Members of the public were allowed to view George Floyd's coffin in his hometown of Houston, Texas, on Monday as global protests sparked by his death continued over the weekend. His body was on display for six hours to allow for the public viewing.
On Tuesday, a private memorial would be held in funeral with a 500-person limit. The reasoning behind the limit was to help everyone attending maintain social distancing guidelines during the service.
In response to Black Lives Matter protests across the nation, Congressional Democrats unveiled new legislation that would directly tackle police reform across the United States. But Republicans have urged caution about passing anything on the federal level addressing police reform and brutality.
On the state and local level, Minneapolis lawmakers pledged to dismantle its police department, promising to create, instead, a new system of public safety, while New York Mayor Bill de Blasio said he would cut the city's $6bn police budget and spend more on social services. Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti also vowed to cut $100m to $150m of his city's police budget, just a few days after he planned to increase that same budget by 7 per cent.
All of this comes as Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer charged with second-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter, made a virtual appearance in court on Monday.
The judge accepted prosecutors' $1.25m unconditioned bail, which changes to $1m with conditions. These conditions include Chauvin remaining a law-abiding citizen, attending all court appearances, refraining from taking any law enforcement and security jobs, and handing over all firearms.
Whether Chauvin would be able to post bail remains to be seen.
President Donald Trump has continued his rhetoric of "law and order" amid the protests across the country. He's accused the Democrats of pushing "defund the police" rhetoric, but prominent Democrats like former Vice President Joe Biden said they did not support the movement. Instead, Mr Biden advocated for funding community policing policies and other vital programmes.
Avon and Somerset Police have launched an investigation to identify those involved in tearing down the statute of 17th century slave trader Edward Colston.
Home secretary Priti Patel said the toppling of the statue was “utterly disgraceful”, ”completely unacceptable” and “sheer vandalism”.
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He did say, though, that the statue had remained a "personal affront" to him as a person of Jamaican heritage.
Asked why he had not organised for its lawful removal, Rees said: "I’m the first directly elected mayor of African heritage in Europe. If I just pitch up and start tearing down all memorials to slavery there would be another debate and I would be on the receiving end.
"I don’t have the latitude to operate like that that other people would, in just the same way Obama didn’t have the latitude to criticise America’s security services in the same way that Trump does."
Boris Johnson has said anti-racism demonstrations in London were “subverted by thuggery” after some protesters clashed with police over the weekend.
The prime minister said people had the right to protest peacefully but those who clashed with police were “a betrayal of the cause they purpose to serve” - and would be held to account.
Thousands of people took part in demonstrations across the UK over the death of George Floyd in the US at the hands of a white police officer.
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Two weeks after the killing of George Floyd at the knee of a police officer, a veto-proof majority of Minneapolis city councillors has committed to disbanding the police force.
The nine members of the 13-member council signed their pledge at a rally of protesters demanding that the police force be defunded. Speaking from the stage in Powderhorn Park, council president Lisa Bender said that the city needed a top-to-bottom rethink of what policing is and how it should work.
“Our commitment is to do what’s necessary to keep every single member of our safe, and to tell the truth: that the Minneapolis police are not doing that.
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The president commented on the news that The New York Times opinion editor has resigned over the publication of an op-ed by Senator Tom Cotton, who called for the possible involvement of the military in tackling protesters.
He has also gone back to a familiar complaint of a couple of years ago - and that is about NFL players kneeling during the national anthem to protest against police violence against black people.
William Barr has defended the clearing of protesters from Lafayette Park in Washington DC through the use of “pepper balls” and denied that the use of force had anything to do with Donald Trump's photo-op with a Bible outside St John's Church that day.
Speaking with CBS News on Sunday, the US attorney general also said that he did not believe systemic racism is an issue in police forces.
The Trump administration has been heavily criticised for its response to protestors in the wake of George Floyd's death in police custody, in particular the aggressive tactics of law enforcement outside the White House last Monday to clear Lafayette Park.
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The call to defund police departments in the wake of the George Floyd protests has support from a high-profile voice in the US House of Representatives.
New York congresswoman Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez voiced her support for reducing and redirecting police department funds as a way to address systemic racism and excessive use of force in law enforcement agencies.
Ms Ocasio-Cortez expressed her support during a debate on New York Spectrum News 1.
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A man drove his car into a crowd of protesters in Seattle on Sunday, then shot and wounded a demonstrator who confronted him as he came to a stop, according to police and eyewitness video.
Seattle police said firefighters took the man who was shot to the hospital and that he was in stable condition. No one else was injured, the police said.
The suspect was seen in the video exiting his car as protesters began to surround it. He brandished what appeared to be a gun, dashed through the crowd and turned himself over to police.
The incident was in contrast to the mostly peaceful weekend protests sparked by the death of George Floyd last month while in Minneapolis police custody.
Reuters
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden will travel to Houston on Monday to meet privately with the family of George Floyd, who died in Minneapolis last month while he was being detained by police.
Mr Biden will meet with the family of Mr Floyd in private so as not to disturb the funeral ceremony with extra security.
“Vice President Biden will travel to Houston Monday to express his condolences in-person to the Floyd family. He is also recording a video message for the funeral service,” a spokesman for the former vice president told CBS News on Sunday.
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Parker Gillian laughed the first time a white co-worker sent her money unprompted. It was all she could do.
Since protests erupted last week over the death of George Floyd, a black man who died in police custody in Minneapolis, Ms Gillian had been hearing from white acquaintances who wanted to check in on her wellbeing. There was a straightforward logic to it: she is a young black woman in Chicago and there is a civil rights movement playing out nationwide, on streets and on screens, with black people at its centre.
But some of the people who reached out were not especially close to her. And even those who were actually friends seemed to subtly ask for her guidance about how they, Good White Allies, should handle the moment. The wave of good intentions started to feel like a riptide.
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Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey faced a chorus of boos and chants of “shame” when he refused to commit to abolishing the city’s police department this weekend.
Saturday was the 12th day of protests over the killing of George Floyd while in the custody of the Minneapolis Police Department.
A peaceful march was led by the Black Visions Collective from Bottineau Park in the city with chants of “Black Lives Matter” and “Defund the police, give the money to the community”, CBS affiliate WCCO reports.
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"Almost as if they didn't know any better," he tweeted of historical figures following the tearing down of Colston's statue in Bristol.
Given everything, I’m quite surprised the statue of Edward Colston in Bristol survived for as long as it did. His reputation, after all, was trashed long before his memorial.
He acquired his vast fortune, later used philanthropically, from the slave trade. He was thus responsible for the death of thousands of the African slaves - that is, his fellow human beings - that he so profitably shipped across the Atlantic.
If a ship transport was too heavy or running out of food, women and children were thrown over the side. Now the iconoclasts of Bristol have tossed Colston into the drink.
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"I attended COLSTONS (slave owner and killer) primary school in order to receive my 'education'," he tweeted.
"Pardon me for enjoying this moment of irony."
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