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His Last Breath: A year after George Floyd鈥檚 murder, nation reckons with history of racism, police brutality

He died in less than nine minutes, gasping for air before lying motionless on the concrete without a pulse.

People across the country, especially in the Black community, recoiled in horror as video evidence of the police brutality careened across the internet and TV screens. Thousands of protesters would soon surge into the streets, powering up a movement that had been brewing for years. 聽聽

The was nothing new; this one had simply been laid bare for the world to see. And the nation cried out for justice.聽

Around 8 p.m. on May 25, 2020, the 46-year-old Black man was arrested for allegedly using a counterfeit $20 bill to buy cigarettes from Cup Foods in Minneapolis.

After the arrest, Derek Chauvin, a white police officer, shoved Floyd to the street and knelt on his neck. Pinned to the pavement, Floyd pleaded for his 鈥渕ama.鈥 He told Chauvin and three other officers, 鈥淚鈥檓 about to die. Please don鈥檛 kill me.鈥 Chauvin, 45, simply told Floyd to 鈥.鈥 聽聽聽聽

鈥淚 can鈥檛 breathe,鈥 Floyd replied. 鈥淧lease, the knee in my neck, I can鈥檛 breathe.鈥 He would repeat that he couldn鈥檛 breathe no fewer than before he eventually took his last breath, lost consciousness and died. 聽

It wasn鈥檛 the first time the phrase was uttered by a Black man during an encounter with police. Printed on thousands of T-shirts and banners, it had already become a well-known rallying cry in the movement to fundamentally transform policing and end police violence against the Black community.

In 2013, voiced 11 times that he, too, couldn鈥檛 breathe after he was wrestled to the ground and put in a chokehold by a New York City police officer on suspicion of illegally selling cigarettes. 聽聽聽

Garner鈥檚 death came a year after George Zimmerman, who fatally shot 17-year-old in Sanford, Florida, on Feb. 26, 2012, was acquitted after claiming self-defense against the unarmed Black teen.

Black Live Matter poster
Protesters march from Columbia City Hall to the South Carolina State House in Columbia, South Carolina, on May 30, 2020, to protest the killing of George Floyd. (Credit: Crush Rush/Alamy)

Outraged, Alicia Garza, Patrisse Cullors and Opal Tometi founded the . Few thought the movement had staying power.

But in 2020, of people would march in solidarity for Floyd and BLM in demonstrations that spanned the globe, making it one of the largest movements in history.

The movement inspired the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act, which passed the U.S. House and is being negotiated in the Senate. The legislation would ban chokeholds and end qualified immunity 鈥 the legal protection that limits victims鈥 ability to sue police officers for misconduct. The law would also ban no-knock warrants in federal drug cases while mandating data collection on police encounters.

Additionally, the law would create a nationwide police misconduct registry that would help hold problematic officers accountable. What鈥檚 more, it would redirect funding to community-based policing programs while prohibiting racial and religious profiling.

Two justice systems

To Benjamin Crump, the civil rights lawyer who represents Floyd鈥檚 family, the 聽movement has highlighted what we, as a nation, have always known.

鈥淭here are two justice systems in America: one for white America and the other for Black America,鈥 Crump told the 澳彩开奖. 鈥淧olice brutality against Black people has always existed in our country, but the video of Chauvin slowly taking the life from George Floyd has left a lasting mark on the minds of many Americans.鈥 聽聽

Benjamin Crump
Benjamin Crump, left, joins Gianna Floyd, daughter of George Floyd, and her mother Roxie Washington, as they speak with reporters following a meeting with President Joe Biden at the White House on May 25, 2021, in Washington, D.C. (Credit: AP/Evan Vucci)

The lasting mark on the Black community was illustrated by a in depression and anxiety. Data from the Census Bureau showed that the rate of Black Americans showing signs of anxiety or depressive disorders climbed from 36% to 41% within a week after the video was released. Even today, the Black community is still waiting to exhale. 聽

David Hodge, operations coordinator for the 澳彩开奖鈥檚 Civil Rights Memorial Center and a Black man, said he lives in a constant state of doubt. 聽

鈥淓very Black person that I know can tell you a story of police brutality or misconduct that has either impacted them personally or someone that they know,鈥 said Hodge, 34. 鈥淭his reality touches everywhere, so for me, there is a degree of uncertainty as to whether I鈥檒l be treated in accordance with the law. That is an uncertainty I have to live with.鈥 聽聽

In the year since Floyd鈥檚 death, fear and uncertainty within the Black community have become unavoidable enemies that swim in the depths of the subconscious.聽 聽

Repeating history

George Perry Floyd Jr. was born in Fayetteville, North Carolina, and raised in Houston. In 2014, he moved to the Minneapolis area, where he lived in the suburb of St. Louis Park.

While the video of his murder was shocking 鈥 and galvanizing for the reform movement 鈥 the brutality was simply part of a pattern that has been out of public sight until recent years.聽

Dr. Lisa Woolfork
Dr. Lisa Woolfork

鈥淧olice violence, anti-Black violence, police brutality, they鈥檙e not getting worse, they鈥檙e getting filmed,鈥 said Dr. Lisa Woolfork, an associate professor of English at the University of Virginia and a founding member of BLM in Charlottesville. 鈥淭here are always going to be folks who are absolutely fine with the disposability of Black people. For some, the marginalized will always be an acceptable loss in a democracy.鈥

Indeed, from the Civil War and the fight to uphold white supremacy and the enslavement of millions of Black people, to of the civil rights era, when Alabama state troopers attacked unarmed marchers with clubs and tear gas, to the 1992 riots in Los Angeles after four policemen were acquitted of the beating of history has a way of repeating itself. 聽聽聽聽

In a sad twist that is a reality for many, Woolfork 鈥 a Black woman 鈥 says she wasn鈥檛 surprised by Floyd鈥檚 murder.

鈥淭hat doesn鈥檛 mean that I wasn鈥檛 wounded or harmed, however,鈥 she said. 鈥淭here is a way in which trauma and violence are regularly doled out to Black people, and it shows up in a variety of ways 鈥 physical violence, or the type of violence that shows up in apathy. Police operate in conjunction with the state and under an umbrella of anti-Blackness that is lethal for Black people of all ages and genders.鈥 聽

Killings mount

In 2014, after BLM was founded, the nation witnessed the murder of at the hands of a Ferguson, Missouri, police officer. 聽

More killings followed, and the victims became household names: and . from where Chauvin was on trial for Floyd鈥檚 murder, was fatally shot by a police officer during a traffic stop.

As of May 25, Newsweek reported that in the U.S. have been killed by police since Floyd鈥檚 death, according to the research group . As one area mourns a victim, yet another death happens.聽

Crump, the Floyd family鈥檚 lawyer, clings to hope 鈥 a deep faith that the movement can and will catapult the nation into a new era.聽

鈥淗ope is 鈥 and must always be 鈥 at the center of our efforts,鈥 Crump, 51, said. 鈥淗ope that justice will prevail. Hope that good people of all races, creeds and colors will speak up and speak out when they see injustice. Hope that a reckoning has begun in America 鈥 both in its people and in its institutions. If I did not have hope, I would not be able to continue the fight for justice.鈥澛

But all know that hope is only a necessary mindset. 聽

鈥淗ope isn鈥檛 an action,鈥 said Woolfork, 51, whose classes at the University of Virginia explore systemic inequity, racism and white supremacy. 鈥淭hings can be animated by hope, that鈥檚 a gesture, but I鈥檓 not of the opinion that hope will get us to the other side. What will free us are the actions, the changes in policy and accountability for wrongdoing. This is the bare minimum.鈥

Echoes Hodge, 鈥淭here are moments when I struggle to find hope.鈥

Starving for air

An , ordered by Floyd鈥檚 family, found that Floyd died by 鈥渉omicide caused by asphyxia due to neck and back compression that led to a lack of blood flow to the brain.鈥

Chauvin was arrested on May 29, 2020 鈥 four days after the murder.

鈥淥fficers are trained and sworn to protect and serve,鈥 Crump said. 鈥淲ho was Chauvin protecting? George wasn鈥檛 a danger to anyone. He was begging for his mother, begging for air. How could Chauvin be innocent?鈥

On March 12, a $27 million settlement for Floyd鈥檚 family was approved. And on April 20, as National Guard troops deployed in anticipation of possible violence in Minneapolis, Chicago and Washington, D.C., a jury found Chauvin on all three charges against him 鈥 second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.

鈥淭he jury got it right,鈥 Crump said. 鈥淭hose who still say Chauvin is innocent are basing that belief not on the evidence but on their rush to conclude that a white man would have done nothing wrong in killing a Black man. While the jury verdict doesn鈥檛 erase centuries of wrong, it does give hope that George鈥檚 death can truly be an agent of change across America.鈥 聽聽

But are the settlement and the verdict justice?

鈥淭rue justice would require the impossible: George back alive, living in the embrace of his loving family,鈥 Crump said. 鈥淏ut I believe his family sees the verdict as a measure of justice for George. Nothing can ever bring George back, but the verdict and the settlement were important steps in the fight for justice for all of us.鈥

Don鈥檛 call it heritage

In addition to seeking police reform, the BLM movement has also pushed to remove the iconography of white supremacy 鈥 the Confederate monuments, the public schools named for Confederate generals and other such symbols that are part of the landscape in this country, particularly in the South.

That movement began in earnest in 2015, when a young white supremacist killed nine Black people at a historic church in Charleston, South Carolina. Floyd鈥檚 death and the BLM movement gave it new momentum. In an update of its Whose Heritage? report, the 澳彩开奖 reported in February that at least 168 monuments and other Confederate symbols have been removed from public spaces since Floyd was killed 鈥 and more than 300 since Charleston. Some statues were yanked down by protesters; others were removed by local authorities.

Yet, some states have enacted laws that punish local officials for removing symbols that represent an era of racial oppression and brutality whose legacy we continue to see in deaths like Floyd鈥檚.

鈥淏lack lives have always been taken from us,鈥 Crump said. 鈥淏lack men, women and children are killed every day. I think George鈥檚 case put a microscope on the ongoing genocide of minorities in our country.鈥

Woolfork said that instead of acting on petitions to remove Confederate monuments, legislators and legislatures are seeking to enshrine white supremacy.

鈥淭hey鈥檙e calling it heritage,鈥 she said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not heritage, it鈥檚 hate.鈥

mural
Street art on the side of a building in Minneapolis honors George Floyd. (Credit: Michael Siluk/Alamy)

Lessons learned

A year after Floyd鈥檚 murder, racial equity seems out of reach for many Black people who live in fear of the next traffic stop.

As for what Floyd鈥檚 murder taught the nation, Hodge said that we can no longer excuse transgressions by police.

鈥淲e cannot look away or distract ourselves from the consequences of anti-Blackness and police brutality,鈥 he said. 鈥淔loyd鈥檚 death is a reminder that the systemic devaluation and dehumanization of Black lives has very concrete implications.鈥 聽聽聽聽

Woolfork said the nation must recognize that racism is the country鈥檚 鈥渙riginal sin鈥 and that anti-Black violence at the hands of the state and the nation is not a relic of the past 鈥 but rather a present threat to be confronted. 聽聽

鈥淓verything surrounding George Floyd鈥檚 murder opened eyes that had for far too long been closed,鈥 Crump said. 鈥淲e can only hope 鈥 we must hope 鈥 that the lesson for law enforcement agencies is to do better at respecting all individuals they encounter.鈥

Photo at top: People continue to lay flowers on April 6, 2021, at the George Floyd Mural in Houston鈥檚 Third Ward, where Floyd grew up. (Credit: Sipa USA/Alamy Live News)