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Atlanta mayor calls for citizens to stop shooting each other after murder of a 8 yr old girl near BLM protest site during July 4th weekend
Atleast 21 people have been killed during George Floyd peaceful protests
Say Their Names: 21 People Killed in the George Floyd Riots
Tyler O'Neil
St. Louis Police image of David Dorn.
Black lives matter, and that should include the lives tragically lost in the riots following the horrific police killing of George Floyd. The riots have destroyed black lives, black livelihoods, and black monuments. As Black Lives Matter activists continue to repeat the names of unarmed black men and women killed by police, Americans should respond with the litany of victims killed in the George Floyd riots.
Some of these victims died at the hands of police, but in every case, the riots created the tense situations that led to their deaths. Left-leaning commentators continue to insist the protests were “mostly peaceful,” and it is true that the vast majority of people in the streets — especially during the day — were peaceful protesters. However, many instigators used large crowds as an opportunity to loot, vandalize, and destroy. Portland journalist Andy Ngo has explained how antifa instigators weaponize such situations, and some “Boogaloo” extremists may have done the same.
While the protests were peaceful, extensive riots across America emphatically were not. These riots came with a death toll of at least 21 people.
Say their names!
David Dorn, St. Louis Police Department. (St. Louis Police)
Looters who broke into a pawn shop ran into David Dorn, a 77-year-old retired St. Louis police captain, on June 2. Dorn was checking on a burglar alarm. That night in St. Louis, rioters shot four officers, burned and looted businesses, and threw rocks at police.
St. Louis police arrested Stephan Cannon, 24, charging the suspect with first-degree murder, first-degree robbery, first-degree burglary, felon in possession of a firearm.
Police and National Guard troops were trying to clear a crowd in Louisville, Ky., when they heard gunshots and returned fire on May 31. David McAtee, the 53-year-old owner of a barbecue restaurant, was shot and killed. Police said a surveillance camera captured McAtee firing a gun as officers approached.
Police released a video of the shooting. “We are releasing it to provide transparency. It does not answer every question,” Interim Louisville Metro Police Chief Robert Schroeder said of the video. “Why did (McAtee) fire? And where were police at the time he fired? We know these are questions the community is asking, and we are asking these same questions ourselves.”
Chris Beaty, 38, played football for Indiana University and was known as “Mr. Indianapolis.” He was shot and killed on the street in downtown Indianapolis on May 30 during a protest.
Jared Thomas, Beaty’s nephew, said Mr. Indianapolis was helping two women who were being mugged when he was shot, the Indianapolis Star reported.
Also on May 30 in Indianapolis, 29-year-old Tyler Newby shot and killed 18-year-old Dorian Murrell, Fox 59 Indianapolis reported. Newby told police he had shot Murrell after Newby and a friend picked up a gas canister on the ground as they walked downtown after the protests. Newby claimed they were approached by a group of about 10 men. He said he was pushed to the ground and found Murrell standing over him, so he shot Murrell.
Newby has been charged with murder.
On May 31, 22-year-old Italia Marie Kelly was trying to get into a friend’s car to leave a George Floyd protest in a Walmart parking lot in Davenport, Iowa. She got shot and died later that evening. The Davenport Police Department arrested 21-year-old Parker Marlin Belz and charged him with first-degree murder in the case, the Des Moines Register reported.
Marquis Tousant, 23, was shot and died that same night in Davenport. He was found dead near where police said one or more persons fired 13 shots at an unmarked police truck investigating a suspicious car in an alley, the Des Moines Register reported. The officer who drove the truck was shot in the leg.
Police reportedly found a semi-automatic handgun under Tousant’s body.

Patrick Underwood. Photo credit Angela Underwood Jacobs.
Fifty-three-year-old federal officer Patrick Underwood was working security at a U.S. courthouse in Oakland, Calif., during a protest when someone opened fire from a vehicle. The shooting critically wounded another officer. The building’s glass doors were mashed and the front entrance sprayed with anti-police graffiti.
Police arrested Air Force Staff Sgt. Stephen Carrillo, 32, charging him with murder and attempted murder, NBC News reported. Police reportedly found symbols associated with the far-right extremist “Boogaloo” movement, which aims to spark an impending civil war.
Calvin Horton Jr., a 43-year-old black man, was fatally shot outside a Minneapolis pawn shop on May 27. The 59-year-old owner was booked into jail on suspicion of murder but later released, the Minneapolis Star-Tribunereported.
Twenty-two-year-old black man James Scurlock reportedly shoved bar owner Jake Gardner to the ground on Saturday, June 6 in Omaha, Neb., Fox 6 reported. Gardner fired shots into the air as people shoved him to the ground. Scurlock jumped on Gardner, who fired the gun over his shoulder, hitting Scurlock. Authorities declined to press charges in the death, calling the shooting self-defense. However, Gardner may still face misdemeanor gun charges because his concealed carry permit for the gun had expired.
The ACLU Nebraska helped to orchestrate a billboard calling for “Justice for James.”
Twenty-one-year-old black man Javar Harrell was reportedly sitting in the driver’s seat of a car in a parking lot with two others when someone fired shots into his vehicle and then ran away during a protest in Detroit on June 5. Detroit police released photos of the suspected killer, a man in a surgical mask with a dark hooded sweater.
In St. Louis on May 30, 29-year-old Barry Perkins III died after climbing betweentwo trailers of a FedEx truck during a protest on the highway, I-44. Protesters stopped the driver, but the driver took off when people began looting one of his trailers. Lawyers for Perkins’ family said he was peacefully protesting Floyd’s death, rather than looting.
On June 1, police broke up a protest in downtown Las Vegas, fatally shooting 25-year-old Jorge Gomez. Police said the officers opened fire after Gomez pointed a gun at them. Gomez had recently shared anti-Trump conspiracies on Facebook.
Hours before the protest started, he wrote, “Be ready for war. Do not cower in the face of revolution,” the Las Vegas Sun reported. Unlike other protesters, Gomez was reportedly carrying several guns and wearing body armor.
Amid rioting in Chicago on June 1, people started breaking into businesses in the Cicero neighborhood. As looters ransacked local businesses, 28-year-old Jose Gutierrez was fatally shot. Police have charged Zion Haygood with first-degree murder in the shooting, the Chicago Sun-Times reported. Police said Gutierrez was a bystander, not involved in the looting.
That same night in Chicago, someone shot 27-year-old Victor Cazares Jr. in a separate incident near a grocery store.
On May 31 in Kansas City, Mo., three carjackers attempted to steal a car. In the process, they shot 50-year-old Marvin Francois, Fox 4 KC reported.
On June 2, a suspected looter attempted to break into a gun shop in Philadelphia. Greg Isabella, the owner of the shop, shot and killed the man after seeing a group of looters on his surveillance video. The looters had broken a padlock on his gate, using bolt cutters.
“The facts we know and the law are clear that the business owner’s use of force while inside his own property against a burglar accompanied by others who was entering with a gun in his hand was justified,” Philadelphia District Attorney Larry Krasner said. “It is fortunate for the City of Philadelphia that this large cache of guns and ammunitions were not taken and sold on the street.”
That same night, a 24-year-old looter died while trying to blow up a sidewalk ATM in Philadelphia.
CHOP barricades. (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren) (AP Photo/Ted S. Warren)
On Saturday, June 20, a shooting around the Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone (CHAZ) Occupied Protest (CHOP) in Seattle, Wash., claimed the life of 19-year-old Horace Lorenzo Anderson. The man’s father, who shares the same name with his late son, called for the National Guard to put an end to CHOP following his son’s tragic death.
On June 28, 16-year-old Antonio Mays Jr. drove a Jeep to CHOP, seeking safety after having carjacked the vehicle. A friend told him he would find “safety” at the cop-free zone. Instead, CHOP “security” fired into the vehicle, killing Maysand injuring his passenger, a 14-year-old boy. Both the teens are black.
Mayor Jenny Durkan (D-Seattle) finally sent in police to break up CHOP on July 1. In her order, Durkan acknowledged that CHOP — which she had originally defended as a peaceful protest and even praised as a potential “Summer of Love” — had caused a spike in coronavirus cases and a crime wave. Following the establishment of CHAZ/CHOP, Seattle saw “an increase of 525%, 22 additional incidents, in person-related crime in the area, to include two additional homicides, 6 additional robberies, and 16 additional aggravated assaults (to include 2 additional non-fatal shootings) between June 2nd and June 30th, 2020, compared to the same period of time in 2019.”
On Friday evening, July 3, protesters in Seattle thought it would be a good idea to block a highway. On Saturday morning, a car careened into protesters, striking 24-year-old Summer Taylor, who died that evening at Harborview Medical Center, NPR reported. Another protester, 32-year-old Diaz Love, remains in serious condition.
Police arrested the driver of the white Jaguar sedan that careened into protesters, but officers said the suspect was not impaired.
On Saturday, July 4, 8-year-old Secoriea Turner fatally shot as her mother attempted to park a car near a group of protesters close to the Wendy’s where Rayshard Brooks was killed by police in Atlanta, CNN reported. Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms (D-Atlanta) said enough was enough.
“We’ve had over 75 shootings in the city over the past several weeks,” Bottoms said. “You can’t blame that on APD [Atlanta Police Department].”
“Our hearts absolutely break for this precious life senselessly taken,” Gov. Brian Kemp (R-Ga.) tweeted. “Marty, the girls, and I are praying for the Lord’s comfort over Secoriea’s family and loved ones in the face of this tragedy. Please contact [the Atlanta Police Department] immediately if you can help their investigation.”
Some of these people were victims pure and simple, either defending their own property (as in the case of David Dorn) or just in the wrong place at the wrong time. Others took part in the lawless acts of rioters, and that lawlessness led to their own deaths.
It may be impossible to capture every single life lost in the George Floyd riots, and this list will be updated as new cases arise. This list also does not include the deaths across the country from an uptick in crime following the withdrawal of police in various cities.
Yet these twenty-one deaths are notable. Journalists, politicians, and activists should consider the potentially tragic results of lawless rioting.
Interesting that protests rank nowhere in the list - going to the bar ranks the highest, opening the mail ranks the lowest
Apparently huge mass of people protesting, rioting, looting, arson defy coronavirus
Texas Doctors Create Coronavirus Activity Risk Guide: ‘The Public Needs More Directed Guidance’J.D. MilesJuly 6, 2020 at 6:20 pm
DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) – There’s an old adage that says, “just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.”
A group of Texas doctors have created a guide to help people measure the risk of COVID-19 from nearly 40 daily activities.
The Texas Medical Association put together a guide to help people navigate the pandemic with a 1-9 scale that measures the risk from low to high.
A trip to the gym, 8.
Shopping at a mall, 5.
Pumping gas, 2.
“I’m comfortable with the risk scale from one to four, but five and above may not suit me,” said Dallas County Medical Society President Dr. Mark Casanova.
He said the guide focused on 37 activities covering everything from hugs and handshakes to attending stadium-sized events.
They are ranked as a guide to help people decide which ones elevate the danger of contracting COVID-19.
The lowest risk on the 1-9 scale comes from opening mail which some people worry will carry the virus.

The highest risk according to the study is associated with stadium events, mega churches and going to bars which the state has now closed.
Grocery shopping, restaurant take out and activities like jogging, golf and tennis are all considered low risk.
But hair salons, dine in restaurants, air travel, fitness centers and even hugs or handshakes are ranked as moderately high risk or above.
Engaging in contact sports and visiting a movie theater are also identified as a lot less safe than sitting in a doctors waiting room or swimming in a public pool.
“So I do think that the public has needed and frankly deserves a little bit more directed guidance, and we’ve done our best as we gain new understanding, as we get clarity on the transmission of this virus, its activity and its interaction with us in the community, and how we live our lives,” said Dr. Casanaova.
Sending kids to school or day care is right in the middle of the scale and considered a moderate risk.
Fourteen Texas doctors of different specialities came up with this guide.
In New York while contact tracing it is forbidden to ask if the infected person has participated in the protests
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