June 24, 2020 Black Lives Matter protest news | CNN

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Breonna Taylor: What you need to know
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What you need to know

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Woman charged in Atlanta Wendy's arson is released on bond

Natalie White, right, bonded out of the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta, Georgia, on Wednesday, June 24.

The attorney for the Wendy’s arson suspect, Natalie White, told CNN that she bonded out of Fulton County Jail Wednesday evening.

White faces first-degree arson charges in the Wendy’s restaurant fire that broke out during protests over Rayshard Brooks’ death. She appeared in court on Wednesday.

More details: White, 29, made her first appearance in Fulton County, Georgia, Magistrate Court and did not make a plea. The judge set bond at $10,000 and ordered White to remain under house arrest with an ankle monitor and stay off of social media.

White’s attorney, Drew Findling, argued for a signature bond, citing financial hardships with White’s family.

“They just don’t have the funds to make any bond,” Findling said. He argued against house arrest.

Mississippi's secretary of state says the decision to change the state flag should be left up to voters

Mississippi Secretary of State Michael Watson, speaks at the Mississippi State Capitol in Jackson, on June 3.

Mississippi Secretary of State Michael Watson believes “the people of Mississippi should have the power to decide on the future of our state flag” which has included the Confederate emblem ⁠— a blue cross with 13 stars over a red background ⁠— since 1894. 

Watson said the flag “represents the place we all call home, so every one of us should have a voice in the decision to keep it or change it.”

“By putting it on the ballot, Mississippians retain the power to do more than just talk about this highly-emotional issue; they have the opportunity to stand up and let their voice be heard,” Watson added.

Some historical context: Critics of the Mississippi state flag say it’s racist, while others believe it’s a crucial part of the state’s history. The last time the state considered changing the flag was in 2001.

However, 65% of voters chose then to keep the flag with the Confederate symbol instead of switching to a flag with 20 white stars on a blue field to represent Mississippi’s status as the 20th state.

Several cities and public universities, including the University of Mississippi and Mississippi State University, have ceased to fly the controversial state flag.

Mississippi state Rep. Christopher Bell, a Democrat who is spearheading the latest efforts to change the flag, said that he and Republican state Rep. Missy McGee formulated the idea together.

“It was basically (us) walking by each other in the hallway and we had started up the conversation, and we got to work in trying to form a small bipartisan group of folks to try to do a special resolution to change this flag,” Bell said.

Mississippi State flag.

3 Wilmington police officers terminated for "hate-filled speech" in car video

Wilmington Police Department in North Carolina terminated three veteran officers for “hate-filled speech,” Police Chief Donny Williams said in a news conference on Wednesday. 

Officer James Gilmore, corporal Jesse Moore II, and officer Kevin Piner were caught on camera using “disrespectful language, hate-filled speech, and referring to black people as the n-word,” Williams said. 

The officers spoke negatively about Williams, other black officers and Black Lives Matter protesters, the chief said.

A supervisor performing a routine inspection of Piner’s in-car video camera discovered the officers’ comments.

Williams said the comments were “brutally offensive and deserved immediate attention.”

The chief said he recommended that none of the terminated officers be eligible for rehire within the city and said he would notify the North Carolina justice and standards commission to determine whether the officers can maintain certification to practice law enforcement. 

Williams said he will meet with every single officer in the department, instill mandatory implicit bias training and launch a cultural education series. 

CNN has reached out to the union for comment.

Wisconsin governor authorizes National Guard to support law enforcement after overnight protests

Gov. Tony Evers speaks at the Wisconsin Department of Military Affairs in the State Emergency Operations Center in Madison, Wisconsin, on March 12.

In response to civil unrest in Madison, Wisconsin, Democratic Gov. Tony Evers announced Wednesday that he authorized the National Guard to support local law enforcement in Dane County. 

In response to the request for assistance from civil authorities, elements of the Wisconsin National Guard’s Quick Reaction Force mobilized to state active duty Wednesday, according to the statement.

Some background: Protests have swept across the country since the death of George Floyd in police custody, some resulting in Confederate statues being torn down by cities and protesters alike. But boiled over frustrations in Madison led to the toppling of monuments unrelated to the Confederacy.

A group tore down the statue of Col. Hans Christian Heg and threw it into Lake Monona, according to CNN affiliate WKOW. Heg was a Norwegian migrant who fought for the Union in the Civil War, according to the Wisconsin Historical Society.

The group also pulled down the Forward statue outside the State Capitol — which the Wisconsin Historical Society said symbolizes devotion and progress, WKOW said.

Democratic state Senator Tim Carpenter of Milwaukee was present for the overnight protests and said he was assaulted after taking a picture, the station reported.

Catch up: Here are the latest updates on the Black Lives Matter protests

The legal process continues in the cases of George Floyd, Ahmaud Arbery and Rayshard Brooks as the US continues to face civil unrest around the country.

Read up on the biggest developments:

  • New indictments: Cobb District Attorney Joyette M. Holmes announced today at a news conference that Glynn County’s Grand Jury has indicted Travis and Greg McMichael and William Bryan on malice and felony murder charges in the Feb. 23 death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery.
  • Officers involved in Floyd’s death: Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said in a statement that the death of George Floyd was “murder” and that the officer who was seen pressing his knee into Floyd’s neck “knew what he was doing” because he had taken specific training on preventing “positional asphyxiation,” or suffocation. 
  • Brooks case: Garrett Rolfe, the former Atlanta police officer accused of fatally shooting Rayshard Brooks, is scheduled for a June 30 bond hearing, the Fulton County Clerk’s officer told CNN.
  • National Guard to protect monuments: The DC National Guard will provide unarmed guard members to assist with additional security for monuments in Washington, DC, the National Guard Bureau said Wednesday.
  • NASCAR’s Bubba Wallace: Wallace said he is “relieved” after the FBI announced that the noose found hanging in his garage had been there since last October, ruling out that he was the victim of a hate crime.
  • Atlanta Wendy’s arson suspect: Natalie White made her first appearance in Fulton County, Georgia Magistrate Court Wednesday on arson charges related to the Wendy’s fire that took place during protests in Atlanta following Brooks’ death. The judge set bond at $10,000 and ordered White to remain under house arrest with an ankle monitor. The judge also said White must stay off of social media. 
  • Reform bill fails: A Republican policing reform proposal collapsed in the Senate today when Democrats lined up to block it after criticizing the legislation as an inadequate response to nationwide calls for action to address police misconduct and racial injustice.
  • Controversial statues: Crews in Charleston, South Carolina, on Wednesday were in the process of removing a statue of John C. Calhoun. Calhoun, a former vice president of the United States and US senator, is also known for defending slavery and owning about 80 slaves himself. Philadelphia will seek to remove a statue of Christopher Columbus in Marconi Plaza in South Philadelphia, Mayor Jim Kenney announced on Wednesday. 
  • Police in schools: California’s Department of Education is pushing for a reevaluation of police on school campuses, specifically as it relates to racial justice, Superintendent Tony Thurmond announced in a news conference today. The Chicago School Board has rejected an effort to terminate its contract with the Chicago Police Department.

University of Oregon will rename oldest campus building that honored a supporter of slavery

Deady Hall on the University of Oregon campus in Eugene, Oregon.

Trustees of the University of Oregon voted unanimously Wednesday to rename Deady Hall, the oldest building on campus.

It was named in honor of Matthew Deady, an Oregon Territory legislator in the mid-19th century and former regent who supported slavery prior to the Civil War, according to a report from historians commissioned by the university.

The vote followed the recommendation of University President Michael Schill three years after he told trustees they should leave the building’s name in place.

Schill cited the recent deaths of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor and Ahmaud Arbery, among others, as a “tipping point” in the conversation.

The university said the building — which was constructed in 1876 — will be called University Hall until another name is chosen.

Chicago school board votes to keep police officers in schools

The Chicago School Board has rejected an effort to terminate its contract with the Chicago Police Department.

The 4-3 vote will keep Chicago Police officers in the city’s schools where they serve as school resource officers.  

The vote keeps intact a $33 million contract between the school system and the Chicago Police Department, leaving more than 200 uniformed school resource officers in about 70 schools.

California schools to examine campus policing statewide

California’s Department of Education is pushing for a reevaluation of police on school campuses, specifically as it relates to racial justice, Superintendent Tony Thurmond announced in a news conference today.

Thurmond noted that he’s seen data indicating that “in many cases when there are police on campus, this results in more suspensions or arrests of our students and in particular, African American students and other students of color.”

A review of research and data relating to the impacts of police on school campuses is in the works, Thurmond said, and will be released soon and a public panel discussion on the issue is scheduled for next week.

Some context: This comes as Oakland School District is contemplating removing school police from campuses entirely.

In a meeting Tuesday, Los Angeles Unified School Board rejected a proposal to defund the school police department.

Additionally, Thurmond announced California Department of Education will be releasing a series of lessons focused on ethnic studies.

Lessons, workshops, and webinars will be released to schools statewide within the next couple of weeks.

Sen. Tim Scott receives more threats since becoming lead Republican on police reform 

Sen. Tim Scott speaks to members of the media after the weekly Senate Republican Policy Luncheon at Hart Senate Office Building on June 23 in Washington.

Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina has seen an uptick in racist and profanity-laced voicemails at his office since becoming the lead Republican on police reform legislation, including from one person who called him “Uncle Tim,” according to his staff and a CNN review of several of the messages.

Scott, the only African-American Republican in the chamber, played two of the messages for his GOP colleagues during a policy lunch Tuesday, according to his spokesperson Sean Smith. 

The caller, who described Scott as “Uncle Tim,” also said he was a “sellout” and “the lowest piece of s*** this country ever produced.” That caller also made unflattering remarks about South Carolina’s other Republican senator, Lindsey Graham, and the two GOP senators from Florida, Marco Rubio and Rick Scott.

In a second message, the caller said “all Republicans are nasty.” 

“Most don’t mention any legislation, but it’s clear they’re related to police reform,” Smith said about the threatening messages to Scott. “The volume has increased greatly the past two weeks since it became known he was leading police reform efforts.”

Smith said the US Capitol Police are investigating the threats and provided CNN with other examples of racist and threatening voicemails his office has received in recent days. 

When CNN asked Scott about the personal toll the threats were having on him he said it was “very little,” and then turned to his police reform bill that was blocked by Democrats on a procedural vote earlier Wednesday.

Trump blames Democrats for failed vote on policing reform

President Trump said the blame on the failed vote on a Senate policing reform proposal should be placed on Democrats. 

“The Democrats don’t want to do it because they want to weaken our police, they want to take away immunity,” Trump said during a White House Rose Garden news conference, adding that the legislation has buy-in from Senate Republicans and police groups. 

“They want to take away a lot of the strength of our police and law enforcement generally and we can’t live with that,” Trump added.

“Mitch wants it to happen,” he said of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell. “I would like to see it happen, but we won’t sacrifice. We won’t do that. We won’t do anything that’s going to hurt our police.”

“So, if nothing happens with it, it’s one of those things. We have different philosophies,” Trump said. 

Watch:

Grand jury indicts three men in the killing of Ahmaud Arbery

Gregory McMichael, Travis McMichael and William "Roddie" Bryan, Jr.

Cobb District Attorney Joyette M. Holmes announced today at a press conference in Brunswick, Georgia, that Glynn County’s Grand Jury has indicted Travis McMichael, Greg McMichael and William R. Bryan on malice and felony murder charges in the Feb. 23, 2020, death of 25-year-old Ahmaud Arbery.

Some background: Arbery, who was black, was jogging outside Brunswick when Gregory McMichael and his son, who are white, chased him after him, authorities said.

Arbery and Travis McMichael struggled over the latter’s shotgun and Arbery was shot three times. Gregory McMichael told police Arbery attacked his son, a police report says.

The killing sparked outrage across a nation after a disturbing video of the shooting emerged online on May 5. “Jogging while black” became the latest example of the many perils visited on African Americans.

More details of Arbery’s last moments emerged earlier this month amid nationwide protests over another killing that of George Floyd by police in Minneapolis and demonstrators have also called for justice in Arbery’s case.

At a preliminary hearing, Georgia Bureau of Investigation Assistant Special Agent in Charge Richard Dial outlined events that led to Arbery’s death and said that before Arbery was shot, the three men charged in his murder engaged in an elaborate chase, hitting the 25-year-old jogger with a truck as he tried to escape them.

“I believe Mr. Arbery was being pursued, and he ran till he couldn’t run anymore, and it was turn his back to a man with a shotgun or fight with his bare hands against the man with the shotgun. He chose to fight,” he said. “I believe Mr. Arbery’s decision was to just try to get away, and when he felt like he could not escape he chose to fight.”

Hear more:

Philadelphia officials will seek to remove Christopher Columbus statue, mayor says

City worker cover the statue of Christopher Columbus at Marconi Plaza, on Tuesday, June 16, in the South Philadelphia neighborhood of Philadelphia.

Philadelphia will seek to remove a statue of Christopher Columbus in Marconi Plaza in South Philadelphia, Mayor Jim Kenney announced on Wednesday. 

The statue has been the site of numerous protests in recent weeks. 

City officials are allowing for residents to provide their input on the statute via written submissions up until July 21, and to testify at the Arts Commission meeting on June 22. 

Read Kenney’s tweet:

This high school student says she won't wear the name of her "Robert E. Lee" school until the name is changed

Trude Lamb

Trude Lamb, a student athlete at Robert E. Lee High School in Tyler, Texas, is refusing to wear her school’s jersey until the name is changed.

In a recent letter to the school board, Lamb wrote that she would no longer wear the school’s jersey, which is emblazoned with “Tyler Lee.” Tyler stands for the Tyler Independent School District located in the city of Tyler, Texas, and Lee stands for the school’s name, Robert E. Lee High School.

Lamb, who came to the United States in 2014 from Ghana, read a portion of her letter in an interview with CNN’s Brianna Keilar:

Lamb said that the school board hasn’t “done anything yet” after receiving her letter. Laura Owens, Lamb’s adopted mother, added that the board hasn’t responded to the letter.

“They have not responded to any of our emails at all. No statements whatsoever about her or the students who are pledging to not wear the name,” Owens said.

“Yeah, I want it to change. I’m hoping they will change it,” Lamb said.

Read more here.

WATCH:

Charleston is removing a statue of John C. Calhoun

Crews in Charleston, South Carolina, on Wednesday were in the process of removing a statue of John C. Calhoun.

Calhoun, a former vice president of the United States and US senator, is also known for defending slavery and owning about 80 slaves himself. A Clemson University biography called him an ardent believer in white supremacy.

Statues controversial because of their connection to racial injustice and slavery have been removed by both protesters and cities in the wake of the death of George Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man who died in police custody.

But conversations around those monuments, particularly Confederate monuments, have been the subject of national debate for years.

Charleston City Council voted unanimously to approve a resolution for the removal Tuesday night, according to CNN affiliate WCSC.

“We have a sense of unity moving forward for racial conciliation and for unity in this city,” Mayor John Tecklenburg said following the vote the station reported. “God bless you all.”

Keep reading.

Republican author of police reform bill voices frustration after Democrats block GOP plan

Sen. Tim Scott speaks to members of the media after the weekly Senate Republican Policy Luncheon at Hart Senate Office Building on June 23 in Washington.

Tim Scott, the only black Republican senator, who led the effort to craft the GOP police reform bill, voiced frustration with Democrats in a lengthy floor speech that was deeply personal at times following the failed vote on his policing reform proposal.

“We wouldn’t be here if it were not for the death of yet another African-American man – George Floyd – his murder is why the country has given us the opportunity to lead, to lead, and my friends on the other side just said no … they just said no,” he said. 

“This process is not broken because of the legislation. This is a broken process beyond that one piece of legislation. It’s one of the reasons why communities of color, young Americans of all colors are losing faith in the institutions of authority and power in this nation. We’re playing small ball. We’re playing for those in the insulated chambers. We’re playing for presidential politics – that’s small ball,” he said. 

Top Senate Democrat blames Republican leader after Democrats block GOP policing bill

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer speaks at a news conference following the Democrats weekly policy luncheon at the US Capitol on June 23 in Washington.

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer argued Wednesday that “the blame more than anyone else falls on McConnell’s shoulders,” after Senate Democrats blocked the GOP police reform bill.  

Schumer said he hopes the American people “will put pressure, moral pressure, political pressure, every kind of pressure on (Mitch McConnell).”

“And he may come back and say ‘let’s negotiate a good bill,’” Schumer said at a press conference alongside Democratic Sens. Dick Durbin, Cory Booker and Kamala Harris.

But Schumer said he thinks there’s “a better chance than people think” of the Senate passing police reform legislation this term, due to continued public pressure. 

Schumer declined to comment on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s remark Tuesday that Republicans are “getting away with the murder” of George Floyd, saying, “Pelosi has answered that question herself, and what she said is fine with me.”

Senate Democrats block GOP police reform bill, throwing overhaul effort into flux

A Republican policing reform proposal collapsed in the Senate today when Democrats lined up to block it after criticizing the legislation as an inadequate response to nationwide calls for action to address police misconduct and racial injustice.

Here’s what happened: Senate Democrats denied Republicans the 60 votes needed on a procedural vote to begin debate on the bill, which was led by Tim Scott, the only Black Republican senator. 

The tally was 55-45. As a result, the vote failed, meaning that lawmakers will not be able to open debate, offer amendments, or move to a final vote on passage. 

Democratic Sens. Joe Manchin and Doug Jones, and Independent Sen. Angus King, who caucuses with Democrats, crossed party lines to vote “yes” on the procedural vote.

The move by Democrats caps weeks of calls from both parties to move quickly on police reform amid protests and civil unrest across the country following high-profile episodes of police use of deadly force that sparked a national backlash.

But efforts to find common ground have now largely devolved into bitter, partisan finger-pointing, underscoring how a deep partisan divide may result in stalemate on the issue on Capitol Hill.

What comes next: House Democrats are planning to bring a Democratic-crafted policing proposal to a vote in their chamber on Thursday and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi had said last week that she had hoped to bring the Democratic legislation to conference with the Senate GOP proposal to reconcile differences.

But the possibility of the two parties finding enough common ground to enact a reform measure now looks increasingly like a remote possibility. Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell was noncommittal today about bringing police reform back if Democrats block the Republican policing bill.

“Well, we will let you know,” McConnell said ahead of the vote. “It can be done under a motion to reconsider at any point.”

He changed his vote to “no” at the end of the vote, a procedural move that preserves his ability to call the measure back up for a re-vote later if he chooses.

McConnell said on the floor that he is “in strong support of the bill,” but “in order to have an opportunity to re-consider the vote without waiting for two days, I changed my vote and moved to re-consider, which means that it could come back at any time should progress be made.”

Two top Republican leaders — Sens. John Cornyn of Texas and Roy Blunt of Missouri — suggested on Tuesday that if Democrats filibuster the Scott policing reform bill, then it’s almost certainly dead for the year.

How both plans compare: While there is some overlap between the GOP and Democratic proposals, there are also key differences in the proposals that have created sticking points.

  • The GOP plan has a major emphasis on incentivizing states to take action, and does not include an outright ban on chokeholds. Scott had argued that “we get very, very close to that place” by blocking federal grant funds to departments that don’t ban chokeholds themselves.
  • The Democratic plan has a focus on setting national standards, such as mandates for federal uniformed officers to wear body cameras and banning chokeholds.
  • Another major sticking point between Democrats and Republicans is whether to overhaul qualified immunity for cops so it’s easier to sue them in civil court. The House Democratic bill overhauls the standard, while Scott’s Republican bill does not.

Atlanta Wendy's arson suspect appears in court

Natalie White made her first appearance in Fulton County, Georgia Magistrate Court Wednesday on arson charges related to the Wendy’s fire that took place during protests in Atlanta.

The judge set bond at $10,000 and ordered White to remain under house arrest with an ankle monitor. The judge also said White must stay off of social media. 

White’s attorney, Drew Findling, virtually argued for a signature bond from his office, citing financial hardships with White’s family. “They just don’t have the funds to make any bond,” Findling said. He also argued against house arrest. 

Findling said he’s known White since she was a child and indicated that White’s mom, sister and godmother where sitting behind him.   

White is charged with first-degree arson for the fire that took place at the Wendy’s as protests escalated last week after the shooting death of Rayshard Brooks. 

Senate holds procedural vote on GOP policing reform bill

The Senate is now holding a procedural vote on the GOP policing reform proposal, a vote that Democrats are expected to block after criticizing the measure as an inadequate response to nationwide calls for action to address police misconduct and racial injustice.

Senate Democrats are expected to deny Republicans the 60 votes needed on the procedural vote to begin debate on the bill, which is led Tim Scott, the only Black Republican senator.

It is unclear how long the vote will take.

Bubba Wallace tells fans, “We’ll conquer the good fight”

Driver Bubba Wallace takes a selfie with himself and other drivers that pushed his car to the front in the pits of the Talladega Superspeedway prior to the start of the NASCAR Cup Series auto race at the Talladega Superspeedway in Talladega Alabama, on Monday, June 22.

NASCAR driver Bubba Wallace says he is “relieved” after the FBI announced that the noose found hanging in his garage had been there since last October, ruling out that he was the victim of a hate crime.

In a message to his fans, he said he will continue to raise their voices because there’s a lot of work left to be done.

“I will continue to praise you and uplift you guys in the ways you have supported me, and I appreciate that from the bottom of my heart,” he said. “There’s a lot of work to be done that’s left on the table. We’ll walk hand in hand together, and conquer the good fight.”

He detailed how he found out about the noose hanging in his garage, saying the President of NASCAR, Steve Phelps, gave him the news on Sunday evening, and it was “one of the most difficult conversations, I believe, [Phelps had] ever had to have, tears flowing down his face and choked up on every word.”

Wallace added that by the time he got the news, the investigations were already underway.

“Then I got a call Monday morning in Talladega that the FBI was involved. So I’m just like, ‘OK, I’ll just sit back and wait to see what we have to do.’”

Last night, he told CNN’s Don Lemon that he’s “pissed” members of the public are now questioning his integrity.

“I’m mad because people are trying to test my character and the person that I am and my integrity.”

READ MORE

Four weeks after George Floyd’s death, an embattled police union finally speaks out
Protesters face off with police near White House after attempt to pull down Andrew Jackson statue
Senate Democrats: GOP policing bill isn’t ‘salvageable’
Seattle mayor announces city will reclaim police-free autonomous zone taken over by demonstrators
Want to reform the police? Hire more women

READ MORE

Four weeks after George Floyd’s death, an embattled police union finally speaks out
Protesters face off with police near White House after attempt to pull down Andrew Jackson statue
Senate Democrats: GOP policing bill isn’t ‘salvageable’
Seattle mayor announces city will reclaim police-free autonomous zone taken over by demonstrators
Want to reform the police? Hire more women