Difference between revisions of "2020/10/31/pepper spray incident"

From Issuepedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 14: Line 14:
 
* '''2020-11-03'''
 
* '''2020-11-03'''
 
** IndyWeek: [https://indyweek.com/news/northcarolina/more-than-1-000-protesters-march-in-graham-at-polls-close/ As Polls Close, More Than 1,000 Protesters March in Graham] ([https://twitter.com/indyweek/status/1323774167242706944 via])
 
** IndyWeek: [https://indyweek.com/news/northcarolina/more-than-1-000-protesters-march-in-graham-at-polls-close/ As Polls Close, More Than 1,000 Protesters March in Graham] ([https://twitter.com/indyweek/status/1323774167242706944 via])
 +
* '''2020-11-01'''
 +
** IndyWeek: [https://indyweek.com/news/elections/civil-rights-groups-sue-alamance-county/ Civil Rights Groups Sue Alamance County Sheriff, Graham Police Chief on the Eve of Election Day] ([https://twitter.com/indyweek/status/1323774167242706944 via])
 
* '''2020-10-31'''  
 
* '''2020-10-31'''  
 
** WRAL News: [https://www.wral.com/police-pepper-spray-crowd-during-march-to-polls-in-front-of-graham-confederate-statue/19364312/ Police pepper spray crowd during march to polls in front of Graham Confederate statue] ([https://twitter.com/WRAL/status/1322663592655753217 tweet])
 
** WRAL News: [https://www.wral.com/police-pepper-spray-crowd-during-march-to-polls-in-front-of-graham-confederate-statue/19364312/ Police pepper spray crowd during march to polls in front of Graham Confederate statue] ([https://twitter.com/WRAL/status/1322663592655753217 tweet])

Revision as of 00:35, 4 November 2020

About

"A group of protesters marching to a polling station in Graham, North Carolina, were pepper-sprayed by police shortly after taking a moment of silence for the death of George Floyd. Protesters say that the police had ushered them up to that point and gave them confusing instructions before pepper-spraying the crowd, which included children."

The police apparently warned the protesters to leave the area before they began pepper-spraying; city officials have inexplicably cited this in defense of the police, and have avoided the question of why the police began spraying immediately after giving the warning, rather than giving the crowd some time to start moving -- much less discussing why pepper spray was needed in the first place.

Links

to file