 protesters gathered outside his home, and some caused minor damage to the house.[42] A protest group gathered at the Hennepin County Government Center on June 12 to demand Freeman's resignation over his handling of previous officer-involved shootings in Minneapolis, such as the shooting of Jamar Clark and the prosecution of former police officer Mohamed Noor in the shooting of Justine Damond.[43] A group also launched a petition drive to recall Freeman.[44]

Freeman later sold his house in late 2020 at less than the assessed value. Some protesters viewed Freeman's home move as a success of their efforts to pressure him politically.[41]

Police abolition movement, June 6, 2020–November 2, 2021 edit

 
A "defund police" rally at Powderhorn Park, June 7, 2020.

Protesters of Floyd's murder in Minneapolis and elsewhere began calling for reforms of police forces, including defunding, downsizing, or abolishing traditional police departments. Led by local organization Black Visions Collective, thousands of protesters marched in Minneapolis on June 6, 2020.[45] The march ended at the home of Mayor Jacob Frey. The crowd demanded that he come outside and asked if he supported abolishing the city's police force. When Frey responded that he did not, the crowd ordered him to leave and booed him away.[46][47][45]

On June 7, 2020, at a Powderhorn Park rally organized by Black Visions Collective and several other black-led social justice organizations, nine of the 13 members of the Minneapolis City Council vowed before a large crowd to dismantle the city's police department.[48][49] Activists who organized the rally wanted to replace the police department with unarmed public safety responders, but details about the proposal were indefinite.[50][51]

The effort to replace the Minneapolis police department with a public safety department continued in 2020 and 2021. A ballot measure was put before Minneapolis voters in the municipal election on November 2, 2021. If passed, city officials would have 30 days to establish a Department of Public Safety, though the exact structure of the new department, the services it would provide, the number of police officers it employed, and its funding level would be determined through a series of city ordinances.[52] Voters rejected the ballot measure, which required at least 51% to pass, with 80,506 votes (56.2%) cast for "no" and 62,813 (43.8%) for "yes".[53]

Christopher Columbus statue toppling, June 10 edit

 
A demonstrator raises a fist next to the empty pedestal, June 10, 2020.

An American Indian Movement group tore down a statue of Christopher Columbus outside the state capitol building in Saint Paul on June 10 as the global protest movement turned toward removing monuments and memorials with controversial legacies.[54]

Earlier in the day, members of the American Indian Movement, led by Mike Forcia of the Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Tribe of Chippewa Indians, announced their intention to topple the statue. State Patrol troopers and a Department of Public Safety tribal liaison met with organizers before the event,[55] encouraging them to follow a legal process for removal[56] and warning them that they could face charges for destruction of public property.[55][56] Forcia countered that they had already waited far too long, having worked through official channels for years without success.[55][56][57] American Indian Movement members and other demonstrators, including Dakota and Ojibwe community members,[55] looped a rope around the statue and pulled it off its granite pedestal. The group drummed, sang songs, and took photos with the fallen statue. No one was arrested at the event. State Patrol troopers watched from a distance and did not intervene.[56] Troopers eventually formed a line to protect the statue before it was transported offsite.[55]

In December, Forcia agreed to a plea deal and accepted 100 hours in community service in connection with the incident. Officials estimated the cost to repair the statue would be over $154,000.[58]

Minneapolis police union protests, June 12 edit

 
A protester holds a sign at the Minneapolis police federation on June 12, 2020.

The Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis, the union representing Minneapolis Police Department officers, and its elected leader were the subject of several protest events. Protesters gathered at the Police Officers Federation building in Minneapolis on June 12 to demand the resignation of Bob Kroll, head of the city's police union, who had characterized the protests and Black Lives Matter as a "terrorist organization". Thousands of people stretched in every direction from the federation building and listened to speeches by community leaders.[59][43] Protesters returned on June 25. Kroll had earlier said he would not step down from the post. Protesters said they would continue protesting until their demands were met.[60]

Juneteenth commemoration, June 19 edit

 
Juneteenth march in north Minneapolis, June 19, 2020.

On June 19, dozens of Juneteenth commemorations were held in the Twin Cities metropolitan area, including in Minneapolis near the former third precinct station and at the location of Floyd's murder. Participants at the events connected recent instances of police brutality to the historic legacy of slavery in the United States.[61] The Minnesota Black Lives Matter chapter that rallied at the state capitol building called on state lawmakers who were meeting in a special legislative session to agree on police reform measures.[62] Walz issued a proclamation declaring eight minutes 46 seconds of silence at 11:00 a.m. CDT on June 9, 2020, in memory of Floyd, which coincided with the beginning of Floyd's funeral in Houston, Texas.[63] He also proclaimed June 19 "Juneteenth Freedom Day" and called on the legislature to make it an annual state holiday.[64]

Calvin Griffith statue removal, June 19 edit

The Minnesota Twins removed the statue of former owner Calvin Griffith outside the team's Target Field baseball stadium in Minneapolis on June 19. In a statement, the team said the "statue reflects an ignorance on our part of systemic racism present in 1978, 2010 and today". Griffith's legacy was tarnished after racist comments he made in a 1978 speech at the Waseca Lions Club, but a statue of him was placed in the stadium's plaza when it opened in 2010.[65][66]

State capitol protest, June 24 edit

In June, George Floyd protests in Minneapolis–Saint Paul broadened to issues of historic racism and police brutality, with events nearly every day. Protesters gathered outside the governor's mansion in Saint Paul on June 24 and called on him to reconvene the legislature in a special session to pass police reform measures. Lawmakers had recently adjourned a special session without agreeing to legislation on the topic.[67]

Breonna Taylor protests, June 26 edit

 
A Breonna Taylor cardboard cutout at a rally at the state capitol building in Saint Paul, June 2020.

Protesters seeking justice for Breonna Taylor held a "Red Sunday" march on June 26 and gathered at several Twin Cities locations.[68]

Pride parade protests, June 28 edit

Despite the cancellation of the official Twin Cities Pride event, on June 28 protesters gathered in downtown Minneapolis and called for justice for Floyd, greater protections for black transgender people, community control of policing, and the freeing of "political prisoners".[69] Restrictions on public gatherings due to the COVID-19 pandemic prevented organizers from holding a more celebratory event of LGBTQ+ people as in past years, which had been among the most well-attended Pride parade events in the country.[70] The 2020 Pride parade in the Twin Cities intersected with the Black Lives Matter movement and returned to the way it began, as a protest movement.[71]

Hachalu Hundessa protests, June 30 edit

On June 30, several hundred protesters from Minnesota's Oromo diaspora gathered outside the Minnesota state capitol building to protest the killing of Hachalu Hundessa, a popular musician and political activist who was shot and killed in Addis Ababa on June 28, resulting in considerable unrest in Ethiopia. On the evening of July 1, hundreds of protesters blocked Interstate 94 in Minneapolis to call for justice for Hundessa and the Oromo people.[72]

"Black 4th" rallies, July 4 edit

Thousands took part in several peaceful demonstrations in Minneapolis and called for racial equity and justice for Floyd on July 4. Organizers of two marches, dubbed "Black 4th", through predominately white areas of the city sought to continue the momentum for police reform and raise awareness about social justice issues.[73][74]

Philando Castile commemoration, July 6 edit

Four years after the shooting of Philando Castile by a police officer in the Twin Cities suburb of St. Anthony, several Black Lives Matter rallies were held on July 6 to commemorate Castile and connect his killing to the global protest movement about racism and police brutality sparked by Floyd's murder.[75]

Calvin Horton Jr. protests, July 21 edit

 
Protesters at the boarded-up Cadillac Pawn shop in Minneapolis, July 21, 2020.

On May 27, during unrest over Floyd's murder in Minneapolis, Calvin Horton Jr., a 43-year-old man from Minneapolis, was fatally shot by the owner of the Cadillac Pawn & Jewelry shop, who believed Horton was burglarizing his business. The incident took place on East Lake Street, about one mile (1.6 km) from the main protest sites.[76][77] The shop owner was arrested the night of the shooting and held in Hennepin County Jail for several days, but was released pending further investigation.[78] There were no new developments in the case by July 21, 2020, when family and supporters of Horton protested outside the store and demanded the owner be charged with murder.[78]

In December 2020, Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman's office declined to file charges against the pawn shop owner after a six-month investigation due to lack of evidence that the shooting was not self-defense.[79]

Powderhorn Park encampment closure, August 14 edit

 
Encampment in Powderhorn Park, July 20, 2020.

A sprawling encampment at Powderhorn Park generated controversy as it grew to 560 tents by mid-July.[80] Numerous sexual assaults, fights, and drug use at the encampment generated alarm for nearby residents. The city had pushed to connect people experiencing homeless with services, including establishing three new shelters, and shelter beds remained available. Officials adopted a deescalation for disbanding camps due to the ongoing civil unrest, and when they attempted to remove tents at non-permitted sites, they faced opposition from a sanctuary movement and protest groups.[81] After violence and multiple sexual assaults at Powderhorn Park, the park board cleared it of tents on August 14, 2020, as police faced off with protesters and fired pepper spray.[82]

Sympathy protest for Portland, Oregon, July 23 edit

On July 23, Minnesotans gathered at a federal courthouse and marched through downtown Minneapolis in opposition to the deployment of federal troops to protests in Portland, Oregon.[83]

Bob Kroll residential protest, August 15 edit

 
Anti-Bob Kroll graffiti in Minneapolis, June 13, 2020.

On August 15, a 100-person protest group led by Nekima Levy Armstrong's Racial Justice Network gathered outside Kroll's home in Hugo, Minnesota, to call for his resignation from the Minneapolis police union. Protesters also criticized Kroll's partner, WCCO television reporter Liz Collin, for a conflict of interest in stories about police violence. Remarks by John Thompson, a Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor candidate for the state legislature from St. Paul, drew controversy. Thompson said in his speech, "You think we give a fuck about burning Hugo down?" and "Fuck Hugo."

Some of Thompson's remarks were said to be directed at children who were present. The event also featured the bashing of piñata effigies of Kroll and Collin. Several local media members condemned the symbolic display of violence against a woman journalist. Inflammatory rhetoric at the event was also condemned by leaders of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor and Republican parties, and led to an apology from Thompson.[84][9][85]

Police station vandalized, August 15 edit

Late at night on August 15, a group of approximately 50 people marched to Minneapolis's fifth precinct police station in what was initially described as a peaceful protest, but it became violent when people threw rocks at windows, threw paint on the building, and shot commercial-grade fireworks at police officers before fleeing the scene. Mayor Frey and Minneapolis City Council Vice President Andrea Jenkins said the destruction was not the solution to problems with policing.[11][86] In 2021, a man from Blaine, Minnesota pleaded guilty to federal criminal charges related to the unrest and other incidents.[87][86]

Jacob Blake protests, August 24 edit

 
Minneapolis police officers with riot gear, August 24, 2020.

On August 23, Jacob Blake, an African-American man, was shot four times in the back during an arrest by police officer Rusten Sheskey.[88][89] The incident occurred in Kenosha, Wisconsin, as police officers were attempting to arrest Blake. In reaction to the incident, protests and unrest occurred in Wisconsin and elsewhere. On August 24 in Minneapolis, a 100-person protest over Blake's shooting took place in the city's downtown area, and after the main protest group disbanded, some protesters became violent and broke windows and threatened to breach a jail facility, resulting in 11 arrests.[90] One Minneapolis police officer suffered a broken hand during a confrontation with a demonstrator.[91]

Riots over false rumors of a police shooting, August 26–28 edit

 
Hennepin County sheriff officers on patrol after looting and vandalism, August 27, 2020.

Rioting and looting in downtown Minneapolis came as reaction to false rumors that Eddie Sole Jr., a 38-year-old African American man, had been shot and killed by Minneapolis police officers on August 26.[92] Surveillance video showed that Sole had died by suicide, a self-inflicted gunshot to the head, during a manhunt for a homicide suspect in which he was the person of interest as police officers closed in to arrest him after a foot chase.[93] Controversially, the police released the CCTV camera footage of the suicide in attempts to stop the unrest.[94]

Overnight destruction the night of August 26 led to at least 132 arrests for violence and looting,[95] as damage to 77 properties occurred in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan region,[96][97] including five buildings that were set on fire, including the Target Corporation headquarters building.[96][98][99] Governor Walz declared a state of emergency and deployed National Guard troops, and Mayor Frey imposed on overnight curfew.[100] Nearly 1,000 members of law enforcement and 400 Minnesota National Guard troops amassed in the metro area to prevent more lawlessness, and calm prevailed after August 27.[101][102]

Wall of Forgotten Natives, September 3 edit

 
Franklin-Hiawatha encampment north gate, October 1, 2020.

Two years after a large camp was disbanded near Hiawatha and Franklin avenues in Minneapolis, on September 3 a group backed by protesters and American Indian Movement advocates reoccupied a site they called the Wall of Forgotten Natives. The state had barricaded the site in 2018 when an encampment closed after experiencing drug overdoses, spread of disease, violence, fires, and deaths. In September 2020, reoccupation of the encampment with 40 tents came after the city closed another encampment on 13th Avenue due to health and safety concerns and after officials sought help from nonprofit organizations. Reestablishment of the Hiawatha encampment also came during a time of increasing confrontation between Minneapolis officials and homeless advocates, as the city had hoped to close all encampments by October.[81]

Pretrial hearing for Chauvin, Lane, and Keung, and Thao protests, September 11 edit

Hundreds rallied outside the Hennepin County Government Center, a downtown Minneapolis local government and court building, on September 11 during a pretrial hearing for the four police officers at the scene of Floyd's murder—former officers Chauvin, Lane, and Keung, and Thao.[103] Confrontations between some in the crowd and the officers' attorney were described as "angry". On November 5, defense attorneys cited the exchange on September 11 and safety concerns in their arguments in court to have a change of venue to another jurisdiction for the trial, but Peter Cahill, the presiding judge, rejected their motion.[104]

Blocking the third precinct police station, September 16 edit

After the third precinct station burned down during the May riots, police officers worked out of the convention center in downtown Minneapolis.[105] In August, officials pursued a lease agreement for a temporary police station at a privately owned building on Minnehaha Avenue in the Seward neighborhood. A neighborhood group that supported the police abolition movement pushed back against the city and organized a "Blocked the Precinct Block party" protest rally near the site.[106] The city's lease agreement fell apart in September after opposition from community groups and threats of violence against the property owner and police officers. Police investigated threats to burn the property down and the building was tagged with anti-police graffiti, including a call for "the literal deaths of individual police officers".[105]

Brooklyn Center arson fraud, September 23 edit

Denis Molla, a 30-year old man from Brooklyn Center, Minnesota, gained widespread media attention after he alleged that in the early morning hours of September 23, 2020, his detached garage and camper were vandalized with graffiti and set on fire by supporters of Black Lives Matter and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden. In media interviews about the incident, he speculated that he was the victim of a politically motivated attack as retaliation for displaying a flag in support of Donald Trump's presidential campaign. Molla submitted $300,000 in insurance claims for property damage, which his insurer mostly denied.[107][108][109]

After the Brooklyn Center Police Department and the FBI investigated the incident and the insurance claims, Molla was charged in U.S. District Court in July 2022 with two counts of wire fraud, as prosecutors said in charging documents that he set his own property on fire and painted the graffiti messages himself. In October 2022, Molla pleaded guilty to federal wire fraud charges for receiving $61,000 in insurance claims and $17,000 from donors via GoFundMe.[107][108][109] He was sentenced on June 8, 2023, to 2.5 years in prison and one year of supervised release.[110]

Derek Chauvin bail protests, October 7 edit

On October 7, protesters took to the streets and held rallies at several places in Minneapolis to express anger over the release on bail of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis Police Department officer charged with murdering George Floyd. Chauvin was later fired from the department and arrested. He posted $1 million bail for his release pending trial. (The bail was later revoked on April 20, 2021, eight weeks before his sentencing, because Chauvin was found guilty.) Governor Walz sent 100 National Guardsmen, 100 state police troops, and 75 conservation officers to keep the peace.[111] Law enforcement made 51 arrests late on October 7, of which 49 were for misdemeanor offenses such as unlawful assembly, one was for assault, and one was for an outstanding felony warrant.[112]

Election night demonstration, November 3 edit

 
A police officer with a rifle during protests on November 3, 2020.

Several business in Minneapolis and Saint Paul boarded up windows and doors on November 3 preparing for possible unrest related to the presidential election. Some of the businesses had suffered damages during protests following Floyd's murder and wanted to be prepared for the possibility of further unrest. The Minnesota National Guard was placed on standby and police forces in the two cities activated extra staff.[113] A group of demonstrators marching behind an "America is Over" banner made their way through Uptown in Minneapolis late at night on Tuesday. Minneapolis police officers kept their distance as the group blocked several intersections, spray-painted storefronts, and threw traffic signs and debris into the street. When protesters shot fireworks at officers and refused to disperse, the police advanced and made 14 arrests for suspicion of rioting and fourth-degree assault. No injuries were reported.[114]

Interstate 94 protest, November 4 edit

 
Protesters on Interstate 94 in Minneapolis on November 4, 2020.

On November 4, as part of a national day of protests led by the National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression following the U.S. presidential election,[115][116] several local social justice organizations converged for protest marches through Minneapolis with the mantra, "Don't Let Trump Steal the Election", in reference to President Donald Trump's claims that the election was stolen and his attempts to overturn its results.[116]

After marching through downtown, protesters entered onto Interstate 94, blocking vehicular traffic. As they attempted to exit the highway, Minneapolis police and Minnesota state patrol officers fired tear gas and then kettled and arrested 646 people for public nuisance and unlawful assembly, while continuing to block traffic for several hours. Most of those arrested were cited and released.[117][116]

A 19-year-old woman from Golden Valley was charged with felony second-degree riot for pointing a laser in a police officer's eyes, and a 29-year-old woman from Minneapolis was charged with fourth-degree assault and obstructing the legal process for kicking a police officer.[118] The charge against the 19-year-old, who tried to take a plea deal, was later dropped by the judge.[115]

The mass arrest of 646 people was the largest in recent Minnesota history. In the aftermath, activists demanded that charges against demonstrators be dropped. The Minneapolis City Attorney's Office later pursued charges in 588 of the cases, saying that the demonstration was not protected by the First Amendment as it broke several laws and endangered motorists and pedestrians.[115] Several hundred demonstrators accepted plea agreements to suspend prosecution in exchange for a $175 fine and six hours of community service. About 280 people rejected plea agreements.[115] Among those who rejected a plea deal was Sara Jane Olson, a leftist radical in the late 1970s; she was convicted of a petty misdemeanor in 2021 and ordered to pay a $378 fine.[116]

Thanksgiving Day statue vandalism, November 26 edit

In the early morning hours of November 26, a statute of George Washington at Washburn Fair Oaks Park in Minneapolis was toppled and defaced with anticolonial graffiti. A few miles away at BF Nelson Park, a monument depicting three generations of pioneers was spray painted with the words "no thanks", "no more genocide", "decolonize", and "land back". The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board said it was investigating the incidents, but was aware of the controversy about the historic context of the statues. The vandalism came six months after a protest group toppled a Christopher Columbus statue outside the Minnesota state capitol building.[119]

Reaction to the killing of Dolal Idd, December 30 edit

 
The secured crime scene in Minneapolis on December 30, 2020.

Protests emerged the evening of December 30 after police shot and killed Dolal Idd at a Holiday gas station near the intersection of Cedar Avenue and East 36th Street in Minneapolis. The shooting happened at approximately 6:15 p.m., less than a one mile (1.6 km) from where George Floyd was murdered in May,[120] and was the first fatal police shooting in the city since then.[121] Few details were known about the shooting as approximately 100 protesters gathered at the scene. Some protesters shouted expletives and threw snowballs at police officers. Officers prepared to use pepper spray if assaulted by demonstrators. By late evening, the scene was calmer, as protesters blocked an intersection and built a bonfire.[122] Several people attended a vigil on December 31 near the intersection of Cedar Avenue and East 36th Street for Idd and other victims of police violence.[121]

New Year's Eve riot, December 31 edit

 
Minneapolis police officers on duty during protests in the early morning hours of January 1, 2021.

Seventy-five demonstrators gathered in downtown Minneapolis on December 31 to protest police brutality. Police learned of the rally from a social media posting calling on people to wear black clothing and masks and to help "burn the precincts & the prisons [sic]". From the downtown area, demonstrators walked to Commons Park near U.S. Bank Stadium, where police observed the group shooting fireworks at motorists, painting graffiti on the walls of local government buildings, and disrupting traffic.[123] That night, authorities gave orders for a crowd to disperse, but some people refused. At least 15 were detained for allegedly rioting and 21 were cited and released.[124] Five were charged with felony riot and for being armed with a dangerous weapon.[123]

The demonstration had been scheduled several weeks earlier and was unrelated to the killing of Dolal Idd.[124]

Events in 2021 edit

Arrangement is chronological by the beginning date of each notable event series; timelines for some topics overlap.

Dolal Idd protest march, January 3 edit

On January 3, 2021, as many as 1,000 protesters marched peacefully in south Minneapolis to express outrage over Dolal Idd's killing by Minneapolis police and a search of the Idd family home by the Hennepin County Sheriff's Office.[125]

Downtown Minneapolis racial justice protest, January 9 edit

Several hundred people gathered in downtown Minneapolis on January 9, 2021, to protest racial injustice at a rally that featured speeches, hand-drawn signs, and chats. Protesters connected Idd's death on December 30, 2020, to Floyd and Jacob Blake. The week before the downtown Minneapolis gathering, a Wisconsin prosecutor declined to press charges against the police officer who shot Blake, which protesters at the rally objected to.[126]

Protesters then marched from the Hennepin County Government Center to the Minneapolis Police Department's first precinct station for more speeches and chants. The protest group expressed outrage over the mob that stormed the United States Capitol building on January 6, 2021, and speakers contrasted the recent police-related homicides in Minneapolis to the mob of apparent white supremacists that overwhelmed Capitol police in Washington, D.C., who took little action to stop them.[126]

Presidential inauguration protest, January 20 edit

 
"Biden is not the solution, keep fighting" sign at George Floyd Square, January 20, 2021.

On the day of the presidential inauguration of Joe Biden, nearly 120 members of several progressive organizations held a peaceful rally in Minneapolis to pressure the incoming Biden administration to commit to several left-wing policy positions during its first 100 days in office, such as to reverse Trump administration policies affecting immigrant and minority communities. Protesters gathered at South High School and marched along Lake Street past the Minneapolis Police Department's third precinct building that was set on fire in May 2020 after Floyd's murder.[127] The day's events were organized by the local Black Lives Matter chapter and other social justice organizations. The group's demands included dropping criminal charges against people who were prosecuted during the 2020 George Floyd protests in Minneapolis–Saint Paul and the 600 people who were arrested on November 4, 2020, for blocking traffic on Interstate 94.[128][129]

Police reform protests, March 6 edit

Approximately 150 people marched and rallied at the governor's mansion in Saint Paul ahead of the trial of Derek Chauvin scheduled for March 8, 2021. The event, organized by Families Supporting Families Against Police Violence, sought to pressure state and local officials to enact police reform legislation and reevaluate cases where people died under police pursuit or arrest.[130] In another protest march, demonstrators in Minneapolis marched from George Floyd Square to the Hennepin County Government Center and back.[131]

Trial of Derek Chauvin protests, March 7–April 19 edit

 
Protest march in Minneapolis, March 7, 2021.

On March 7, 2021, several hundred protesters marched in downtown Minneapolis and rallied outside the Hennepin County Government Center building to mourn George Floyd and call for reform of policing. The event, dubbed the "'I Can't Breathe' Silent March For Justice" by its organizers, came a day before jury selection in the trial of Derek Chauvin. Protesters carried a white-colored replica coffin adorned with red flowers. Another group of faith leaders held a "Pray for MN" gathering at the government center building later that afternoon.[131]

Approximately 1,000 protesters gathered peacefully outside a downtown courthouse as Chauvin's trial commenced on March 8 to call for justice for Floyd and raise broader issues of racial injustice. Officials had surrounded the facility with a temporary concrete barrier, metal fencing, and barbed wire in anticipation of potential unrest. Protests and rallies planned for George Floyd Square were halted for several days after a fatal shooting there on March 6, 2021.[132]

On March 28, 2021, the day before opening statements in Chauvin's trial, several rallies and protests were held in Minneapolis. Floyd's family and Al Sharpton hosted a vigil at the Greater Friendship Missionary Baptist Church in Minneapolis. Separately, protesters marched in downtown Minneapolis to demand justice for Floyd and rallied at the Hennepin County Government Center and City Hall, and some demonstrators parked cars on the Metro light-rail tracks, which closed train traffic for several hours. At the intersection where Floyd was murdered, a group of people who self-identified as "anarchists" and "anti-fascists" held a training workshop on how to avoid arrest and keep calm if detained by police. Protesters claimed that the intersection was not public property and demanded that journalists leave the area before the workshop began.[133]

George Floyd Square remained an important gathering place during Chauvin's trial for people protesting racial injustice and seeking justice for Floyd. The square hosted daily visitors from around the country who made pilgrimages there.[134] Groups of protesters also gathered outside Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapolis during Chauvin's trial and marched on the streets calling for justice.[135] On April 6, several civil rights leaders, including Sharpton and former New York Governor David Paterson, led a rally outside the government building and prayed for Chauvin's conviction.[136] The trial concluded on April 19, 2021, and the jury began deliberations.[137]

"Stop Asian Hate" rally, March 28 edit

On March 28, 2021, hundreds of people, and more than 20 community organizations, participated in a "Stop Asian Hate" rally at the state capitol building. The event was in reaction to recent Atlanta spa shootings, where eight people had died, most of them Asian-American women.[138]

Daunte Wright protests, April 11–December 23 edit

 
Protest after the killing of Daunte Wright in Brooklyn Center, April 11, 2021.

On April 11, 2021, at 1:48 p.m., an officer with the police department of Brooklyn Center, a suburb of Minneapolis-Saint Paul, shot 20-year-old Daunte Wright, a black man, during a traffic stop. Wright had an outstanding warrant for his arrest. As officers attempted to detain him, a struggle ensued and Wright reentered his vehicle. An officer discharged her firearm, believing she was using her taser gun instead, striking Wright before he drove off.[139] Wright crashed his vehicle several blocks away. Though EMS arrived and attempted to revive him, Wright was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash. Wright's girlfriend was also a passenger in the car. She sustained non-life-threatening injuries from the crash and was transported to the hospital.[140][141][142][143][144]

The event unfolded as the trial of Derek Chauvin was underway in Minneapolis. Wright's death occurred approximately 10 miles (16 km) from the intersection where Floyd was murdered.[145] As news of the Brooklyn Center incident spread, family members of Wright, neighbors to the car crash, and protesters began gathering at the car crash scene in Brooklyn Center in what was initially a peaceful demonstration.[141][140][142] Several protesters came from another rally organized by families of people who had been killed by police that they had held earlier in the day in Saint Paul.[146] The crowd grew to several hundred people by evening as they demanded more information from police investigators. As tension at the scene rose over the ensuing hours, police in tactical gear arrived, formed a line, and moved in when demonstrators began climbing on police vehicles and throwing bricks.[141][140][142]

Over the next days, tense protests and sporadic looting took place and resulted in the deployment of the Minnesota National Guard, Minnesota State Patrol, and Hennepin County sheriff's office. Thousands of people participated in protests and rallies in Brooklyn Center and elsewhere. Authorities clashed with some protesters, resulting in several dozen arrests.[147]

Demonstrations awaiting the Chauvin trial verdict, April 19 edit

 
Justice for George Floyd March in Minneapolis during jury deliberations on April 19, 2021.

Derek Chauvin's trial concluded in Minneapolis just after 5 p.m. on April 19, 2021, and the jury began deliberations that evening. The trial was one of the most closely watched cases of police brutality in the United States. Governor Walz declared a peacetime emergency and deployed 3,000 Minnesota National Guard troops and state patrol officers to assist local law enforcement. He also sought deployment of law enforcement officers from nearby states. Some schools in the metropolitan area announced plans to proactively move to distance learning, and some businesses boarded up out of worries of potential unrest. The killing of Daunte Wright on April 11 and the subsequent protests intersected with the looming verdict. Days earlier, U.S. Representative Maxine Waters told demonstrators in Minnesota that they should "stay on the street" and "get more confrontational" if Chauvin was acquitted.[148]

On April 19, twenty activist groups coordinated a large demonstration and march through the streets in Minneapolis near the Hennepin County Government Center building where Chauvin's trial was held. Protesters made several demands: lengthy sentences for the officers involved in Floyd's murder, police reform legislation in Minnesota, to have charges dropped against demonstrators in Brooklyn Center and at other recent events, and for officials to end Operation Safety Net and other counter-protest measures. Protesters and law enforcement authorities did not engage with one another and the event was peaceful.[137][149] A protest group of about 40-50 people gathered outside the Brooklyn Center police station that evening.[150]

Protest events occurred without incident and officials described them as peaceful. Officials with the Operation Safety Net also reported three business burglaries in Minneapolis and that a Minnesota Department of Natural Resources vehicle deployed for potential unrest was broken into and had a firearm stolen from it. Officials did not make any arrests connected to April 19 events.[150]

Chauvin verdict announcement demonstrations, April 20 edit

 
Crowd gathers for the verdict announcement in the trial of Derek Chauvin, April 20, 2021.

Derek Chauvin was found guilty of murdering George Floyd on April 20, 2021. People gathered outside the Hennepin County Government Center where the trial was held and at the 38th and Chicago Avenue intersection where Floyd was murdered to await the verdict at approximately 4 p.m. Crowds chanted in approval as the verdict was read that found Chauvin guilty on all charges.[151] As news of the verdict spread, thousands of people marched in downtown Minneapolis and others gathered at 38th and Chicago Avenue in elation over the outcome. Protesters also called for reforms to policing and justice for other black men killed by police.[152][153]

Dight Avenue name change petition, June edit

In mid 2021, a petition drive led by disability activist Noah McCourt requested that the City of Minneapolis rename Dight Avenue, a street in the Longfellow community that had been named decades earlier for the controversial Charles Fremont Dight.[154] After consulting with Dight Avenue residents and offering several options,[155] city officials decided to honor John Cheatham's legacy of racially integrating the city's fire department by renaming Dight Avenue after him, with the change taking place in 2022.[156][157]

Winston Boogie Smith protests and Uptown unrest, June 3–November 3 edit

 
Minneapolis police and demonstrators on West Lake Street, June 4, 2021.

Winston Boogie Smith, a 32-year-old black man, was shot and killed by law enforcement authorities on June 3, 2021, as they attempted to apprehend him at a parking ramp in the Uptown neighborhood of Minneapolis. Protests following the killing began on June 3 and continued for several days, primarily in Uptown.[158][159][160] Soon after the shooting, Smith's family demanded greater law enforcement transparency and the release of any surveillance footage that captured the incident.[161] Civil rights activists and Smith's friends and family disputed law enforcement's accounts of the incident. Local organization Communities United Against Police Brutality held a press conference near the shooting site on June 4 to call for officials to release video footage and other details of the shooting.[162][163] Smith's family and friends held a peaceful vigil the evening of June 4 at the parking ramp where he was killed, and participated in a protest march on June 6.[164][158] Activist Nekima Levy Armstrong led a protest on June 8 outside the home of Minnesota's U.S. Marshal, Ramona Dohman, calling for her resignation. Armstrong alleged that Dohman, a Trump administration appointee, had a conflict of interest due to a past working relationship with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension.[165] Protests were held over subsequent days, with demonstrators periodically occupying an intersection near where Smith was killed.[166][167]

Uptown vehicle-ramming incident, June 13 edit

 
The secured crime scene on June 14, 2021, several hours after Deona Knajdek was killed.

On June 13, 2021, Nicholas Kraus, a 35-year old man from Saint Paul, drove a car into a crowd of demonstrators who had gathered as a part of the ongoing Winston Boogie Smith protests, killing Deona Marie Knajdek and injuring three others. That evening, demonstrators had blocked the intersection of West Lake Street and Girard Avenue.[166][168] At approximately 11:39 p.m. CDT, in a Jeep Cherokee, Kraus drove into the crowd at a high speed, striking a parked vehicle that had been used to block off the intersection to traffic, which then collided with protesters.[168][169][170] On June 16, he was charged with second-degree intentional murder and two counts of assault with a deadly weapon in relation to the crash, after allegedly telling investigators that he had accelerated toward the crowd in an attempt to clear the barricades that were protecting protesters.[171] To avoid trial, Kraus pleaded guilty on October 24, 2022, to charges of unintentional murder and second-degree assault with a dangerous weapon.[172]

"Taking Back Pride" event, June 27 edit

In a protest event called "Taking Back Pride", demonstrators marched in downtown Minneapolis on June 27 as a counter to contemporary Pride parade festivities, and referenced the protest-origin of the U.S. LGBTQ movement that began with the 1969 Stonewall riots Participants of the June 27 march said that police were not welcome at the event, refused to cooperate with law enforcement for permits, and did not invite corporate partnerships. Demonstrators demanded police accountability for the killings of Daunte Wright and Winston Smith, and called for greater protections of Black transgender people.[173]

Council President Andrea Jenkins vehicle blocking incident, June 27 edit

A group of activists that included Donald Hooker Jr, a leader with Twin Cities Coalition for Justice 4 Jamar (referring to Jamar Clark), confronted Minneapolis Council Vice President Andrea Jenkins near Loring Park in the afternoon of June 27. Jenkins—a transgender African American woman—had attended an earlier Pride event. For several hours, the group blocked the car she was a passenger in and presented a list of six demands that Jenkins was asked to sign her agreement to. The demands including dropping charges against protesters in recent demonstrations, the immediate resignation of Mayor Jacob Frey, continuing the closure of George Floyd Square, and providing more information about investigations of recent police killings. After Jenkins signed the agreement, activists moved out of the way to allow the vehicle to drive away.[174][175][176] Hooker posted a 23-minute video of part of the encounter to Facebook. In a statement about the incident, Jenkins said she was treated inhumanely and held against her will by the demonstrators.[177]

Philando Castile commemoration, July 6 edit

Five years after the shooting of Philando Castile by a police officer in the Twin Cities suburb of St. Anthony, Castile's family and a crowd of 200 people gathered and marched outside the governor's mansion in Saint Paul. They expressed their desire for the state legislature to enact several police reform measures, such as limiting pretextual traffic stops.[178]

Leneal Frazier demonstration, July 7 edit

On July 7, a group of approximately 40 people who were mourning the death of Leneal Frazier, a 40-year-old man from Saint Paul, blocked Lyndale Avenue in the Camden neighborhood of Minneapolis. Frazier, an uninvolved bystander, was killed on July 6 by a Minneapolis police squad car that was pursuing a robbery suspect in a vehicle that had reportedly been carjacked. While in pursuit, the squad car struck several vehicles, including Frazier's, near the intersection of Lyndale Avenue and 41st Avenue North at approximately 12:30 a.m. CDT. Frazier was a relative of Darnella Frazier, the then-teenager who filmed George Floyd's murder on her cellphone on May 25, 2020.[179] Brian Cummings, the Minneapolis police officer who crashed into Frazier's vehicle on July 6, was charged with second-degree manslaughter and criminal vehicular homicide.[180]

Judge Regina Chu protest, November 6 edit

Demonstrators gathered outside a downtown Minneapolis condominium to demand that the State v. Potter trial be broadcast live for public view. The trial of former Brooklyn Center police office Kimberly Potter was related to the April 11, 2021, killing of Daunte Wright during a traffic stop. During the November 6 protest event, a demonstrator recorded a Facebook livestream of himself gaining entry to the building and protesting outside the door of what he believed was Judge Chu's unit. Chu no longer resided at the building at the time of the protest.[181][182][183] Cortez Rice, a resident of Minneapolis, was later charged in Hennepin County for harassment involving retaliation against a judicial officer.[184][182]

Prior Lake student protests, November 11, 19 & 22 edit

 
Protest against racism at Prior Lake High School, November 11, 2021.

On November 11, hundreds of people participated in a protest in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul suburb of Savage to express anger at the contents of a video that captured a Prior Lake High School student directing racial slurs at another Black student. Protesters, who gathered outside the school that closed early anticipation of the event, denounced the incident and what they viewed as persistent Islamophobia and racism in the Prior Lake Savage Area School District.[185][186]

Dozens attended a rally organized by Minnesota Teen Activists on November 19 outside U.S. Bank Stadium in downtown Minneapolis to support students who spoke out against racism at Prior Lake High School.[187] Raucous activists confronted members of the Prior Lake-Savage Area School Board at a meeting on November 22. Board members walked out when an activist interrupted the meeting with a profane outburst.[188]

Kyle Rittenhouse trial verdict protest, November 20 edit

On November 20, hundreds protested the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse at a demonstration in downtown Minneapolis. Rittenhouse was charged with several crimes related to a shooting that killed two people and injured another during the Kenosha unrest on August 20, 2020. Protesters gathered near Hennepin County Government Center and marched through downtown, at times blocking traffic and temporarily shutting down a street intersection. Protesters believed Rittenhouse should have been found guilty of the charges against him.[189][190]

Trial of Kimberly Potter protests, November 30–December 23 edit

 
Wright's family, news media, and activists await the trial verdict, December 23, 2021.

Trial proceedings for Kimberly Potter, the Brooklyn Center police officer who shot Daunte Wright in April, began on November 30 in downtown Minneapolis. Demonstrators gathered outside the Hennepin County Government Center building, the venue for her trial. Protests marched through the streets and temporarily blocked vehicular traffic. A vehicle drove through the crowd as protesters urged the driver to stop. A protester climbed on the vehicle as the drive slowly drove away, but was able to dismount safety one block later. No injuries were reported.[191]

The number of protesters dwindled over the course of the Potter trial as outside temperatures became colder. A lone demonstrator was protesting outside the courtroom building by December 17, 2021.[192] Crowds grew in size during the jury deliberation that began on December 22.[193] Potter was convicted of first-degree and second-degree manslaughter charges. The security measures at the Hennepin County Government Center were laxer than during Chauvin's trial, and downtown Minneapolis calmly awaited the verdict with relatively few businesses boarding up.[194] A crowd of about 50 people that had gathered outside the court building celebrated the trial's outcome.[195]

Cottage Grove student protest, December 20 edit

Some students at Park High School in Cottage Grove, Minnesota, staged a walkout-style protest over "countless racially motivated incidents" and a school employee's alleged use of the n-word. The event was organized by the Park High School Black Student Union.[196]

Events in 2022 edit

Arrangement is chronological by the beginning date of each notable event series; timelines for some topics overlap.

Dolal Idd protest, January 4 edit

Activists and family members of Dolal Idd rallied in Saint Paul on January 4, 2022, outside Governor Walz's official residence. They called for further investigation of the incident that led to Idd's death and the release of additional evidence in the case.[197]

Civil rights trial of Kueng, Lane, and Thao protests, January 24–February 24 edit

 
Counter-protest security measures at the Warren E. Burger Federal Building, January 23, 2022.

In early 2022, local officials prepared counter-protest measures for potential unrest ahead of the scheduled January 20 start of the federal civil rights trial of J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane, and Tou Thao—Minneapolis police officers who were at the scene of George Floyd's murder. Officials erected security fencing around the Warren E. Burger Federal Building in Saint Paul that contained the courtroom for the trial.[198][199][200] Before the trial, protesters said they were concerned about its outcome and were prepared to demonstrate.[201] Protest demonstrations were held in the streets surrounding the courtroom building during the trial.[202][203]

Amir Locke protests, February 2–April 8 edit

 
Civil rights activists speak about the killing of Amir Locke, February 2, 2022.

At 6:48 a.m. on February 2, 2022, Minneapolis Police Department officer Mark Hanneman[204] fatally shot Amir Locke, a 22-year-old Black man, while police officers were executing a search warrant at an apartment in downtown Minneapolis. The shooting occurred nine seconds after police entered the apartment while Locke was lying on a couch wrapped in a blanket and holding a gun.[205][206][207][208] Local civil rights advocates called on city officials to release video footage and additional information about the incident, and questioned whether deadly force was necessary. A group of advocates held a vigil on the evening of February 2 outside the downtown apartment building where the killing took place.[209] Several protests were held in Minneapolis and Saint Paul over the subsequent weeks.[210][211][212]

Murder of Deshaun Hill Jr., February 9 edit

Deshaun Hill Jr., a 15-year old student at North Community High School, was fatally shot in Minneapolis at about 12:30 p.m. on February 9, 2022. The school principal at North, despite being told not to do so by school district officials, had released students early for the day so they could participate in a planned protest in downtown Minneapolis over the police killing of Amir Locke. The principal attended and encouraged students to participate in the walkout. Hill left school and was walking home when he was fatally shot after a chance encounter with the shooter, Cody Fohrenkam, a 30-year-old Minneapolis resident, who later faced murder charges.[213][214][215]

The principal was put on leave by officials, but was reinstated after receiving support from community members. The school district settled with Hill's family for $500,000 in 2023. Hill's family called for criminal charges to be filed against the principal, but Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty declined to do so.[214][215] Hill was the quarterback on the North football team. His story was the subject of the Showtime docuseries "Boys in Blue", released in 2023.[216]

A jury convicted Fohrenkam of second-degree murder after a three-day trial in January 2023.[217] In February 2023, he was sentenced to 38.5 years in prison; he will not be eligible for supervised release for 25 years.[218][219]

Lake Street protest march and vandalism, February 11 edit

On February 11, 2022, approximately 100 people marched through south Minneapolis during the evening to demand justice for the police killings of Amir Locke and Winston Boogie Smith. Along several blocks of Lake Street, several properties were vandalized and tagged with anti-police and anarchist graffiti. Some demonstrators threw rocks at the Minneapolis Police Department's fifth precinct station building.[211][220]

Reaction to the Kimberly Potter sentencing, February 18 edit

Protests were held in reaction to former Brooklyn Center police officer Kimberly Potter's sentence hearing on February 18, 2022, when she received two years in custody rather than the seven years requested by prosecutors for killing Daunte Wright. Protesters gathered in Minneapolis outside the Hennepin County Government Center building where the sentencing hearing was held. A group of about 100 people marched to what they believed to be the residence of Judge Regina Chu, who presided over Potter's trial and sentenced her. In Brooklyn Center that night, people looted the Icon Beauty Supply store.[221]

Minneapolis teachers' strike, March 8 to 29 edit

 
Striking teachers demonstrate at Minneapolis City Hall, March 24, 2022.

The Minneapolis Federation of Teachers, the labor union representing teachers and other education professionals in the Minneapolis Public Schools, went on a three-week strike from March 8 to 29, 2022. Around 4,500 workers went on strike.[222] The strike, the first in the city in nearly 50 years, affected about 30,000 students and resulted in 15 days of canceled classes. It occurred in the aftermath of the largest racial injustice protests in the city's history, with the teacher's union advocating for smaller classes, higher wages, expanded mental health services, and a focus on retaining teachers who are people of color.[223][224][225]

East Lake Street vandalism, May 28 edit

Under the slogan "Remember May 28", a group of demonstrators marched on East Lake Street in Minneapolis on May 28, 2022, to mark the second anniversary of the burning of the city's third police precinct building in the aftermath of George Floyd's murder. Demonstrators lit off fireworks, spray-painted graffiti messages, and set several shopping carts on fire.[226]

Independence Day unrest, July 4 edit

Several Independence Day celebrations resulted in unrest in downtown Minneapolis the night of July 4, 2022. In the late evening, several crowds that had gathered for informal celebrations discharged fireworks at people, cars, and residential buildings, while several street racers performed doughnut maneuvers in the streets. Minneapolis police officers who responded to the scene had fireworks shot at them. Late that night, more than 100 gunshots were reported, and seven people were injured at a mass shooting near Boom Island Park at about 11:00 p.m. Police officers dispersed another crowd at 2:30 a.m. near the Stone Arch Bridge and arrested a 32-year-old woman from Savage for allegedly assaulting an officer and obstructing police activity.[227][228][229]

City Counselor Michael Rainville placed primary blame on Somali youth for the July 4 violence in comments he made about public safety in the unrest aftermath. Rainsville's comments received substantial public backlash for singling out the Somali-American community and he later apologized for them.[230]

Andrew Tekle Sundberg protests, July 14 & 16 edit

 
Police and BCA vehicles at the building where Andrew Tekle Sundberg was fatally shot the prior day, June 14, 2022.

Andrew Tekle Sundberg, a 20-year-old Ethiopian American man, was shot and killed by Minneapolis police officers on July 14.

At 9:30 p.m. on July 13 at an apartment building on the 900 block of 21st Avenue in the Seward neighborhood, Minneapolis police responded to reports of gunshots being fired from one apartment unit into another. Police who arrived at the scene observed more shots being fired through interior walls and evacuated the apartment building. A six-hour standoff ensued with Sundberg, the alleged assailant, who, according to police, also fired at officers.[231] At about 4:30 a.m. on July 14, two police officer snipers fired their rifles, fatally wounding Sundberg. The shooting is under investigation.[232][233]

Activists and Sundberg's family held a vigil near the apartment building the evening of July 14.[232] Another rally was held near the building on July 16. Family members, who retained civil rights attorneys Benjamin Crump and Jeff Storms, questioned why Sundberg was shot and sought release of police body camera footage.[234] A woman whose apartment was shot up confronted Sundberg's family and activists during the July 16 demonstration.[235]

Sundberg's killing led to further mistrust between police and community activists, who questioned why police used deadly tactics to end the standoff.[236] Public outrage gave way to protests in Minneapolis, but demonstrations were smaller than in the period after Floyd's murder.[237] Hennepin County Attorney Michael Freeman concluded in a report released on December 21, 2022, that the officers' actions were legally justified and no charges would be filed against them.[238][239]

Stevens House arson, August 30, September 20 & October 1 edit

The John Harrington Stevens House in the Minnehaha Falls Historic District was damaged by three arson attacks in 2022.[240] The house, which dates to the mid-1800s, was named for John H. Stevens, an early settler in Minneapolis.[241] The first fire, on August 30, heavily damaged the building's back side. The second fire, on September 20, affected part of the exterior. Initial work on renovations to repair damage from the first two fires was underway when another suspicious fire on October 1 burned the first and second floors and part of the roof.[242][243][244] Local officials believed the three fires were deliberate and launched an investigation.[241]

Winner Gas and Merwin Liquors protest, September 9 edit

After several days of shootings that left two dead and several injured, residents and activists on the north side of Minneapolis staged a protest to block access to and shutdown Winner Gas and Merwin Liquors for several hours. The residents demanded the city permanently close the two businesses as they had been the location of many violent incidents since Floyd's murder.[245] In Minneapolis, the increase in violent crime following Floyd's murder and widespread civil unrest had a disproportionate impact on underserved and Black communities.[246]

Jamar Clark car caravan protest, November 17 edit

On November 17, seven years after his killing by a Minneapolis police officer, family members of Jamar Clark and local activists held a car caravan protest rally in north Minneapolis. Sixty vehicles participated in the three-mile drive that began at Patrick Henry High School and ended on Plymouth Avenue, where Clark was killed in 2015. Protesters demanded greater community control and oversight of police and noted that they were previously successful in pushing for the elimination of grant juries in Minnesota when investigating police homicides, instead requiring public officials to make a charging determination.[247]

Reaction to the killing of Howard Johnson, December 6 edit

On December 6, Black Lives Matter activists and family of Howard Johnson held a vigil at the site of his death.[248]

On December 5, Saint Paul Police Department officers responded to a domestic assault 911 call in the Dayton's Bluff neighborhood allegedly involving Johnson and set up a perimeter to apprehend him. According to the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, a video surveillance camera captured Johnson attempt a carjacking of an uninvolved vehicle while displaying a gun. Police drove up to him and struck him with a squad car, knocking him to the ground. Johnson got up as an officer exited the police car and the two exchanged gunshots. Johnson was struck multiple times. He was transported to a hospital and later died. The shooting is under investigation.[249][250]

Activists and Johnson's family called for release of body camera footage.[251][250] It was released on December 8, and appeared to show Johnson engaged in a shootout with police.[252]

Immigration reform protest, December 9 edit

On December 8, the Council on American-Islamic Relations and the Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee led a protest in Minneapolis outside the office of U.S. Senator Amy Klobuchar. The demonstrators called on the U.S. Senate to pass American Dream and Promise Act, legislation that would offer permanent protection and a pathway to citizenship for certain immigrants to the United States.[253]

Events in 2023 edit

Manuel Terán protests, January 20 & 21 edit

 
Stop Cop City protest on West Lake Street in Minneapolis on January 21, 2023.

About 100 people participated in a vigil in Minneapolis near the Midtown Greenway on January 20 for Manuel "Tortuguita" Terán, who was fatally shot by a police officer while protesting the construction of a police training facility in Atlanta, Georgia. Another protest march was held in Uptown Minneapolis on January 21 and a Bank of America branch was spray-painted with protest messages.[254] The Stop Cop City protests were part of longstanding tension over U.S. police killings since George Floyd's murder. Demonstrators in Minneapolis, Atlanta, and elsewhere opposed the construction of a police facility in a Black and Brown neighborhood.[255][256] Terán was considered one of the only Black or Brown people to participate in the occupied forest protest and his killing raised further questions of racism in law enforcement conduct.[257]

Tyre Nichols protests, January 27–29 edit

 
Security fencing erected at the Minneapolis police fifth precinct building shortly after the January 27, 2023, release of the footage containing the Tyre Nichols' beating.

Protests were held several U.S. cities on January 27 after video of the January 10 police assault on Tyre Nichols in Memphis, Tennessee, was released. Ahead of the video's release, the ATF sent out a precautionary alert about localities in the Twin Cities for law enforcement agencies to monitor for unrest. The cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul announced plans to prepare for protests and the possibility of unrest.[258][259]

Before the January 27 NBA basketball game at Target Center between the Memphis Grizzles and Minnesota Timberwolves, a moment of silence was held for Nichols, who died three days after the police assault.[259]

On January 28, a protest was held in Minneapolis's Saint Anthony Main neighborhood. A law enforcement helicopter and SWAT team observed the demonstration, but the crowd dispersed without incident.[260] Several racial justice organizations held a protest outside Governor Walz's residence in Saint Paul on January 29; about 300 people participated. Demonstrators called on the governor and legislature to enact police reform measures, such as removing qualified immunity for police officers.[261]

Yia Xiong protests, February 17 & 19 edit

 
Hundreds of community members, activists, family members, and legislators gathered at the Saint Paul Police Western District office on February 26, 2023 to protest the police killing of Yia Xiong.

On February 12, Saint Paul police responded to calls of a knife-wielding man at an apartment on the 100 block of Western Avenue South. According to police officer accounts and body camera footage, Yia Xiong, a 65-year old man and veteran of the U.S. Secret War in Vietnam, advanced toward police officers while holding the knife, prompting them to fatally shoot him. The release of body camera footage on February 17 was met with protest by members of Saint Paul's Hmong American community, including city council member Nelsie Yang, who said Xiong was unnecessarily provoked and that police could have taken other measures to avoid the use of deadly force.[262][263] Hmong community activists, Black Lives Matter, and Communities United Against Police Brutality held a 100-person protest on February 19 outside the apartment building where Xiong was shot. On February 26, as many as 300 people gathered at the St. Paul Police Western District office to protest and march along University Avenue. Family members believe that Xiong's limited English proficiency and hearing loss contributed to the incident.[264][265][266]

Tou Thao guilty verdict, May 2 edit

On May 2, 2023, Thao was found guilty of aiding and abetting manslaughter related—the last federal or state criminal court case related to Floyd's murder. The conviction fulfilled a key demand of protesters that all four Minneapolis police officers be held accountable for murdering Floyd.[267][268]

See also edit

References edit

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2020, 2023, minneapolis, saint, paul, racial, unrest, this, article, about, prolonged, unrest, series, protests, that, began, with, murder, george, floyd, specific, event, list, civil, unrest, minneapolis, saint, paul, early, 2020s, minneapolis, saint, paul, m. This article is about prolonged unrest and a series of protests that began with the murder of George Floyd For a specific event see List of civil unrest in Minneapolis Saint Paul In the early 2020s the Minneapolis Saint Paul metropolitan area in U S state of Minnesota experienced a wave of civil unrest comprising peaceful demonstrations and riots against systemic racism toward black Americans notably in the form of police violence A number of events occurred beginning soon after the murder of George Floyd an unarmed black man by a white Minneapolis police officer on May 25 2020 3 National Public Radio characterized the events as cultural reckoning on topics of racial injustice 4 2020 2023 Minneapolis Saint Paulracial unrestPart of the United States racial unrest 2020 present Protesters march in downtown Minneapolis on May 28 2020 three days after the murder of George Floyd DateMay 26 2020 May 2 2023 2 years 11 months and 1 week LocationMinneapolis and Saint Paul Minnesota U S Caused byReaction to the murder of George Floyd by the Minneapolis Police Department Reaction to other law enforcement killings Institutional racism against African Americans 1 2 Economic racial and social inequality 2 GoalsJustice for George Floyd and others killed as a result of police brutality End to police brutality Address historic racial injusticeMethodsProtests demonstrations civil disobedience civil resistance riotsCasualtiesDeath s Calvin Horton Jr May 27 2020 Oscar Lee Stewart Jr May 28 2020 Deona Marie Knajdek June 13 2021 Deshaun Hill Jr February 9 2022 Damage 500 million for the period of May 26 to early June 2020 Many specific protests over Floyd s murder were described as peaceful events but Minneapolis Saint Paul experienced widespread rioting looting and property destruction over a three night period in late May 2020 that resulted in 500 million in property damage the second most destructive period of local unrest in U S history after the 1992 Los Angeles riots 5 6 Local protests sparked a global protest movement over police brutality and racial justice and affected state and local policies local economic conditions and residents well being Unrest over Floyd s murder continued as protesters sought justice for Floyd and made broader calls to address structural racism in Minnesota and residents reacted to other incidents with many protest events part of the larger Black Lives Matter movement 7 While some demonstrations were violent and generated controversy protesters from varying backgrounds came to rally against what they perceived as the normalization of the killings of innocent black people 8 9 10 11 Contents 1 Events in 2020 1 1 George Floyd protests May 26 2020 May 2 2023 1 2 George Floyd Square occupation protest May 26 ongoing 1 3 Michael Freeman protests May 27 late 2020 1 4 Police abolition movement June 6 2020 November 2 2021 1 5 Christopher Columbus statue toppling June 10 1 6 Minneapolis police union protests June 12 1 7 Juneteenth commemoration June 19 1 8 Calvin Griffith statue removal June 19 1 9 State capitol protest June 24 1 10 Breonna Taylor protests June 26 1 11 Pride parade protests June 28 1 12 Hachalu Hundessa protests June 30 1 13 Black 4th rallies July 4 1 14 Philando Castile commemoration July 6 1 15 Calvin Horton Jr protests July 21 1 16 Powderhorn Park encampment closure August 14 1 17 Sympathy protest for Portland Oregon July 23 1 18 Bob Kroll residential protest August 15 1 19 Police station vandalized August 15 1 20 Jacob Blake protests August 24 1 21 Riots over false rumors of a police shooting August 26 28 1 22 Wall of Forgotten Natives September 3 1 23 Pretrial hearing for Chauvin Lane and Keung and Thao protests September 11 1 24 Blocking the third precinct police station September 16 1 25 Brooklyn Center arson fraud September 23 1 26 Derek Chauvin bail protests October 7 1 27 Election night demonstration November 3 1 28 Interstate 94 protest November 4 1 29 Thanksgiving Day statue vandalism November 26 1 30 Reaction to the killing of Dolal Idd December 30 1 31 New Year s Eve riot December 31 2 Events in 2021 2 1 Dolal Idd protest march January 3 2 2 Downtown Minneapolis racial justice protest January 9 2 3 Presidential inauguration protest January 20 2 4 Police reform protests March 6 2 5 Trial of Derek Chauvin protests March 7 April 19 2 6 Stop Asian Hate rally March 28 2 7 Daunte Wright protests April 11 December 23 2 8 Demonstrations awaiting the Chauvin trial verdict April 19 2 9 Chauvin verdict announcement demonstrations April 20 2 10 Dight Avenue name change petition June 2 11 Winston Boogie Smith protests and Uptown unrest June 3 November 3 2 12 Uptown vehicle ramming incident June 13 2 13 Taking Back Pride event June 27 2 14 Council President Andrea Jenkins vehicle blocking incident June 27 2 15 Philando Castile commemoration July 6 2 16 Leneal Frazier demonstration July 7 2 17 Judge Regina Chu protest November 6 2 18 Prior Lake student protests November 11 19 amp 22 2 19 Kyle Rittenhouse trial verdict protest November 20 2 20 Trial of Kimberly Potter protests November 30 December 23 2 21 Cottage Grove student protest December 20 3 Events in 2022 3 1 Dolal Idd protest January 4 3 2 Civil rights trial of Kueng Lane and Thao protests January 24 February 24 3 3 Amir Locke protests February 2 April 8 3 4 Murder of Deshaun Hill Jr February 9 3 5 Lake Street protest march and vandalism February 11 3 6 Reaction to the Kimberly Potter sentencing February 18 3 7 Minneapolis teachers strike March 8 to 29 3 8 East Lake Street vandalism May 28 3 9 Independence Day unrest July 4 3 10 Andrew Tekle Sundberg protests July 14 amp 16 3 11 Stevens House arson August 30 September 20 amp October 1 3 12 Winner Gas and Merwin Liquors protest September 9 3 13 Jamar Clark car caravan protest November 17 3 14 Reaction to the killing of Howard Johnson December 6 3 15 Immigration reform protest December 9 4 Events in 2023 4 1 Manuel Teran protests January 20 amp 21 4 2 Tyre Nichols protests January 27 29 4 3 Yia Xiong protests February 17 amp 19 4 4 Tou Thao guilty verdict May 2 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksEvents in 2020 editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items June 2021 Arrangement is chronological by the beginning date of each notable event series timelines for some topics overlap George Floyd protests May 26 2020 May 2 2023 edit nbsp Protesters marching in Minneapolis on May 26 2020 the day after Floyd s murder A protester s sign reads Justice for George Floyd and I CANT BREATHE Main article George Floyd protests in Minneapolis Saint Paul Further information List of arson damage during the George Floyd protests in Minneapolis Saint Paul and Aftermath of the George Floyd protests in Minneapolis Saint Paul Protests began in Minneapolis on May 26 the day after the murder of George Floyd when a video of the incident had circulated widely in the media By midday people had gathered by the thousands at the location of Floyd s murder and set up a makeshift memorial 12 13 Organizers of the rally emphasized keeping the protest peaceful 14 Protesters and Floyd s family demanded that all four officers at the scene of his arrest and death be charged with murder and that judicial consequences be swift 15 16 That evening the protest rally turned into a march to the Minneapolis Police Department s third precinct station where the officers were believed to work After the main protest group disbanded a small skirmish the night of May 26 resulted in minor property damage at the station and the police firing tear gas at demonstrators 5 7 13 14 Protests were held at several locations in the Minneapolis Saint Paul metropolitan area in subsequent days The situation escalated on the nights of May 27 to 29 when widespread arson rioting and looting took place which were noted as a contrast to daytime protests that were characterized as mostly peaceful 5 Some initial acts of property destruction on May 27 by a 32 year old man with ties to white supremacist organizations who local police investigators said was deliberately inciting racial tension led to a chain reaction of fires and looting 17 The unrest including demonstrators overtaking the Minneapolis third precinct police station and setting it on fire the night of May 28 garnered significant national and international media attention 7 After state officials mobilized Minnesota National Guard troops in its largest deployment since World War II 18 19 the violent unrest subsided and mostly peaceful protests resumed 7 Violence and property destruction in May 2020 resulted in two deaths 20 21 617 arrests 22 23 and more than 500 million in property damage to 1 500 locations making it the second most destructive period of local unrest in U S history after the 1992 Los Angeles riots 6 24 25 23 George Floyd Square occupation protest May 26 ongoing edit nbsp George Floyd Square August 2020 Main article George Floyd Square On May 26 the day after George Floyd s murder an occupation protest emerged at the intersection of East 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis where Floyd was murdered 26 27 Protesters turned the area into a makeshift memorial and erected barricades to keep automobile traffic out and police officers largely avoided the area in the following months Thousands of visitors protested and grieved at the site which was adorned with public art installments and described as like a shrine 28 When Minneapolis city officials attempted to negotiate reopening the intersection in August 2020 protesters demanded that the city meet a list of 24 demands before removing cement barricades around it 29 The Minneapolis Planning Commission recommended to the city council that Chicago Avenue between 37th and 39th streets be named George Perry Floyd Jr Place 30 and the city designated the intersection as one of seven cultural districts in the city 31 The city also allocated 4 7 million to establish a permanent memorial at the site though by the end of 2020 it was unable to reach agreement with community organizations that had presented officials with a list of demands before opening the intersection back up 32 33 The occupation protests persisted in 2021 34 35 City crews removed cement barricades at the intersection on June 3 2021 as part of a phased reopening process 36 and vehicular traffic resumed on June 20 after having been closed for over a year 37 38 Despite the intersection reopening to vehicular traffic by the end of 2021 the occupied protest at George Floyd Square had persisted for 19 months 39 Tension persisted between organizers of the occupied protest neighborhood residents and city officials into 2023 40 Michael Freeman protests May 27 late 2020 edit nbsp A volunteer campaigns to recall Michael O Freeman June 11 2020 Further information Michael O Freeman In the aftermath of Floyd s murder protests were held regarding Hennepin County Attorney Michael Freeman with several taking place outside his Minneapolis home beginning on May 27 2020 41 Freeman was the attorney for Hennepin County and the initial prosecutor of the four Minneapolis police officers involved in Floyd s murder Protesters were outraged by comments Freeman made on May 28 2020 when he said There is other evidence that does not support a criminal charge referencing how officials were reviewing evidence about whether to charge the police officers with crimes Freeman later said the remarks were misinterpreted and were meant to convey a thorough review of all available evidence 41 The Hennepin County Sheriff s Office deployed deputies and the county paid for private security to protect Freeman and his home against alleged threats 41 On May 30 more than 1 000 protesters gathered outside his home and some caused minor damage to the house 42 A protest group gathered at the Hennepin County Government Center on June 12 to demand Freeman s resignation over his handling of previous officer involved shootings in Minneapolis such as the shooting of Jamar Clark and the prosecution of former police officer Mohamed Noor in the shooting of Justine Damond 43 A group also launched a petition drive to recall Freeman 44 Freeman later sold his house in late 2020 at less than the assessed value Some protesters viewed Freeman s home move as a success of their efforts to pressure him politically 41 Police abolition movement June 6 2020 November 2 2021 edit nbsp A defund police rally at Powderhorn Park June 7 2020 Main article 2021 Minneapolis Question 2 Protesters of Floyd s murder in Minneapolis and elsewhere began calling for reforms of police forces including defunding downsizing or abolishing traditional police departments Led by local organization Black Visions Collective thousands of protesters marched in Minneapolis on June 6 2020 45 The march ended at the home of Mayor Jacob Frey The crowd demanded that he come outside and asked if he supported abolishing the city s police force When Frey responded that he did not the crowd ordered him to leave and booed him away 46 47 45 On June 7 2020 at a Powderhorn Park rally organized by Black Visions Collective and several other black led social justice organizations nine of the 13 members of the Minneapolis City Council vowed before a large crowd to dismantle the city s police department 48 49 Activists who organized the rally wanted to replace the police department with unarmed public safety responders but details about the proposal were indefinite 50 51 The effort to replace the Minneapolis police department with a public safety department continued in 2020 and 2021 A ballot measure was put before Minneapolis voters in the municipal election on November 2 2021 If passed city officials would have 30 days to establish a Department of Public Safety though the exact structure of the new department the services it would provide the number of police officers it employed and its funding level would be determined through a series of city ordinances 52 Voters rejected the ballot measure which required at least 51 to pass with 80 506 votes 56 2 cast for no and 62 813 43 8 for yes 53 Christopher Columbus statue toppling June 10 edit nbsp A demonstrator raises a fist next to the empty pedestal June 10 2020 Further information Statue of Christopher Columbus Saint Paul Minnesota 2020 removal An American Indian Movement group tore down a statue of Christopher Columbus outside the state capitol building in Saint Paul on June 10 as the global protest movement turned toward removing monuments and memorials with controversial legacies 54 Earlier in the day members of the American Indian Movement led by Mike Forcia of the Bad River Band of the Lake Superior Tribe of Chippewa Indians announced their intention to topple the statue State Patrol troopers and a Department of Public Safety tribal liaison met with organizers before the event 55 encouraging them to follow a legal process for removal 56 and warning them that they could face charges for destruction of public property 55 56 Forcia countered that they had already waited far too long having worked through official channels for years without success 55 56 57 American Indian Movement members and other demonstrators including Dakota and Ojibwe community members 55 looped a rope around the statue and pulled it off its granite pedestal The group drummed sang songs and took photos with the fallen statue No one was arrested at the event State Patrol troopers watched from a distance and did not intervene 56 Troopers eventually formed a line to protect the statue before it was transported offsite 55 In December Forcia agreed to a plea deal and accepted 100 hours in community service in connection with the incident Officials estimated the cost to repair the statue would be over 154 000 58 Minneapolis police union protests June 12 edit nbsp A protester holds a sign at the Minneapolis police federation on June 12 2020 Further information Bob Kroll police officer The Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis the union representing Minneapolis Police Department officers and its elected leader were the subject of several protest events Protesters gathered at the Police Officers Federation building in Minneapolis on June 12 to demand the resignation of Bob Kroll head of the city s police union who had characterized the protests and Black Lives Matter as a terrorist organization Thousands of people stretched in every direction from the federation building and listened to speeches by community leaders 59 43 Protesters returned on June 25 Kroll had earlier said he would not step down from the post Protesters said they would continue protesting until their demands were met 60 Juneteenth commemoration June 19 edit Further information Juneteenth nbsp Juneteenth march in north Minneapolis June 19 2020 On June 19 dozens of Juneteenth commemorations were held in the Twin Cities metropolitan area including in Minneapolis near the former third precinct station and at the location of Floyd s murder Participants at the events connected recent instances of police brutality to the historic legacy of slavery in the United States 61 The Minnesota Black Lives Matter chapter that rallied at the state capitol building called on state lawmakers who were meeting in a special legislative session to agree on police reform measures 62 Walz issued a proclamation declaring eight minutes 46 seconds of silence at 11 00 a m CDT on June 9 2020 in memory of Floyd which coincided with the beginning of Floyd s funeral in Houston Texas 63 He also proclaimed June 19 Juneteenth Freedom Day and called on the legislature to make it an annual state holiday 64 Calvin Griffith statue removal June 19 edit Main article Statue of Calvin Griffith The Minnesota Twins removed the statue of former owner Calvin Griffith outside the team s Target Field baseball stadium in Minneapolis on June 19 In a statement the team said the statue reflects an ignorance on our part of systemic racism present in 1978 2010 and today Griffith s legacy was tarnished after racist comments he made in a 1978 speech at the Waseca Lions Club but a statue of him was placed in the stadium s plaza when it opened in 2010 65 66 State capitol protest June 24 edit Further information 91st Minnesota Legislature In June George Floyd protests in Minneapolis Saint Paul broadened to issues of historic racism and police brutality with events nearly every day Protesters gathered outside the governor s mansion in Saint Paul on June 24 and called on him to reconvene the legislature in a special session to pass police reform measures Lawmakers had recently adjourned a special session without agreeing to legislation on the topic 67 Breonna Taylor protests June 26 edit nbsp A Breonna Taylor cardboard cutout at a rally at the state capitol building in Saint Paul June 2020 Main article Breonna Taylor protests Protesters seeking justice for Breonna Taylor held a Red Sunday march on June 26 and gathered at several Twin Cities locations 68 Pride parade protests June 28 edit Despite the cancellation of the official Twin Cities Pride event on June 28 protesters gathered in downtown Minneapolis and called for justice for Floyd greater protections for black transgender people community control of policing and the freeing of political prisoners 69 Restrictions on public gatherings due to the COVID 19 pandemic prevented organizers from holding a more celebratory event of LGBTQ people as in past years which had been among the most well attended Pride parade events in the country 70 The 2020 Pride parade in the Twin Cities intersected with the Black Lives Matter movement and returned to the way it began as a protest movement 71 Hachalu Hundessa protests June 30 edit Further information Hachalu Hundessa riots On June 30 several hundred protesters from Minnesota s Oromo diaspora gathered outside the Minnesota state capitol building to protest the killing of Hachalu Hundessa a popular musician and political activist who was shot and killed in Addis Ababa on June 28 resulting in considerable unrest in Ethiopia On the evening of July 1 hundreds of protesters blocked Interstate 94 in Minneapolis to call for justice for Hundessa and the Oromo people 72 Black 4th rallies July 4 edit Thousands took part in several peaceful demonstrations in Minneapolis and called for racial equity and justice for Floyd on July 4 Organizers of two marches dubbed Black 4th through predominately white areas of the city sought to continue the momentum for police reform and raise awareness about social justice issues 73 74 Philando Castile commemoration July 6 edit Further information Killing of Philando Castile Four years after the shooting of Philando Castile by a police officer in the Twin Cities suburb of St Anthony several Black Lives Matter rallies were held on July 6 to commemorate Castile and connect his killing to the global protest movement about racism and police brutality sparked by Floyd s murder 75 Calvin Horton Jr protests July 21 edit nbsp Protesters at the boarded up Cadillac Pawn shop in Minneapolis July 21 2020 On May 27 during unrest over Floyd s murder in Minneapolis Calvin Horton Jr a 43 year old man from Minneapolis was fatally shot by the owner of the Cadillac Pawn amp Jewelry shop who believed Horton was burglarizing his business The incident took place on East Lake Street about one mile 1 6 km from the main protest sites 76 77 The shop owner was arrested the night of the shooting and held in Hennepin County Jail for several days but was released pending further investigation 78 There were no new developments in the case by July 21 2020 when family and supporters of Horton protested outside the store and demanded the owner be charged with murder 78 In December 2020 Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman s office declined to file charges against the pawn shop owner after a six month investigation due to lack of evidence that the shooting was not self defense 79 Powderhorn Park encampment closure August 14 edit Further information 2020 Minneapolis homeless encampments nbsp Encampment in Powderhorn Park July 20 2020 A sprawling encampment at Powderhorn Park generated controversy as it grew to 560 tents by mid July 80 Numerous sexual assaults fights and drug use at the encampment generated alarm for nearby residents The city had pushed to connect people experiencing homeless with services including establishing three new shelters and shelter beds remained available Officials adopted a deescalation for disbanding camps due to the ongoing civil unrest and when they attempted to remove tents at non permitted sites they faced opposition from a sanctuary movement and protest groups 81 After violence and multiple sexual assaults at Powderhorn Park the park board cleared it of tents on August 14 2020 as police faced off with protesters and fired pepper spray 82 Sympathy protest for Portland Oregon July 23 edit Further information George Floyd protests in Portland Oregon On July 23 Minnesotans gathered at a federal courthouse and marched through downtown Minneapolis in opposition to the deployment of federal troops to protests in Portland Oregon 83 Bob Kroll residential protest August 15 edit Further information Bob Kroll police officer Nekima Levy Armstrong and John Thompson Minnesota politician nbsp Anti Bob Kroll graffiti in Minneapolis June 13 2020 On August 15 a 100 person protest group led by Nekima Levy Armstrong s Racial Justice Network gathered outside Kroll s home in Hugo Minnesota to call for his resignation from the Minneapolis police union Protesters also criticized Kroll s partner WCCO television reporter Liz Collin for a conflict of interest in stories about police violence Remarks by John Thompson a Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor candidate for the state legislature from St Paul drew controversy Thompson said in his speech You think we give a fuck about burning Hugo down and Fuck Hugo Some of Thompson s remarks were said to be directed at children who were present The event also featured the bashing of pinata effigies of Kroll and Collin Several local media members condemned the symbolic display of violence against a woman journalist Inflammatory rhetoric at the event was also condemned by leaders of the Minnesota Democratic Farmer Labor and Republican parties and led to an apology from Thompson 84 9 85 Police station vandalized August 15 edit Late at night on August 15 a group of approximately 50 people marched to Minneapolis s fifth precinct police station in what was initially described as a peaceful protest but it became violent when people threw rocks at windows threw paint on the building and shot commercial grade fireworks at police officers before fleeing the scene Mayor Frey and Minneapolis City Council Vice President Andrea Jenkins said the destruction was not the solution to problems with policing 11 86 In 2021 a man from Blaine Minnesota pleaded guilty to federal criminal charges related to the unrest and other incidents 87 86 Jacob Blake protests August 24 edit nbsp Minneapolis police officers with riot gear August 24 2020 Main article Kenosha unrest On August 23 Jacob Blake an African American man was shot four times in the back during an arrest by police officer Rusten Sheskey 88 89 The incident occurred in Kenosha Wisconsin as police officers were attempting to arrest Blake In reaction to the incident protests and unrest occurred in Wisconsin and elsewhere On August 24 in Minneapolis a 100 person protest over Blake s shooting took place in the city s downtown area and after the main protest group disbanded some protesters became violent and broke windows and threatened to breach a jail facility resulting in 11 arrests 90 One Minneapolis police officer suffered a broken hand during a confrontation with a demonstrator 91 Riots over false rumors of a police shooting August 26 28 edit nbsp Hennepin County sheriff officers on patrol after looting and vandalism August 27 2020 Main article 2020 Minneapolis false rumors riot Rioting and looting in downtown Minneapolis came as reaction to false rumors that Eddie Sole Jr a 38 year old African American man had been shot and killed by Minneapolis police officers on August 26 92 Surveillance video showed that Sole had died by suicide a self inflicted gunshot to the head during a manhunt for a homicide suspect in which he was the person of interest as police officers closed in to arrest him after a foot chase 93 Controversially the police released the CCTV camera footage of the suicide in attempts to stop the unrest 94 Overnight destruction the night of August 26 led to at least 132 arrests for violence and looting 95 as damage to 77 properties occurred in the Minneapolis Saint Paul metropolitan region 96 97 including five buildings that were set on fire including the Target Corporation headquarters building 96 98 99 Governor Walz declared a state of emergency and deployed National Guard troops and Mayor Frey imposed on overnight curfew 100 Nearly 1 000 members of law enforcement and 400 Minnesota National Guard troops amassed in the metro area to prevent more lawlessness and calm prevailed after August 27 101 102 Wall of Forgotten Natives September 3 edit nbsp Franklin Hiawatha encampment north gate October 1 2020 Two years after a large camp was disbanded near Hiawatha and Franklin avenues in Minneapolis on September 3 a group backed by protesters and American Indian Movement advocates reoccupied a site they called the Wall of Forgotten Natives The state had barricaded the site in 2018 when an encampment closed after experiencing drug overdoses spread of disease violence fires and deaths In September 2020 reoccupation of the encampment with 40 tents came after the city closed another encampment on 13th Avenue due to health and safety concerns and after officials sought help from nonprofit organizations Reestablishment of the Hiawatha encampment also came during a time of increasing confrontation between Minneapolis officials and homeless advocates as the city had hoped to close all encampments by October 81 Pretrial hearing for Chauvin Lane and Keung and Thao protests September 11 edit Hundreds rallied outside the Hennepin County Government Center a downtown Minneapolis local government and court building on September 11 during a pretrial hearing for the four police officers at the scene of Floyd s murder former officers Chauvin Lane and Keung and Thao 103 Confrontations between some in the crowd and the officers attorney were described as angry On November 5 defense attorneys cited the exchange on September 11 and safety concerns in their arguments in court to have a change of venue to another jurisdiction for the trial but Peter Cahill the presiding judge rejected their motion 104 Blocking the third precinct police station September 16 edit After the third precinct station burned down during the May riots police officers worked out of the convention center in downtown Minneapolis 105 In August officials pursued a lease agreement for a temporary police station at a privately owned building on Minnehaha Avenue in the Seward neighborhood A neighborhood group that supported the police abolition movement pushed back against the city and organized a Blocked the Precinct Block party protest rally near the site 106 The city s lease agreement fell apart in September after opposition from community groups and threats of violence against the property owner and police officers Police investigated threats to burn the property down and the building was tagged with anti police graffiti including a call for the literal deaths of individual police officers 105 Brooklyn Center arson fraud September 23 edit Denis Molla a 30 year old man from Brooklyn Center Minnesota gained widespread media attention after he alleged that in the early morning hours of September 23 2020 his detached garage and camper were vandalized with graffiti and set on fire by supporters of Black Lives Matter and Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden In media interviews about the incident he speculated that he was the victim of a politically motivated attack as retaliation for displaying a flag in support of Donald Trump s presidential campaign Molla submitted 300 000 in insurance claims for property damage which his insurer mostly denied 107 108 109 After the Brooklyn Center Police Department and the FBI investigated the incident and the insurance claims Molla was charged in U S District Court in July 2022 with two counts of wire fraud as prosecutors said in charging documents that he set his own property on fire and painted the graffiti messages himself In October 2022 Molla pleaded guilty to federal wire fraud charges for receiving 61 000 in insurance claims and 17 000 from donors via GoFundMe 107 108 109 He was sentenced on June 8 2023 to 2 5 years in prison and one year of supervised release 110 Derek Chauvin bail protests October 7 edit Further information Murder of George Floyd Investigations and criminal charges On October 7 protesters took to the streets and held rallies at several places in Minneapolis to express anger over the release on bail of Derek Chauvin the former Minneapolis Police Department officer charged with murdering George Floyd Chauvin was later fired from the department and arrested He posted 1 million bail for his release pending trial The bail was later revoked on April 20 2021 eight weeks before his sentencing because Chauvin was found guilty Governor Walz sent 100 National Guardsmen 100 state police troops and 75 conservation officers to keep the peace 111 Law enforcement made 51 arrests late on October 7 of which 49 were for misdemeanor offenses such as unlawful assembly one was for assault and one was for an outstanding felony warrant 112 Election night demonstration November 3 edit nbsp A police officer with a rifle during protests on November 3 2020 Several business in Minneapolis and Saint Paul boarded up windows and doors on November 3 preparing for possible unrest related to the presidential election Some of the businesses had suffered damages during protests following Floyd s murder and wanted to be prepared for the possibility of further unrest The Minnesota National Guard was placed on standby and police forces in the two cities activated extra staff 113 A group of demonstrators marching behind an America is Over banner made their way through Uptown in Minneapolis late at night on Tuesday Minneapolis police officers kept their distance as the group blocked several intersections spray painted storefronts and threw traffic signs and debris into the street When protesters shot fireworks at officers and refused to disperse the police advanced and made 14 arrests for suspicion of rioting and fourth degree assault No injuries were reported 114 Interstate 94 protest November 4 edit nbsp Protesters on Interstate 94 in Minneapolis on November 4 2020 On November 4 as part of a national day of protests led by the National Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression following the U S presidential election 115 116 several local social justice organizations converged for protest marches through Minneapolis with the mantra Don t Let Trump Steal the Election in reference to President Donald Trump s claims that the election was stolen and his attempts to overturn its results 116 After marching through downtown protesters entered onto Interstate 94 blocking vehicular traffic As they attempted to exit the highway Minneapolis police and Minnesota state patrol officers fired tear gas and then kettled and arrested 646 people for public nuisance and unlawful assembly while continuing to block traffic for several hours Most of those arrested were cited and released 117 116 A 19 year old woman from Golden Valley was charged with felony second degree riot for pointing a laser in a police officer s eyes and a 29 year old woman from Minneapolis was charged with fourth degree assault and obstructing the legal process for kicking a police officer 118 The charge against the 19 year old who tried to take a plea deal was later dropped by the judge 115 The mass arrest of 646 people was the largest in recent Minnesota history In the aftermath activists demanded that charges against demonstrators be dropped The Minneapolis City Attorney s Office later pursued charges in 588 of the cases saying that the demonstration was not protected by the First Amendment as it broke several laws and endangered motorists and pedestrians 115 Several hundred demonstrators accepted plea agreements to suspend prosecution in exchange for a 175 fine and six hours of community service About 280 people rejected plea agreements 115 Among those who rejected a plea deal was Sara Jane Olson a leftist radical in the late 1970s she was convicted of a petty misdemeanor in 2021 and ordered to pay a 378 fine 116 Thanksgiving Day statue vandalism November 26 edit In the early morning hours of November 26 a statute of George Washington at Washburn Fair Oaks Park in Minneapolis was toppled and defaced with anticolonial graffiti A few miles away at BF Nelson Park a monument depicting three generations of pioneers was spray painted with the words no thanks no more genocide decolonize and land back The Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board said it was investigating the incidents but was aware of the controversy about the historic context of the statues The vandalism came six months after a protest group toppled a Christopher Columbus statue outside the Minnesota state capitol building 119 Reaction to the killing of Dolal Idd December 30 edit nbsp The secured crime scene in Minneapolis on December 30 2020 Main article Killing of Dolal Idd Protests emerged the evening of December 30 after police shot and killed Dolal Idd at a Holiday gas station near the intersection of Cedar Avenue and East 36th Street in Minneapolis The shooting happened at approximately 6 15 p m less than a one mile 1 6 km from where George Floyd was murdered in May 120 and was the first fatal police shooting in the city since then 121 Few details were known about the shooting as approximately 100 protesters gathered at the scene Some protesters shouted expletives and threw snowballs at police officers Officers prepared to use pepper spray if assaulted by demonstrators By late evening the scene was calmer as protesters blocked an intersection and built a bonfire 122 Several people attended a vigil on December 31 near the intersection of Cedar Avenue and East 36th Street for Idd and other victims of police violence 121 New Year s Eve riot December 31 edit nbsp Minneapolis police officers on duty during protests in the early morning hours of January 1 2021 Seventy five demonstrators gathered in downtown Minneapolis on December 31 to protest police brutality Police learned of the rally from a social media posting calling on people to wear black clothing and masks and to help burn the precincts amp the prisons sic From the downtown area demonstrators walked to Commons Park near U S Bank Stadium where police observed the group shooting fireworks at motorists painting graffiti on the walls of local government buildings and disrupting traffic 123 That night authorities gave orders for a crowd to disperse but some people refused At least 15 were detained for allegedly rioting and 21 were cited and released 124 Five were charged with felony riot and for being armed with a dangerous weapon 123 The demonstration had been scheduled several weeks earlier and was unrelated to the killing of Dolal Idd 124 Events in 2021 editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items June 2021 Arrangement is chronological by the beginning date of each notable event series timelines for some topics overlap Dolal Idd protest march January 3 edit On January 3 2021 as many as 1 000 protesters marched peacefully in south Minneapolis to express outrage over Dolal Idd s killing by Minneapolis police and a search of the Idd family home by the Hennepin County Sheriff s Office 125 Downtown Minneapolis racial justice protest January 9 edit Several hundred people gathered in downtown Minneapolis on January 9 2021 to protest racial injustice at a rally that featured speeches hand drawn signs and chats Protesters connected Idd s death on December 30 2020 to Floyd and Jacob Blake The week before the downtown Minneapolis gathering a Wisconsin prosecutor declined to press charges against the police officer who shot Blake which protesters at the rally objected to 126 Protesters then marched from the Hennepin County Government Center to the Minneapolis Police Department s first precinct station for more speeches and chants The protest group expressed outrage over the mob that stormed the United States Capitol building on January 6 2021 and speakers contrasted the recent police related homicides in Minneapolis to the mob of apparent white supremacists that overwhelmed Capitol police in Washington D C who took little action to stop them 126 Presidential inauguration protest January 20 edit nbsp Biden is not the solution keep fighting sign at George Floyd Square January 20 2021 On the day of the presidential inauguration of Joe Biden nearly 120 members of several progressive organizations held a peaceful rally in Minneapolis to pressure the incoming Biden administration to commit to several left wing policy positions during its first 100 days in office such as to reverse Trump administration policies affecting immigrant and minority communities Protesters gathered at South High School and marched along Lake Street past the Minneapolis Police Department s third precinct building that was set on fire in May 2020 after Floyd s murder 127 The day s events were organized by the local Black Lives Matter chapter and other social justice organizations The group s demands included dropping criminal charges against people who were prosecuted during the 2020 George Floyd protests in Minneapolis Saint Paul and the 600 people who were arrested on November 4 2020 for blocking traffic on Interstate 94 128 129 Police reform protests March 6 edit Approximately 150 people marched and rallied at the governor s mansion in Saint Paul ahead of the trial of Derek Chauvin scheduled for March 8 2021 The event organized by Families Supporting Families Against Police Violence sought to pressure state and local officials to enact police reform legislation and reevaluate cases where people died under police pursuit or arrest 130 In another protest march demonstrators in Minneapolis marched from George Floyd Square to the Hennepin County Government Center and back 131 Trial of Derek Chauvin protests March 7 April 19 edit Further information Protests in Minneapolis regarding the trial of Derek Chauvin nbsp Protest march in Minneapolis March 7 2021 On March 7 2021 several hundred protesters marched in downtown Minneapolis and rallied outside the Hennepin County Government Center building to mourn George Floyd and call for reform of policing The event dubbed the I Can t Breathe Silent March For Justice by its organizers came a day before jury selection in the trial of Derek Chauvin Protesters carried a white colored replica coffin adorned with red flowers Another group of faith leaders held a Pray for MN gathering at the government center building later that afternoon 131 Approximately 1 000 protesters gathered peacefully outside a downtown courthouse as Chauvin s trial commenced on March 8 to call for justice for Floyd and raise broader issues of racial injustice Officials had surrounded the facility with a temporary concrete barrier metal fencing and barbed wire in anticipation of potential unrest Protests and rallies planned for George Floyd Square were halted for several days after a fatal shooting there on March 6 2021 132 On March 28 2021 the day before opening statements in Chauvin s trial several rallies and protests were held in Minneapolis Floyd s family and Al Sharpton hosted a vigil at the Greater Friendship Missionary Baptist Church in Minneapolis Separately protesters marched in downtown Minneapolis to demand justice for Floyd and rallied at the Hennepin County Government Center and City Hall and some demonstrators parked cars on the Metro light rail tracks which closed train traffic for several hours At the intersection where Floyd was murdered a group of people who self identified as anarchists and anti fascists held a training workshop on how to avoid arrest and keep calm if detained by police Protesters claimed that the intersection was not public property and demanded that journalists leave the area before the workshop began 133 George Floyd Square remained an important gathering place during Chauvin s trial for people protesting racial injustice and seeking justice for Floyd The square hosted daily visitors from around the country who made pilgrimages there 134 Groups of protesters also gathered outside Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapolis during Chauvin s trial and marched on the streets calling for justice 135 On April 6 several civil rights leaders including Sharpton and former New York Governor David Paterson led a rally outside the government building and prayed for Chauvin s conviction 136 The trial concluded on April 19 2021 and the jury began deliberations 137 Stop Asian Hate rally March 28 edit Further information Stop Asian HateOn March 28 2021 hundreds of people and more than 20 community organizations participated in a Stop Asian Hate rally at the state capitol building The event was in reaction to recent Atlanta spa shootings where eight people had died most of them Asian American women 138 Daunte Wright protests April 11 December 23 edit nbsp Protest after the killing of Daunte Wright in Brooklyn Center April 11 2021 Main article Daunte Wright protests Further information Killing of Daunte Wright On April 11 2021 at 1 48 p m an officer with the police department of Brooklyn Center a suburb of Minneapolis Saint Paul shot 20 year old Daunte Wright a black man during a traffic stop Wright had an outstanding warrant for his arrest As officers attempted to detain him a struggle ensued and Wright reentered his vehicle An officer discharged her firearm believing she was using her taser gun instead striking Wright before he drove off 139 Wright crashed his vehicle several blocks away Though EMS arrived and attempted to revive him Wright was pronounced dead at the scene of the crash Wright s girlfriend was also a passenger in the car She sustained non life threatening injuries from the crash and was transported to the hospital 140 141 142 143 144 The event unfolded as the trial of Derek Chauvin was underway in Minneapolis Wright s death occurred approximately 10 miles 16 km from the intersection where Floyd was murdered 145 As news of the Brooklyn Center incident spread family members of Wright neighbors to the car crash and protesters began gathering at the car crash scene in Brooklyn Center in what was initially a peaceful demonstration 141 140 142 Several protesters came from another rally organized by families of people who had been killed by police that they had held earlier in the day in Saint Paul 146 The crowd grew to several hundred people by evening as they demanded more information from police investigators As tension at the scene rose over the ensuing hours police in tactical gear arrived formed a line and moved in when demonstrators began climbing on police vehicles and throwing bricks 141 140 142 Over the next days tense protests and sporadic looting took place and resulted in the deployment of the Minnesota National Guard Minnesota State Patrol and Hennepin County sheriff s office Thousands of people participated in protests and rallies in Brooklyn Center and elsewhere Authorities clashed with some protesters resulting in several dozen arrests 147 Demonstrations awaiting the Chauvin trial verdict April 19 edit nbsp Justice for George Floyd March in Minneapolis during jury deliberations on April 19 2021 Main article Protests in Minneapolis regarding the trial of Derek Chauvin Derek Chauvin s trial concluded in Minneapolis just after 5 p m on April 19 2021 and the jury began deliberations that evening The trial was one of the most closely watched cases of police brutality in the United States Governor Walz declared a peacetime emergency and deployed 3 000 Minnesota National Guard troops and state patrol officers to assist local law enforcement He also sought deployment of law enforcement officers from nearby states Some schools in the metropolitan area announced plans to proactively move to distance learning and some businesses boarded up out of worries of potential unrest The killing of Daunte Wright on April 11 and the subsequent protests intersected with the looming verdict Days earlier U S Representative Maxine Waters told demonstrators in Minnesota that they should stay on the street and get more confrontational if Chauvin was acquitted 148 On April 19 twenty activist groups coordinated a large demonstration and march through the streets in Minneapolis near the Hennepin County Government Center building where Chauvin s trial was held Protesters made several demands lengthy sentences for the officers involved in Floyd s murder police reform legislation in Minnesota to have charges dropped against demonstrators in Brooklyn Center and at other recent events and for officials to end Operation Safety Net and other counter protest measures Protesters and law enforcement authorities did not engage with one another and the event was peaceful 137 149 A protest group of about 40 50 people gathered outside the Brooklyn Center police station that evening 150 Protest events occurred without incident and officials described them as peaceful Officials with the Operation Safety Net also reported three business burglaries in Minneapolis and that a Minnesota Department of Natural Resources vehicle deployed for potential unrest was broken into and had a firearm stolen from it Officials did not make any arrests connected to April 19 events 150 Chauvin verdict announcement demonstrations April 20 edit nbsp Crowd gathers for the verdict announcement in the trial of Derek Chauvin April 20 2021 Derek Chauvin was found guilty of murdering George Floyd on April 20 2021 People gathered outside the Hennepin County Government Center where the trial was held and at the 38th and Chicago Avenue intersection where Floyd was murdered to await the verdict at approximately 4 p m Crowds chanted in approval as the verdict was read that found Chauvin guilty on all charges 151 As news of the verdict spread thousands of people marched in downtown Minneapolis and others gathered at 38th and Chicago Avenue in elation over the outcome Protesters also called for reforms to policing and justice for other black men killed by police 152 153 Dight Avenue name change petition June edit Further information John Cheatham and Charles Fremont Dight In mid 2021 a petition drive led by disability activist Noah McCourt requested that the City of Minneapolis rename Dight Avenue a street in the Longfellow community that had been named decades earlier for the controversial Charles Fremont Dight 154 After consulting with Dight Avenue residents and offering several options 155 city officials decided to honor John Cheatham s legacy of racially integrating the city s fire department by renaming Dight Avenue after him with the change taking place in 2022 156 157 Winston Boogie Smith protests and Uptown unrest June 3 November 3 edit Main article 2021 Uptown Minneapolis unrest Further information Killing of Winston Boogie Smith nbsp Minneapolis police and demonstrators on West Lake Street June 4 2021 Winston Boogie Smith a 32 year old black man was shot and killed by law enforcement authorities on June 3 2021 as they attempted to apprehend him at a parking ramp in the Uptown neighborhood of Minneapolis Protests following the killing began on June 3 and continued for several days primarily in Uptown 158 159 160 Soon after the shooting Smith s family demanded greater law enforcement transparency and the release of any surveillance footage that captured the incident 161 Civil rights activists and Smith s friends and family disputed law enforcement s accounts of the incident Local organization Communities United Against Police Brutality held a press conference near the shooting site on June 4 to call for officials to release video footage and other details of the shooting 162 163 Smith s family and friends held a peaceful vigil the evening of June 4 at the parking ramp where he was killed and participated in a protest march on June 6 164 158 Activist Nekima Levy Armstrong led a protest on June 8 outside the home of Minnesota s U S Marshal Ramona Dohman calling for her resignation Armstrong alleged that Dohman a Trump administration appointee had a conflict of interest due to a past working relationship with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension 165 Protests were held over subsequent days with demonstrators periodically occupying an intersection near where Smith was killed 166 167 Uptown vehicle ramming incident June 13 edit nbsp The secured crime scene on June 14 2021 several hours after Deona Knajdek was killed Main article Killing of Deona Marie Knajdek On June 13 2021 Nicholas Kraus a 35 year old man from Saint Paul drove a car into a crowd of demonstrators who had gathered as a part of the ongoing Winston Boogie Smith protests killing Deona Marie Knajdek and injuring three others That evening demonstrators had blocked the intersection of West Lake Street and Girard Avenue 166 168 At approximately 11 39 p m CDT in a Jeep Cherokee Kraus drove into the crowd at a high speed striking a parked vehicle that had been used to block off the intersection to traffic which then collided with protesters 168 169 170 On June 16 he was charged with second degree intentional murder and two counts of assault with a deadly weapon in relation to the crash after allegedly telling investigators that he had accelerated toward the crowd in an attempt to clear the barricades that were protecting protesters 171 To avoid trial Kraus pleaded guilty on October 24 2022 to charges of unintentional murder and second degree assault with a dangerous weapon 172 Taking Back Pride event June 27 edit In a protest event called Taking Back Pride demonstrators marched in downtown Minneapolis on June 27 as a counter to contemporary Pride parade festivities and referenced the protest origin of the U S LGBTQ movement that began with the 1969 Stonewall riots Participants of the June 27 march said that police were not welcome at the event refused to cooperate with law enforcement for permits and did not invite corporate partnerships Demonstrators demanded police accountability for the killings of Daunte Wright and Winston Smith and called for greater protections of Black transgender people 173 Council President Andrea Jenkins vehicle blocking incident June 27 edit Further information Andrea Jenkins A group of activists that included Donald Hooker Jr a leader with Twin Cities Coalition for Justice 4 Jamar referring to Jamar Clark confronted Minneapolis Council Vice President Andrea Jenkins near Loring Park in the afternoon of June 27 Jenkins a transgender African American woman had attended an earlier Pride event For several hours the group blocked the car she was a passenger in and presented a list of six demands that Jenkins was asked to sign her agreement to The demands including dropping charges against protesters in recent demonstrations the immediate resignation of Mayor Jacob Frey continuing the closure of George Floyd Square and providing more information about investigations of recent police killings After Jenkins signed the agreement activists moved out of the way to allow the vehicle to drive away 174 175 176 Hooker posted a 23 minute video of part of the encounter to Facebook In a statement about the incident Jenkins said she was treated inhumanely and held against her will by the demonstrators 177 Philando Castile commemoration July 6 edit Further information Killing of Philando Castile Five years after the shooting of Philando Castile by a police officer in the Twin Cities suburb of St Anthony Castile s family and a crowd of 200 people gathered and marched outside the governor s mansion in Saint Paul They expressed their desire for the state legislature to enact several police reform measures such as limiting pretextual traffic stops 178 Leneal Frazier demonstration July 7 edit Further information Killing of Leneal Frazier and Darnella Frazier On July 7 a group of approximately 40 people who were mourning the death of Leneal Frazier a 40 year old man from Saint Paul blocked Lyndale Avenue in the Camden neighborhood of Minneapolis Frazier an uninvolved bystander was killed on July 6 by a Minneapolis police squad car that was pursuing a robbery suspect in a vehicle that had reportedly been carjacked While in pursuit the squad car struck several vehicles including Frazier s near the intersection of Lyndale Avenue and 41st Avenue North at approximately 12 30 a m CDT Frazier was a relative of Darnella Frazier the then teenager who filmed George Floyd s murder on her cellphone on May 25 2020 179 Brian Cummings the Minneapolis police officer who crashed into Frazier s vehicle on July 6 was charged with second degree manslaughter and criminal vehicular homicide 180 Judge Regina Chu protest November 6 edit Demonstrators gathered outside a downtown Minneapolis condominium to demand that the State v Potter trial be broadcast live for public view The trial of former Brooklyn Center police office Kimberly Potter was related to the April 11 2021 killing of Daunte Wright during a traffic stop During the November 6 protest event a demonstrator recorded a Facebook livestream of himself gaining entry to the building and protesting outside the door of what he believed was Judge Chu s unit Chu no longer resided at the building at the time of the protest 181 182 183 Cortez Rice a resident of Minneapolis was later charged in Hennepin County for harassment involving retaliation against a judicial officer 184 182 Prior Lake student protests November 11 19 amp 22 edit nbsp Protest against racism at Prior Lake High School November 11 2021 On November 11 hundreds of people participated in a protest in the Minneapolis Saint Paul suburb of Savage to express anger at the contents of a video that captured a Prior Lake High School student directing racial slurs at another Black student Protesters who gathered outside the school that closed early anticipation of the event denounced the incident and what they viewed as persistent Islamophobia and racism in the Prior Lake Savage Area School District 185 186 Dozens attended a rally organized by Minnesota Teen Activists on November 19 outside U S Bank Stadium in downtown Minneapolis to support students who spoke out against racism at Prior Lake High School 187 Raucous activists confronted members of the Prior Lake Savage Area School Board at a meeting on November 22 Board members walked out when an activist interrupted the meeting with a profane outburst 188 Kyle Rittenhouse trial verdict protest November 20 edit Further information Kenosha unrest shooting On November 20 hundreds protested the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse at a demonstration in downtown Minneapolis Rittenhouse was charged with several crimes related to a shooting that killed two people and injured another during the Kenosha unrest on August 20 2020 Protesters gathered near Hennepin County Government Center and marched through downtown at times blocking traffic and temporarily shutting down a street intersection Protesters believed Rittenhouse should have been found guilty of the charges against him 189 190 Trial of Kimberly Potter protests November 30 December 23 edit nbsp Wright s family news media and activists await the trial verdict December 23 2021 Main article Daunte Wright protests Further information Killing of Daunte Wright Trial proceedings for Kimberly Potter the Brooklyn Center police officer who shot Daunte Wright in April began on November 30 in downtown Minneapolis Demonstrators gathered outside the Hennepin County Government Center building the venue for her trial Protests marched through the streets and temporarily blocked vehicular traffic A vehicle drove through the crowd as protesters urged the driver to stop A protester climbed on the vehicle as the drive slowly drove away but was able to dismount safety one block later No injuries were reported 191 The number of protesters dwindled over the course of the Potter trial as outside temperatures became colder A lone demonstrator was protesting outside the courtroom building by December 17 2021 192 Crowds grew in size during the jury deliberation that began on December 22 193 Potter was convicted of first degree and second degree manslaughter charges The security measures at the Hennepin County Government Center were laxer than during Chauvin s trial and downtown Minneapolis calmly awaited the verdict with relatively few businesses boarding up 194 A crowd of about 50 people that had gathered outside the court building celebrated the trial s outcome 195 Cottage Grove student protest December 20 edit Some students at Park High School in Cottage Grove Minnesota staged a walkout style protest over countless racially motivated incidents and a school employee s alleged use of the n word The event was organized by the Park High School Black Student Union 196 Events in 2022 editThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items January 2022 Arrangement is chronological by the beginning date of each notable event series timelines for some topics overlap Dolal Idd protest January 4 edit Activists and family members of Dolal Idd rallied in Saint Paul on January 4 2022 outside Governor Walz s official residence They called for further investigation of the incident that led to Idd s death and the release of additional evidence in the case 197 Civil rights trial of Kueng Lane and Thao protests January 24 February 24 edit Further information Murder of George Floyd Trial of Kueng Lane and Thao nbsp Counter protest security measures at the Warren E Burger Federal Building January 23 2022 In early 2022 local officials prepared counter protest measures for potential unrest ahead of the scheduled January 20 start of the federal civil rights trial of J Alexander Kueng Thomas Lane and Tou Thao Minneapolis police officers who were at the scene of George Floyd s murder Officials erected security fencing around the Warren E Burger Federal Building in Saint Paul that contained the courtroom for the trial 198 199 200 Before the trial protesters said they were concerned about its outcome and were prepared to demonstrate 201 Protest demonstrations were held in the streets surrounding the courtroom building during the trial 202 203 Amir Locke protests February 2 April 8 edit Further information Killing of Amir Locke Protests nbsp Civil rights activists speak about the killing of Amir Locke February 2 2022 At 6 48 a m on February 2 2022 Minneapolis Police Department officer Mark Hanneman 204 fatally shot Amir Locke a 22 year old Black man while police officers were executing a search warrant at an apartment in downtown Minneapolis The shooting occurred nine seconds after police entered the apartment while Locke was lying on a couch wrapped in a blanket and holding a gun 205 206 207 208 Local civil rights advocates called on city officials to release video footage and additional information about the incident and questioned whether deadly force was necessary A group of advocates held a vigil on the evening of February 2 outside the downtown apartment building where the killing took place 209 Several protests were held in Minneapolis and Saint Paul over the subsequent weeks 210 211 212 Murder of Deshaun Hill Jr February 9 edit Deshaun Hill Jr a 15 year old student at North Community High School was fatally shot in Minneapolis at about 12 30 p m on February 9 2022 The school principal at North despite being told not to do so by school district officials had released students early for the day so they could participate in a planned protest in downtown Minneapolis over the police killing of Amir Locke The principal attended and encouraged students to participate in the walkout Hill left school and was walking home when he was fatally shot after a chance encounter with the shooter Cody Fohrenkam a 30 year old Minneapolis resident who later faced murder charges 213 214 215 The principal was put on leave by officials but was reinstated after receiving support from community members The school district settled with Hill s family for 500 000 in 2023 Hill s family called for criminal charges to be filed against the principal but Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty declined to do so 214 215 Hill was the quarterback on the North football team His story was the subject of the Showtime docuseries Boys in Blue released in 2023 216 A jury convicted Fohrenkam of second degree murder after a three day trial in January 2023 217 In February 2023 he was sentenced to 38 5 years in prison he will not be eligible for supervised release for 25 years 218 219 Lake Street protest march and vandalism February 11 edit On February 11 2022 approximately 100 people marched through south Minneapolis during the evening to demand justice for the police killings of Amir Locke and Winston Boogie Smith Along several blocks of Lake Street several properties were vandalized and tagged with anti police and anarchist graffiti Some demonstrators threw rocks at the Minneapolis Police Department s fifth precinct station building 211 220 Reaction to the Kimberly Potter sentencing February 18 edit Protests were held in reaction to former Brooklyn Center police officer Kimberly Potter s sentence hearing on February 18 2022 when she received two years in custody rather than the seven years requested by prosecutors for killing Daunte Wright Protesters gathered in Minneapolis outside the Hennepin County Government Center building where the sentencing hearing was held A group of about 100 people marched to what they believed to be the residence of Judge Regina Chu who presided over Potter s trial and sentenced her In Brooklyn Center that night people looted the Icon Beauty Supply store 221 Minneapolis teachers strike March 8 to 29 edit nbsp Striking teachers demonstrate at Minneapolis City Hall March 24 2022 The Minneapolis Federation of Teachers the labor union representing teachers and other education professionals in the Minneapolis Public Schools went on a three week strike from March 8 to 29 2022 Around 4 500 workers went on strike 222 The strike the first in the city in nearly 50 years affected about 30 000 students and resulted in 15 days of canceled classes It occurred in the aftermath of the largest racial injustice protests in the city s history with the teacher s union advocating for smaller classes higher wages expanded mental health services and a focus on retaining teachers who are people of color 223 224 225 East Lake Street vandalism May 28 edit Under the slogan Remember May 28 a group of demonstrators marched on East Lake Street in Minneapolis on May 28 2022 to mark the second anniversary of the burning of the city s third police precinct building in the aftermath of George Floyd s murder Demonstrators lit off fireworks spray painted graffiti messages and set several shopping carts on fire 226 Independence Day unrest July 4 edit Several Independence Day celebrations resulted in unrest in downtown Minneapolis the night of July 4 2022 In the late evening several crowds that had gathered for informal celebrations discharged fireworks at people cars and residential buildings while several street racers performed doughnut maneuvers in the streets Minneapolis police officers who responded to the scene had fireworks shot at them Late that night more than 100 gunshots were reported and seven people were injured at a mass shooting near Boom Island Park at about 11 00 p m Police officers dispersed another crowd at 2 30 a m near the Stone Arch Bridge and arrested a 32 year old woman from Savage for allegedly assaulting an officer and obstructing police activity 227 228 229 City Counselor Michael Rainville placed primary blame on Somali youth for the July 4 violence in comments he made about public safety in the unrest aftermath Rainsville s comments received substantial public backlash for singling out the Somali American community and he later apologized for them 230 Andrew Tekle Sundberg protests July 14 amp 16 edit nbsp Police and BCA vehicles at the building where Andrew Tekle Sundberg was fatally shot the prior day June 14 2022 Andrew Tekle Sundberg a 20 year old Ethiopian American man was shot and killed by Minneapolis police officers on July 14 At 9 30 p m on July 13 at an apartment building on the 900 block of 21st Avenue in the Seward neighborhood Minneapolis police responded to reports of gunshots being fired from one apartment unit into another Police who arrived at the scene observed more shots being fired through interior walls and evacuated the apartment building A six hour standoff ensued with Sundberg the alleged assailant who according to police also fired at officers 231 At about 4 30 a m on July 14 two police officer snipers fired their rifles fatally wounding Sundberg The shooting is under investigation 232 233 Activists and Sundberg s family held a vigil near the apartment building the evening of July 14 232 Another rally was held near the building on July 16 Family members who retained civil rights attorneys Benjamin Crump and Jeff Storms questioned why Sundberg was shot and sought release of police body camera footage 234 A woman whose apartment was shot up confronted Sundberg s family and activists during the July 16 demonstration 235 Sundberg s killing led to further mistrust between police and community activists who questioned why police used deadly tactics to end the standoff 236 Public outrage gave way to protests in Minneapolis but demonstrations were smaller than in the period after Floyd s murder 237 Hennepin County Attorney Michael Freeman concluded in a report released on December 21 2022 that the officers actions were legally justified and no charges would be filed against them 238 239 Stevens House arson August 30 September 20 amp October 1 edit Further information John H Stevens and John Harrington Stevens House The John Harrington Stevens House in the Minnehaha Falls Historic District was damaged by three arson attacks in 2022 240 The house which dates to the mid 1800s was named for John H Stevens an early settler in Minneapolis 241 The first fire on August 30 heavily damaged the building s back side The second fire on September 20 affected part of the exterior Initial work on renovations to repair damage from the first two fires was underway when another suspicious fire on October 1 burned the first and second floors and part of the roof 242 243 244 Local officials believed the three fires were deliberate and launched an investigation 241 Winner Gas and Merwin Liquors protest September 9 edit After several days of shootings that left two dead and several injured residents and activists on the north side of Minneapolis staged a protest to block access to and shutdown Winner Gas and Merwin Liquors for several hours The residents demanded the city permanently close the two businesses as they had been the location of many violent incidents since Floyd s murder 245 In Minneapolis the increase in violent crime following Floyd s murder and widespread civil unrest had a disproportionate impact on underserved and Black communities 246 Jamar Clark car caravan protest November 17 edit Further information Killing of Jamar Clark On November 17 seven years after his killing by a Minneapolis police officer family members of Jamar Clark and local activists held a car caravan protest rally in north Minneapolis Sixty vehicles participated in the three mile drive that began at Patrick Henry High School and ended on Plymouth Avenue where Clark was killed in 2015 Protesters demanded greater community control and oversight of police and noted that they were previously successful in pushing for the elimination of grant juries in Minnesota when investigating police homicides instead requiring public officials to make a charging determination 247 Reaction to the killing of Howard Johnson December 6 edit On December 6 Black Lives Matter activists and family of Howard Johnson held a vigil at the site of his death 248 On December 5 Saint Paul Police Department officers responded to a domestic assault 911 call in the Dayton s Bluff neighborhood allegedly involving Johnson and set up a perimeter to apprehend him According to the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension a video surveillance camera captured Johnson attempt a carjacking of an uninvolved vehicle while displaying a gun Police drove up to him and struck him with a squad car knocking him to the ground Johnson got up as an officer exited the police car and the two exchanged gunshots Johnson was struck multiple times He was transported to a hospital and later died The shooting is under investigation 249 250 Activists and Johnson s family called for release of body camera footage 251 250 It was released on December 8 and appeared to show Johnson engaged in a shootout with police 252 Immigration reform protest December 9 edit On December 8 the Council on American Islamic Relations and the Minnesota Immigrant Rights Action Committee led a protest in Minneapolis outside the office of U S Senator Amy Klobuchar The demonstrators called on the U S Senate to pass American Dream and Promise Act legislation that would offer permanent protection and a pathway to citizenship for certain immigrants to the United States 253 Events in 2023 editManuel Teran protests January 20 amp 21 edit Further information Stop Cop City and Killing of Manuel Esteban Paez Teran nbsp Stop Cop City protest on West Lake Street in Minneapolis on January 21 2023 About 100 people participated in a vigil in Minneapolis near the Midtown Greenway on January 20 for Manuel Tortuguita Teran who was fatally shot by a police officer while protesting the construction of a police training facility in Atlanta Georgia Another protest march was held in Uptown Minneapolis on January 21 and a Bank of America branch was spray painted with protest messages 254 The Stop Cop City protests were part of longstanding tension over U S police killings since George Floyd s murder Demonstrators in Minneapolis Atlanta and elsewhere opposed the construction of a police facility in a Black and Brown neighborhood 255 256 Teran was considered one of the only Black or Brown people to participate in the occupied forest protest and his killing raised further questions of racism in law enforcement conduct 257 Tyre Nichols protests January 27 29 edit Further information Killing of Tyre Nichols and Tyre Nichols protests nbsp Security fencing erected at the Minneapolis police fifth precinct building shortly after the January 27 2023 release of the footage containing the Tyre Nichols beating Protests were held several U S cities on January 27 after video of the January 10 police assault on Tyre Nichols in Memphis Tennessee was released Ahead of the video s release the ATF sent out a precautionary alert about localities in the Twin Cities for law enforcement agencies to monitor for unrest The cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul announced plans to prepare for protests and the possibility of unrest 258 259 Before the January 27 NBA basketball game at Target Center between the Memphis Grizzles and Minnesota Timberwolves a moment of silence was held for Nichols who died three days after the police assault 259 On January 28 a protest was held in Minneapolis s Saint Anthony Main neighborhood A law enforcement helicopter and SWAT team observed the demonstration but the crowd dispersed without incident 260 Several racial justice organizations held a protest outside Governor Walz s residence in Saint Paul on January 29 about 300 people participated Demonstrators called on the governor and legislature to enact police reform measures such as removing qualified immunity for police officers 261 Yia Xiong protests February 17 amp 19 edit nbsp Hundreds of community members activists family members and legislators gathered at the Saint Paul Police Western District office on February 26 2023 to protest the police killing of Yia Xiong On February 12 Saint Paul police responded to calls of a knife wielding man at an apartment on the 100 block of Western Avenue South According to police officer accounts and body camera footage Yia Xiong a 65 year old man and veteran of the U S Secret War in Vietnam advanced toward police officers while holding the knife prompting them to fatally shoot him The release of body camera footage on February 17 was met with protest by members of Saint Paul s Hmong American community including city council member Nelsie Yang who said Xiong was unnecessarily provoked and that police could have taken other measures to avoid the use of deadly force 262 263 Hmong community activists Black Lives Matter and Communities United Against Police Brutality held a 100 person protest on February 19 outside the apartment building where Xiong was shot On February 26 as many as 300 people gathered at the St Paul Police Western District office to protest and march along University Avenue Family members believe that Xiong s limited English proficiency and hearing loss contributed to the incident 264 265 266 Tou Thao guilty verdict May 2 edit On May 2 2023 Thao was found guilty of aiding and abetting manslaughter related the last federal or state criminal court case related to Floyd s murder The conviction fulfilled a key demand of protesters that all four Minneapolis police officers be held accountable for murdering Floyd 267 268 See also edit2020 United States anti lockdown protest Minnesota 2020 2023 United States racial unrest History of Minnesota List of incidents of civil unrest in Minneapolis Saint Paul List of killings by law enforcement officers in MinnesotaReferences edit Robertson Nicky May 30 2020 US surgeon general says there is no easy prescription to heal our nation CNN Archived from the original on June 1 2020 Retrieved May 30 2020 a b Goldberg Michelle May 29 2020 Opinion America Is a Tinderbox The New York Times Archived from the original on May 30 2020 Retrieved May 30 2020 Carrega Christina Lloyd Whitney June 3 2020 Charges against former Minneapolis police officers involved in George Floyd s death ABC News Archived from the original on January 6 2022 Retrieved June 17 2020 NPR special report Summer of racial reckoning MPR News August 24 2020 Archived from the original on May 24 2021 Retrieved September 14 2020 a b c Stockman Farah July 4 2020 They have lost control How Minneapolis leaders failed to stop their city from burning The New York Times Archived from the original on January 4 2022 Retrieved November 9 2021 a b Meitrodt Jeffrey June 14 2020 For riot damaged Twin Cities businesses rebuilding begins with donations pressure on government Star Tribune Archived from the original on January 3 2022 Retrieved June 14 2020 a b c d Caputo Angela Craft Will Gilbert Curtis June 30 2020 The precinct is on fire What happened at Minneapolis 3rd Precinct and what it means MPR News Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Retrieved July 1 2020 Smith Jamil July 2020 The Power of Black Lives Matter Rolling Stone a b Uren Adam 18 August 2020 Protesters condemned after they destroy pinata of WCCO s Liz Collin Archived July 16 2021 at the Wayback Machine Bring Me the News Protesters vandalize Minneapolis police precinct shoot fireworks at officers St Paul Pioneer Press The Associated Press August 16 2020 a b Flood Hannah August 16 2020 Minneapolis Police Group vandalized MPD precinct building shot fireworks at officers KMSP TV Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved July 4 2023 In pictures Protesting the death of George Floyd CNN May 27 2020 Archived from the original on May 28 2020 Retrieved May 27 2020 a b Demonstrators gather around Minneapolis to protest death of George Floyd KSTP May 26 2020 Archived from the original on May 28 2020 Retrieved May 26 2020 a b Wagner Jeff June 18 2020 It s Real Ugly Protesters Clash With Minneapolis Police After George Floyd s Death WCCO Archived from the original on May 27 2020 Retrieved September 15 2020 Family and Friends Mourn Minneapolis Police Killing Victim George Floyd Time Archived from the original on May 28 2020 Retrieved May 29 2020 This is the right call Officers involved in fatal Minneapolis incident fired mayor says KSTP May 27 2020 Archived from the original on May 28 2020 Retrieved June 15 2020 Jany Libor July 28 2020 Police Umbrella Man was a white supremacist trying to incite George Floyd rioting Star Tribune Archived from the original on July 28 2020 Retrieved July 28 2020 Bakst Brian July 10 2020 Guard mobilized quickly adjusted on fly for Floyd unrest MPR News Archived from the original on December 28 2021 Retrieved July 10 2020 Doran Kevin June 11 2020 How the Minnesota National Guard connected with protesters during the George Floyd demonstrations KSTP Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Retrieved June 17 2020 Furst Randy Stanley Greg June 23 2020 Mystery remains weeks after a pawnshop owner fatally shot a man during Minneapolis unrest Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Retrieved September 15 2020 Jany Libor July 20 2020 Authorities Body found in wreckage of S Minneapolis pawn shop burned during George Floyd unrest Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 30 2021 Retrieved July 20 2020 Pham Scott June 2 2020 Police Arrested More Than 11 000 People At Protests Across The US BuzzFeed News Archived from the original on December 29 2021 Retrieved September 15 2020 a b Lurie Julia July 15 2020 Weeks Later 500 People Still Face Charges for Peacefully Protesting in Minneapolis Mother Jones Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Retrieved July 17 2020 Penrod Josh Sinner C J Webster MaryJo June 19 2020 Buildings damaged in Minneapolis St Paul after riots Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 8 2021 Retrieved September 15 2020 Braxton Grey June 16 2020 They documented the 92 L A uprising Here s how the George Floyd movement compares Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on April 14 2021 Retrieved July 6 2020 38th Street and Chicago Avenue City of Minneapolis November 12 2020 Archived from the original on October 20 2020 Retrieved November 25 2020 Sandberg Diane Edwards Kiya August 17 2020 Talks continue on reopening 38th and Chicago in Mpls KARE 11 Archived from the original on July 11 2021 Retrieved November 25 2020 Walsh James June 12 2020 Shrine to George Floyd could be permanent at Minneapolis intersection Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 3 2020 Retrieved November 27 2020 Al Arshani Sarah Protesters in Minneapolis say they won t clear barricades around the George Floyd Memorial until the city leaders meet their 24 demands Insider Archived from the original on July 11 2021 Retrieved November 25 2020 Otarola Miguel August 4 2020 Cup Foods site where George Floyd was killed reopens in south Minneapolis Star Tribune Archived from the original on January 19 2021 Retrieved February 5 2021 Minneapolis City Council Approves 7 New Cultural Districts To Advance Equity Fuel Economic Growth WCCO August 14 2020 Archived from the original on December 4 2020 Retrieved November 25 2020 Protesters reject phased reopening of 38th and Chicago MPR News August 29 2020 Archived from the original on February 13 2021 Retrieved August 31 2020 Feshir Riham December 29 2020 Mpls council member says it s time to reopen George Floyd s Square Minnesota Public Radio Archived from the original on June 4 2021 Retrieved January 2 2021 Burks Megan December 11 2020 George Floyd s Square offers an alternative to police though not all neighbors want one MPR News Archived from the original on January 5 2021 Retrieved December 16 2020 Schuman David January 25 2021 We Look At Our Protest As Art Future Of George Floyd Square Becoming Clearer WCCO Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Winter Deena Bogel Burroughs Nicholas Gross Jenny June 3 2021 Minneapolis Removes Memorials and Barricades From George Floyd Square The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on June 3 2021 Retrieved June 3 2021 Griswold David June 20 2021 Traffic resumes at George Floyd Square KARE TV Archived from the original on July 11 2021 Retrieved June 21 2021 George Floyd Square Uptown Intersection Reopen To Traffic WCCO TV June 20 2021 Archived from the original on June 21 2021 Retrieved June 21 2021 Noma Shosuke January 5 2022 Kim Potter found guilty of first and second degree manslaughter The Mac Weekly Archived from the original on January 6 2022 Retrieved January 5 2022 Pan H Jiahong January 5 2023 New year new George Floyd Square Minnesota Spokesman Recorder Archived from the original on January 24 2023 Retrieved January 24 2023 a b c d Xiong Chao March 21 2021 County Attorney Mike Freeman sold home took security measures in wake of Floyd killing protests Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 21 2021 Retrieved March 21 2021 Thousands gather outside Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman s home WCCO Radio May 30 2020 Archived from the original on November 21 2021 Retrieved May 3 2021 a b Gray Callan June 12 2020 Protesters call for resignation of Minneapolis Police Union boss Bob Kroll KSTP Archived from the original on January 12 2021 Retrieved September 15 2020 George Floyd s family applauds charges against four fired Minneapolis officers Star Tribune Archived from the original on October 20 2020 Retrieved June 30 2020 a b Moore Jane June 7 2020 Minneapolis Mayor Frey tells DefundMPD marchers he favors reforms over disbanding Star Tribune Archived from the original on February 4 2021 Amir Vera Hollie Silverman June 7 2020 Minneapolis mayor booed by protesters after refusing to defund and abolish police CNN Archived from the original on April 29 2021 Retrieved June 7 2020 Schuman David June 6 2020 I m Not For Abolishing The Entire Police Department Mayor Frey Speaks Out At Mpls Protest WCCO 4CBS Minnesota Archived from the original on September 8 2020 Retrieved June 10 2020 Searcey Dionne Eligon John June 7 2020 Minneapolis Will Dismantle Its Police Force Council Members Pledge The New York Times Archived from the original on June 8 2020 Retrieved June 8 2020 Navratil Liz June 8 2020 Most of Minneapolis City Council pledges to begin the process of ending Police Department Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 29 2020 Retrieved November 28 2020 Veto proof majority of Minneapolis council members supports dismantling police department MPR News June 7 2020 Archived from the original on June 8 2020 Retrieved June 8 2020 Minneapolis City Council members announces intent to radically change their city s police department CBS News Archived from the original on June 8 2020 Retrieved June 8 2020 Navratil Liz Mahamud Faiza September 17 2021 What you need to know about the Minneapolis charter amendments Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Retrieved September 17 2021 Minneapolis voters reject plan to overhaul city policing Minnesota Public Radio November 2 2021 Archived from the original on November 15 2021 Retrieved November 2 2021 Condon Patrick June 11 2020 Gov Tim Walz says he understands why Christopher Columbus statue was toppled but there will be consequences Star Tribune Archived from the original on October 7 2020 Retrieved June 11 2020 a b c d e Belcamino Kristi June 10 2020 Protesters tear down Christopher Columbus statue on Minnesota Capitol grounds Pioneer Press Archived from the original on June 13 2020 Retrieved June 15 2020 a b c d Van Berkel Jessie June 15 2020 Protesters topple Columbus statue on Minnesota Capitol grounds Star Tribune Archived from the original on June 11 2020 Retrieved June 15 2020 Bishara Hakim June 11 2020 Native American Activists Topple Columbus Statue in Minnesota Hyperallergic Archived from the original on June 16 2020 Retrieved June 15 2020 Skluzacek Josh December 7 2020 Man charged with tearing down Columbus statue outside Minnesota Capitol agrees to community service to avoid trial KSTP TV Archived from the original on December 7 2020 Retrieved December 7 2020 Williams Brandt June 12 2020 Bob Kroll has got to go Calls grow for Minneapolis police union leader s resignation KNOW FM Archived from the original on July 5 2020 Retrieved July 5 2020 Palladino Christina June 26 2020 After addressing Floyd s death protesters again call for Minneapolis police union leader to resign Fox 9 Archived from the original on September 18 2020 Retrieved September 15 2020 Juneteenth brings dancing speeches reflection as Gov Tim Walz calls for state holiday Star Tribune June 19 2020 Archived from the original on August 26 2020 Retrieved September 15 2020 Minnesota Activists Hold Juneteenth Rally for Reparations U S News June 19 2020 Archived from the original on June 22 2020 Retrieved September 15 2020 Walsh Paul June 9 2020 Gov Tim Walz calls for 8 minutes 46 seconds of silence today in honor of George Floyd Star Tribune Archived from the original on June 9 2020 Retrieved June 9 2020 Juneteenth brings dancing speeches reflection as Gov Tim Walz calls for state holiday Star Tribune June 19 2020 Archived from the original on August 26 2020 Retrieved September 15 2020 Neal III La Velle E June 19 2020 Minnesota Twins remove statue of former owner Calvin Griffith from outside Target Field Star Tribune Archived from the original on June 21 2020 Retrieved February 5 2021 Minnesota Twins statement on removal of Calvin Griffith statue Minnesota Twins June 19 2020 Archived from the original on June 22 2020 Retrieved June 19 2020 Protesters gather at Governor s Residence demanding another special session KSTP June 24 2020 Archived from the original on June 27 2020 Retrieved September 15 2020 Crowd protests Breonna Taylor decision with march through downtown Minneapolis kare11 com KARE 11 September 27 2020 Retrieved December 14 2020 Protesters gather in Minneapolis to demand justice for George Floyd defend black trans lives Fox 9 June 28 2020 Archived from the original on September 16 2020 Retrieved June 28 2020 Mohs Marielle June 17 2020 Twin Cities Pride Postpones Virtual LGBTQ Parade Pledges To Fight Systemic Racial Inequality WCCO Archived from the original on October 20 2020 Retrieved September 16 2020 Hyatt Kim June 28 2020 Twin Cities Pride shares its moment with Black Lives Matter Star Tribune Archived from the original on September 6 2020 Retrieved September 16 2020 MN s Oromo community protests killing of Hundessa Minnesota Public Radio July 1 2020 Archived from the original on November 5 2020 Retrieved November 22 2020 Sawyer Liz Xiong Chao July 5 2020 Minneapolis July 4th protesters say they re marching for justice for all Star Tribune Archived from the original on September 28 2020 Retrieved July 5 2020 Desmond DeClan 5 July 2020 Thousands take part in Minneapolis 4th of July demonstrations Archived October 1 2020 at the Wayback Machine Bring Me the News Retrieved 5 July 2020 Forgrave Reid July 6 2020 Remembering Philando Castile four years later We got strength in numbers now Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 7 2021 Retrieved November 9 2021 As Mayor Frey calls for officer s arrest violence intensifies in Minneapolis Star Tribune Archived from the original on May 29 2020 Retrieved May 29 2020 Man shot dead outside Lake Street pawnshop during unrest is identified Star Tribune Archived from the original on June 1 2020 Retrieved December 31 2020 a b Collins John July 21 2020 Family demands charges in shooting during Floyd protests MPR News Archived from the original on January 17 2021 Retrieved December 31 2020 No charges in fatal shooting during George Floyd unrest MPR News December 14 2020 Archived from the original on December 17 2020 Retrieved December 15 2020 Serres Chris June 13 2020 Nowhere left to go Minneapolis homeless forced out of a hotel face uncertain future Star Tribune Archived from the original on August 21 2020 Retrieved September 16 2020 a b Otarola Miguel September 3 2020 Encampment returns to Wall of Forgotten Natives bringing call to action from Indigenous leaders Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 7 2020 Retrieved September 16 2020 Harlow Tim August 14 2020 Minneapolis officials clear Powderhorn Park of last campers Star Tribune Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Minneapolis Protesters March Against Trump s Use Of Federal Agents In Portland WCCO July 23 2020 Archived from the original on August 17 2020 Retrieved July 24 2020 Staff 15 August 2020 Protesters gather outside home of Minneapolis Police Federation President Bob Kroll Archived September 16 2020 at the Wayback Machine KSTP Retrieved 16 August 2020 Staff 17 August 2020 No felony charges to be filed against House DFL candidate who spoke at Hugo protest Archived January 12 2021 at the Wayback Machine Star Tribune Retrieved 19 August 2020 a b Read Kathy August 21 2021 Blaine man who allegedly vandalized police precinct pleads guilty to federal gun charge Star Tribune Retrieved July 4 2023 Blaine Man Charged With Illegal Possession Of Firearms And Ammunition United States Department of Justice U S Attorney s Office District of Minnesota March 30 2021 Retrieved July 4 2023 DOJ identifies officer who shot Jacob Blake as Rusten Sheskey says Blake had knife Fox 6 Now Milwaukee August 26 2020 Archived from the original on August 27 2020 Retrieved August 27 2020 Department of Justice identifies Kenosha police officer who shot Jacob Blake 7 times in the back TMJ4 August 26 2020 Archived from the original on September 16 2020 Retrieved September 15 2020 Walsh Paul August 25 2020 11 protesting Kenosha police shooting arrested after jail damaged in Minneapolis Star Tribune Archived from the original on August 27 2020 Retrieved August 25 2020 Pagones Stephanie August 25 2020 Minneapolis Jacob Blake protest leads to 11 arrests at least 1 officer injured police say Fox News Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved September 15 2020 Homicide Suspect Who Shot Self On Nicollet Mall Identified August 28 2020 Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved August 31 2020 Levenson Michael August 26 2020 Minneapolis Homicide Suspect s Suicide Spurs More Protests Police Say The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved August 31 2020 When a graphic video can bring both truth and harm MPR News August 28 2020 Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved August 31 2020 132 arrests made during unrest looting in Minneapolis overnight KMSP TV August 27 2020 Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved September 11 2020 a b Sinner C J Penrod Josh Hyatt Kim September 3 2020 Map of Minneapolis businesses damaged looted after night of unrest Star Tribune Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved August 28 2020 Gottfried Mara H August 28 2020 At least 16 charged in Wednesday night looting no curfew after calm Thursday night St Paul Pioneer Press Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved December 12 2020 Furst Randy September 11 2020 Richfield man charged with arson in fire at Target headquarters during Nicollet Mall unrest Star Tribune Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved September 12 2020 Sinner C J Penrod Josh Hyatt Kim September 3 2020 Map of Minneapolis businesses damaged looted after night of unrest Star Tribune Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved September 15 2020 Navratil Liz Van Oot Oot August 27 2020 Lessons learned after George Floyd s death inform Minneapolis state response to riot Star Tribune Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved September 15 2020 1 000 Law Enforcement Members On Minneapolis Streets After Downtown Riot WCCO August 27 2020 Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved September 15 2020 Jany Libor August 31 2020 Circumstances behind parking ramp killing hours before riots remain murky Star Tribune Archived from the original on February 10 2021 Retrieved September 11 2020 Lauritsen John September 11 2020 I Believe In Justice Hundreds Of Protesters Gather Outside George Floyd Pretrial Hearing WCCO Archived from the original on October 2 2021 Retrieved September 11 2020 Karnowski Steve Forlit Amy November 5 2020 Judge rejects moving trial of ex officers in Floyd s death Associated Press News Archived from the original on May 22 2021 Retrieved November 5 2020 a b Navratil Liz September 17 2020 City says deal for temporary Third Precinct site for Minneapolis police is off Star Tribune Archived from the original on October 30 2020 Retrieved November 28 2020 Williams Brandt September 16 2020 Mpls stops pursuit of a temporary 3rd Precinct space MPR News Archived from the original on January 5 2021 Retrieved December 3 2020 a b Chhith Alex July 12 2022 Charges Brooklyn Center man faked Trump flag arson BLM vandalism Star Tribune Archived from the original on July 13 2022 Retrieved July 12 2022 a b Ladden Hall Dan July 13 2022 MAGA Fan Accused of Setting Fire to His Own Van After Blaming Biden Supporters and BLM The Daily Beast Archived from the original on July 13 2022 Retrieved July 13 2022 a b Brooklyn Center Man Pleads Guilty to Insurance Fraud After Staging a Politically Motivated Arson Attack The United States Attorney s Office District of Minnesota October 11 2022 Archived from the original on October 12 2022 Retrieved October 12 2022 Walsh Paul June 8 2023 2 year term for Brooklyn Center man who torched his own place and falsely blamed activists on political left Star Tribune Archived from the original on June 9 2023 Retrieved June 9 2023 Eliott C McLaughlin and Brad Parks October 7 2020 Protesters take to streets following release on bond of former officer charged in George Floyd s killing CNN Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Retrieved October 23 2020 More than 50 protesters arrested during faceoff with law enforcement in Minneapolis after Derek Chauvin release Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 1 2021 Retrieved October 23 2020 Mazan Joe November 2 2020 Some Twin Cities businesses boarding up windows before Election Day KSTP Archived from the original on November 3 2020 Retrieved November 4 2020 14 arrested in late night Minneapolis protest Star Tribune November 4 2020 Archived from the original on November 4 2020 Retrieved November 4 2020 a b c d Duggan J D December 6 2021 Activists arrested on freeway protest charges by rejecting plea deals and going to trial Minnesota Reformer Archived from the original on December 31 2021 Retrieved December 6 2021 a b c d Hyatt Kim November 21 2022 Convicted 1970s leftist militant Sara Jane Olson loses appeal for blocking I 94 in 2020 protest Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 22 2022 Retrieved November 22 2022 Walsh Paul November 5 2020 More than 600 arrested during anti Trump march on I 94 in Minneapolis Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 5 2020 Retrieved November 5 2020 Xiong Chao November 7 2020 Charges Election protesters shined laser in officer s eyes kicked another in groin Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 19 2020 Retrieved November 22 2020 Sawyer Liz November 27 2020 Vandals hit pioneer monument Washington statue in Minneapolis Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 27 2020 Retrieved November 27 2020 Glass Doug December 31 2020 Minneapolis to release bodycam video in fatal shooting Associated Press News Archived from the original on December 31 2020 a b Xiong Chao Jany Libor Mannix Andy Walsh Paul Sawyer Liz December 31 2020 Minneapolis police release body camera footage of man shot killed after exchanging gunfire with police Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 31 2020 Retrieved December 31 2020 Jany Chhith Chhith Alex December 31 2020 Minneapolis police shoot kill man during traffic stop Star Tribune Archived from the original on January 5 2021 Retrieved December 31 2020 a b Chhith Alex January 4 2021 Five face riot charges after New Year s Eve protest in downtown Minneapolis Star Tribune Archived from the original on January 5 2021 Retrieved January 4 2021 a b Protesters demand answers in Minneapolis shooting dozens arrested KSTP January 1 2021 Archived from the original on January 5 2021 Retrieved January 4 2021 Hyatt Kim January 3 2021 Hundreds march in protest of Minneapolis police killing Star Tribune Archived from the original on January 5 2021 Retrieved January 3 2021 a b Read Katy January 9 2021 Fresh frustration fuels Minneapolis march for racial justice Star Tribune Archived from the original on January 10 2021 Retrieved January 9 2021 Chhith Alex Warren Peter January 21 2021 Minneapolis protesters seek focus on progressive priorities Star Tribune Archived from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved January 21 2021 Jackson Zoe January 19 2021 Twin Cities progressive groups to protest on Inauguration Day Star Tribune Archived from the original on January 23 2021 Retrieved January 19 2021 Progressive groups march in Minneapolis call for People s Agenda in Biden administration KARE 11 January 20 2021 Norfleet Nicole Du Susan March 7 2021 Ahead of Derek Chauvin trial protesters rally in St Paul Star Tribune Archived from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved March 7 2021 a b Ahead of Chauvin trial silent marchers demonstrate in Minneapolis KARE 11 March 7 2021 Retrieved March 7 2021 Jackson Zoe Forgrave Reid Du Susan March 9 2021 Peaceful protesters march in Minneapolis as Derek Chauvin trial in George Floyd s death slowed by legal wrangling Star Tribune Archived from the original on March 8 2021 Retrieved March 9 2021 Du Susan Norfleet Nicole March 28 2021 Prayer service on eve of Derek Chauvin trial urges peace unity and justice Star Tribune Archived from the original on March 29 2021 Retrieved March 29 2021 Hughes Trevor April 4 2021 No justice no streets Still grieving Minneapolis residents wonder how city will move forward after Derek Chauvin trial USA Today Archived from the original on April 4 2021 Retrieved April 5 2021 Martinez Andres R Arango Tim March 29 2021 First Witnesses in Derek Chauvin Trial Testify About George Floyd s Death The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on October 31 2021 Retrieved April 2 2021 Forgrave Reid April 6 2021 Civil rights leaders pray with Floyd family outside Chauvin trial Star Tribune Archived from the original on April 6 2021 Retrieved April 6 2021 a b Minneapolis demonstrators call for justice Chauvin jury wraps for night without verdict KARE 11 April 19 2021 Archived from the original on April 20 2021 Retrieved April 20 2021 Hundreds gather for Stop Asian Hate rally in St Paul Minnesota Public Radio March 28 2021 Archived from the original on May 22 2021 Retrieved March 28 2021 Brooklyn Center chief Cop meant to use stun gun on Wright pulled the wrong weapon Minnesota Public Radio April 12 2021 Archived from the original on April 12 2021 Retrieved April 12 2021 a b c Klecker Mara Kim Kim Hyatt April 11 2021 Brooklyn Center police fatally shoot man 20 inflaming tensions during the Derek Chauvin trial Star Tribune Archived from the original on April 12 2021 Retrieved April 11 2021 a b c Brown Kyle April 11 2021 Police shoot kill driver during traffic stop in Brooklyn Center KSTP Archived from the original on April 12 2021 Retrieved April 11 2021 a b c Belcamino Kristi April 11 2021 Man dies after being shot by police in Brooklyn Center BCA investigating Pioneer Press Archived from the original on April 14 2021 Retrieved April 11 2021 Protesters Clash With Police In Brooklyn Center After Deadly Officer Involved Shooting WCCO April 11 2021 Archived from the original on April 12 2021 Retrieved April 11 2021 Bogel Burroughs Nicholas Paybarah Azi April 12 2021 Officer Near Minneapolis Kills Motorist and a Crowd Confronts the Police The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on April 14 2021 Retrieved April 12 2021 Allen Keith Broaddus Adrienne Silverman Hollie Sutton Joe April 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2021 Archived from the original on January 2 2022 Retrieved January 1 2022 Brooks Jennifer December 25 2021 Minneapolis will change infamous street name to honor trailblazing firefighter Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 27 2021 Retrieved December 25 2021 Croman John December 28 2021 Minneapolis street renamed for city s first Black firefighter KARE TV Retrieved December 28 2021 a b Winston Smith shooting Protests continue overnight Fox 9 June 5 2021 Archived from the original on June 5 2021 Retrieved June 5 2021 Rao Maya June 5 2021 Protesters converge for third night at Uptown spot where Winston Smith was killed Star Tribune Archived from the original on June 6 2021 Retrieved June 6 2021 Minneapolis sees more protests after man killed by deputies Associated Press News June 7 2021 Archived from the original on June 7 2021 Retrieved June 7 2021 Forliti Amy Ibrahim Mohamed June 4 2021 Authorities Man killed by Minnesota deputies had fired gun Associated Press News 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years after his death Philando Castile s mother criticizes lack of progress in police accountability Minnesota Public Radio Archived from the original on July 7 2021 Retrieved July 6 2021 Hyatt Kim Miller Maya July 7 2021 Mourners block streets where Minneapolis police car crashed into car during pursuit killing innocent driver Star Tribune Archived from the original on July 8 2021 Retrieved July 8 2021 Powell Tori October 22 2021 Minneapolis police officer charged with manslaughter and homicide in the death of Leneal Frazier CBS News Archived from the original on January 12 2022 Retrieved October 22 2021 Simons Abby Walsh Paul November 8 2021 Protester films himself outside condo unit door of judge presiding over Kim Potter trial Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Retrieved November 8 2021 a b Schuman David November 8 2021 Protester May Have Crossed Line When Filming Himself Outside Supposed Home Of Judge In Kim Potter Trial WCCO TV Archived from the original on November 9 2021 Retrieved November 8 2021 Xiong Chao November 9 2021 Former Brooklyn Center officer Kimberly Potter s trial will be livestreamed Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 10 2021 Retrieved November 9 2021 Thiede Dana December 3 2021 Man charged with harassing judge in Kim Potter trial KARE TV Retrieved December 3 2021 Chhith Alex November 11 2021 Protest outside Prior Lake High attracts hundreds outraged by racist video Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 19 2021 Retrieved November 11 2021 Gerezgiher Feven November 13 2021 Students community protest racist video at Prior Lake High School Minnesota Spokesman Recorder Archived from the original on November 19 2021 Retrieved November 13 2021 Chhith Alex November 19 2021 Students take their support of Prior Lake girl to downtown rally Star Tribune Archived from the original on November 21 2021 Retrieved November 19 2021 Jackson Zoe November 22 2021 Confronted by activists over Prior Lake incident school board members walk out Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 2 2021 Retrieved November 22 2021 McGuire Mary November 20 2021 Hundreds protest Kyle Rittenhouse verdict in downtown Minneapolis KMSP TV Archived from the original on November 21 2021 Retrieved November 20 2021 Protesters in Minneapolis other cities condemn Rittenhouse acquittal Minnesota Public Radio November 20 2021 Archived from the original on November 21 2021 Retrieved November 20 2021 Driver forces car through crowd during Minneapolis protest on Kim Potter trial KMSP TV November 30 2021 Archived from the original on December 1 2021 Retrieved November 30 2021 Winter Deena December 17 2021 You got to stand says lone protester outside Potter trial Minnesota Reformer Archived from the original on December 25 2021 Retrieved December 17 2021 Walsh Paul Xiong Chao Olson Rochelle December 22 2021 Third day of jury deliberation ends without verdicts in Kimberly Potter manslaughter trial Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 24 2021 Retrieved December 22 2021 Winter Deena December 23 2021 Jury finds Brooklyn Center Officer Potter guilty of manslaughter Minnesota Reformer Archived from the original on December 23 2021 Retrieved December 23 2021 Hyatt Kim December 23 2021 Wright family activists cheer Kimberly Potter verdict Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 24 2021 Retrieved December 23 2021 Countless Racially Motivated Incidents Lead To High School Walkout In Cottage Grove WCCO TV December 21 2021 Archived from the original on December 31 2021 Retrieved December 21 2021 Boogren Jill January 11 2022 Activists rally outside Governor s Residence in remembrance of Dolal Idd The Monitor www monitorsaintpaul com Archived from the original on January 22 2022 Retrieved January 11 2022 Galioto Katie December 4 2021 St Paul to host federal civil rights trial for ex Minneapolis cops in Floyd s death Star Tribune Archived from the original on December 6 2021 Retrieved December 4 2021 Fence erected around St Paul federal courthouse ahead of former Minneapolis officers trial KSTP TV January 4 2022 Archived from the original on January 5 2022 Retrieved January 4 2022 3 other cops in George Floyd death to stand trial this month Star Tribune January 6 2022 Archived from the original on January 7 2022 Retrieved January 6 2022 Barrett Joe January 3 2022 Minneapolis Area Prepares for Another Trial Over George Floyd s Killing The Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Archived from the original on January 13 2022 Retrieved January 13 2022 Arango Tim January 24 2022 Trial Starts for 3 Officers in George Floyd s Death The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Archived from the original on January 27 2022 Retrieved January 25 2022 Ajasa Amudalat January 24 2022 Trial begins of three ex police officers present at George Floyd murder The Guardian Archived from the original on January 26 2022 Retrieved January 24 2022 Van Brugen Isabel February 4 2022 Amir Locke Bodycam Video Appears To Contradict Minneapolis Police Claim Newsweek Archived from the original on February 4 2022 Retrieved February 4 2022 Amir Locke Shooting Minneapolis Releases Body Cam Footage Of Deadly Police Encounter WCCO TV February 3 2022 Archived from the original on February 4 2022 Retrieved February 4 2022 Winter Deena February 2 2022 Minneapolis police officer shoots and kills man in early morning raid Minnesota Reformer Archived from the original on February 2 2022 Retrieved February 2 2022 Jany Libor February 3 2022 Sources Man shot and killed by Minneapolis police during raid was not target of investigation Star Tribune Archived from the original on February 3 2022 Retrieved February 3 2022 Jimenez Omar February 4 2022 Body camera video shows Minneapolis officers shooting Black man during no knock warrant Attorneys say he wasn t the target CNN a, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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