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King: Let's address really the elephant in the room, how black people feel in your city - that black men are under siege by white police officers and that they're targeted in a disproportionate rate. On the relationship with the black community If I was there I probably would have put him on his side in a recovery position once he went unconscious.
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Sherral Schmidt: I'm not one that likes to Monday morning quarterback things. King: How do you think the situation should have been handled with George Floyd that night? It does look and sound horrible, I completely agree with you, Gayle. We saw the initial statement from the administration, which was wrong, and this has been a failed exercise in leadership here, and we wish we could have an early opinion on this, but it is up to the administration to stick with policy and give us what we are entitled to under policy. That we're not going to say anything negative about a fellow officer even though what you're looking and seeing with your own eyes seems especially heinous and especially egregious? King: Because it feels like this, it feels like the blue wall of silence again. King: Can you understand why that answer, what you're saying right now is extremely upsetting to people who have seen this case, heard the charges, looked at the tape that we have seen? Can you understand from the public point of view why it's upsetting? Right now, we cannot make an informed decision regarding the other officers that do not appear on camera. It may shed some light that we're unaware of. Kroll: We would just like to see what we are entitled to in our agreement, in our policy, is our officer's body camera footage. King: Are you all saying to us that you can't really make a comment about this case until you see every piece of video associated with it? Is that what you're saying today? We don't know if he never resisted because we haven't seen from the time the officer stopped him until the point where he was on the ground.
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They say he never resisted in the statement's release. Rich Walker Sr.: Any human being that watched that knows that that shouldn't have ended the way it did, but we also know that there's more to the story. King: How much more do you need to see to determine - to come out and say that this is not alright? In all other officer-involved critical incidents, we're entitled to review, and what I've seen of it is only what the public has seen on the cell phone and it is horrific. The administration broke our policy, which gives us the ability to review the video, so we were blindsided. Kroll: That's part of the problem, Gayle, is we were not allowed to see the video. I want to know from each of you what you thought when you saw the video of George Floyd and officer Chauvin. King: Let's talk about the incident because it has certainly become a global conversation. On the video of George Floyd being killed So it's just dumbfounding to me that one incident, we become the scapegoat to having a bad officer. We will be on the right side of history.Īnna Hedberg: Before this incident happened, we had some great conversation occurring with the city leaders and with the chiefs, and we were making some good progress on the contract. So here is our opportunity to hopefully set the record straight. Kroll: We believe that our membership, that we are elected to represent, has been unfairly scapegoated by political leaders in our city and our state and they have shifted their incompetent leadership - failed leadership - onto us and our members, and it's simply unjust. King: Can I get your response to what the chief said Sunday night? Or, they will be left behind," Arradondo said. "He and others are going to have to come to a reckoning that either they are going to be on the right side of history or they are going to be on the wrong side of history. During a "60 Minutes" interview on Sunday, Arradondo blamed the police union, its contract and Kroll, for making reform difficult. Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo called on the city's police union to reform the department after the killing of George Floyd. On Minneapolis police chief Arradondo's comments Minnesota Governor Tim Walz did not call the Black Lives Matter organizers "domestic terrorists." Walz claimed the protests were being hijacked by domestic terrorists.
#THIS IS THE POLICE 2 GALE WINDOWS#
Kroll: When you see arson taking place, windows being broke, molotov cocktails being thrown, the police being shot at with live gunfire, thrown rocks and bricks at them, burning down a police precinct, the riotous conditions, that was a form of domestic terrorism, in my opinion.