Video: Brutal action of US police strangling black men to death




A video that shows a Police within the state of Minnesota, USA that pinned a Black man to death becomes viral and triggered anger of many people on Internet.

The video of the incident shows that cops 
arrested and dropped a person named George Floyd on the sidewalk then lay on his knees on the man's neck for several minutes.

The video shows state and federal authorities investigating the arrest of a Black man who died after being stapled to the bottom .

After the video was viral, the four police were fired.

The incident video shared on social media captured the person, identified as George Floyd by Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey (D), repeatedly telling officials, "I can't breathe!" The increasingly confused crowd of spectators begged the officers to maneuver their knees.

On Tuesday afternoon, as anger continued to rise, Frey announced the termination of the officers.

"This is that the right call," he wrote during a post on his Twitter and Facebook pages.

The incident began when two officers received block 3700 Chicago Avenue South around 8 pm Monday, police said. Officers found the person , who they believed was under the influence of an intoxicating person, in his car. After he left, the police said, the person was "an officer who physically opposes."

"Officers can handcuff the suspect and realize that the suspect is affected by medical pressure," a Minneapolis police spokesman said at a press conference Tuesday morning. "The clerk called an ambulance. He was transferred to the Hennepin County center , where he died moments later. "

The police said that no weapons were used at any time by men or officers during the meeting.

Darnella Frazier was on her thanks to see friends when she saw the incident happen outside the Cup Foods grocery on the side of Minneapolis. He quickly began recording the meeting during a video 10 minutes later shared on Facebook.


"When I walked, he was on the bottom ," Frazier said during a Facebook video. "Police, they pinned him to his neck and he cried. they do not attempt to take it seriously. "
As more people gathered round the meeting outside the grocery the person begged for his entire body to harm . Frazier remembered that the man's face was pressed so hard to the bottom that his nose bled.

Eyewitnesses pleaded with white officers to get rid of their knees from the man's neck.

"You're just getting to sit there together with your knees round her neck?" said an observer on the video.

A few minutes later, the person appeared motionless on the bottom , his eyes closed and his head spread on the road.

"Bro, he isn't even ------ moving!" an observer begs the police. "Get off his neck!"

The others asked, "Did you kill him?"
Then, the unconscious man was placed on a stretcher and into the ambulance. Observers who remained ahead of Cup Foods pointed to 2 officers and said the incident would haunt them "for the remainder of your life."

"The police killed him, friend, right ahead of everyone," Frazier said on Facebook. "He cried, telling them like, 'I can't breathe,' and everything. They killed this person."



Family reaction to George Floyd's death in police custody 

During Tuesday's news conference with the mayor, Minneapolis captain Medaria Arradondo said he had decided to ask the FBI to research after receiving "additional information" about the incident from a community source that "only provided more context than the knowledge I had before." He refused to elucidate further.

This case are going to be investigated separately by the Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, which consistent with the Minneapolis Star Tribune investigates most deaths in detention.

The agency said during a statement Tuesday that it might present its findings to the district prosecutor's office for review.
As the video continues to circulate, it quickly provokes anger and condemnation. within the neighboring St. Paul, Mayor Melvin Carter (D) said it had been "one of the foremost despicable and grievous pictures I even have ever seen, "It must stop now."

Minneapolis captain Medaria Arradondo said at a news conference on Tuesday that four officers involved within the incident had been dismissed.

The mayor of the town , Jacob Frey, also confirmed that the officers had been laid off, saying "this is that the right decision for our city".
In an earlier statement on Tuesday, the Minneapolis local department said its officers skilled an "ongoing forgery report".

"After [the suspect] got out [of his car], he physically opposed the officers," the statement said. "Officers can handcuff the suspect and see that he appears to be having a medical problem."

He was then transferred to the closest center where he died moments later, the department said.

Arradondo added that it shared information with the FBI, which "is conducting a separate federal civil rights investigation at the request of the Minneapolis local department ." 

He requested the involvement of the FBI after receiving additional information "from community sources".

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