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Chicago protests erupt after cop shooting of Adam Toledo, 13, while Minnesota still reels from Daunte Wright riots

PROTESTS have erupted in Chicago after the police shooting of Adam Toledo, 13, while Minnesota is still reeling from Daunte Wright riots.

Bodycam footage of Toledo’s death on March 29 was released on Thursday, and led to widespread demonstrations across Chicago – with protesters calling for police reform and Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s resignation.

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Protesters took to the streets in Chicago after footage of the police shooting of Adam Toledo was shared[/caption]

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Chicago demonstrators protest the police shooting of Adam Toledo on Thursday[/caption]

Chicago COPA

Footage shows Toledo putting his hands up before he was shot[/caption]

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Toledo was just 13 years old[/caption]

Toledo was fatally shot in an alley after running from police around 2.30am. Video footage clearly shows the teen putting his hands up before he was shot.

The arrest reports published by Civilian Office of Police Accountability (COPA) indicated that the teen posed an “imminent threat of battery with a weapon” as pressure mounted for the footage to be shown.

The police report said Officer Eric Stillman shot Adam for allegedly not following directions, running, using significant force likely to “cause death or great bodily harm,” and being armed with a semi-automatic pistol.

In front of the city’s Public Safety Headquarters on Thursday afternoon, activist and former mayoral candidate Ja’Mal Green called for the dismantling of the police department and the resignation of Lightfoot.

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Protesters hold signs and flags to call for justice for Adam[/caption]

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Activist Ja’Mal Green spoke in front of police headquarters on Thursday[/caption]

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Women hold signs calling for police accountability in Chicago on Thursday[/caption]

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A protester holds up a sign on Thursday night in Chicago[/caption]

Green claimed the mayor “demonized” Toledo for questioning why he would have a gun, and mocked her appeals to Chicago residents for peace in the wake of the footage being released.

“Lori Lightfoot herself said, ‘Oh, we need to figure out why he had a gun. He shouldn’t have been out there,’” Green said.

“Now you want to say let’s calm the city down. But when do you say let’s calm these killings down that the Police Department are doing each and every day?”

There were a few tense moments between Green and other protests and the police standing outside of the headquarters, but demonstrations were mostly peaceful.

Reuters

In Minnesota, a vigil was held for Daunte Wright on Thursday[/caption]

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In Brooklyn Center, protesters came out for a fifth night in a row[/caption]

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Wright, 20, was fatally shot during a routine traffic stop[/caption]

Reuters

Protesters hung air fresheners outside of police headquarters in Brooklyn Center[/caption]

EPA

Former Officer Kim Potter was arrested in Wright’s death[/caption]

Elsewhere in the city Jose Herrera, who told the Chicago Sun Times that Toledo was his cousin, was driving around blasting Banda music and waving a Mexican flag.

He claimed Chicago police officers busted the staff of his flag at some point during the protests.

“Those cops took my flag and broke it,” he said. “I’m out here protesting the killing of my cousin. He doesn’t and didn’t deserve any of this.”

“My family is shattered right now, and, like this flag, it came at the hands of the police,” he added.

In Minnesota, protests have been ongoing since a police officer fatally shot Daunte Wright, 20, during a routine traffic stop on Sunday.

AFP

Protesters set off fireworks on the fifth night of demonstrations at Brooklyn Center[/caption]

For the fifth night in a row, hundreds of protesters gathered outside of Brooklyn Center Police Department on Thursday.

Many brought air fresheners and hung them on the fence that police put up around the department, to symbolize the one Wright’s mother said was hanging in his car window – the reason he was pulled over.

Dozens of people have been arrested in the five days since Wright was killed, but local media reported that Thursday night’s demonstrations seemed – for the most part – more peaceful.

The city has been implementing a 10pm curfew in an attempt to reduce the likelihood of demonstrations turning violent.


However, as 10pm approached, between 200 and 300 protesters were still in the area, holding up signs and demanding justice for Wright.

The cop who shot him, Kim Potter, was arrested earlier this week and charged with second-degree manslaughter.

The department has maintained that she meant to reach for her Taser and shot Wright with her gun by accident.

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