Anonymous ID: 7a8664 May 31, 2020, 4:17 p.m. No.9401369   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1413

Is anyone able to download this video?

 

‘Let’s get this motherf—ker’: San Jose officer suspended after viral protest comments

 

Officer Jared Yuen has been viewed millions of times antagonizing George Floyd protesters while getting into downtown skirmish line

 

The San Jose Police Department was doing damage control after one of its officers trended nationally on social media for aggressive comments toward demonstrators protesting the George Floyd killing in Minneapolis, shouting “Let’s get this motherf—er” and “Shut up, bitch” as he manned downtown skirmish lines.

 

The officer, confirmed to be six-year SJPD veteran Jared Yuen, was recorded in multiple instances late Friday afternoon and drew immediate and wide rebukes from thousands of people who watched the video and called for Yuen’s firing.

 

One of the videos had been viewed more than 10 million times and been shared nearly 500,000 times on Twitter as of Sunday morning. Authorities confirmed that Yuen has been temporarily taken off street duty and will not be staffing any more demonstrations.

 

Raj Jayadev, director of the South Bay social-justice group Silicon Valley De-Bug, said the videos are particularly troubling because of the fears elicited by the police killing of Floyd last week, after Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin pressed his knee on a handcuffed Floyd’s neck for more than eight minutes. Chauvin was fired and has since been charged with murder.

 

“Officer Yuen’s actions are extremely dangerous because you have someone who actually has a license to kill,” Jayadev said. “It’s one thing for someone to be a bully. But when you have the tools and state authority to act upon that violent aggression, it’s not just words, as far as I see it. It’s a criminal threat.”

 

There was no shortage of condemnation from city leaders for the behavior shown in the videos, which surfaced as the police department parries criticism for its use of rubber bullets, tear gas and other force tactics to dispserse protesters after they shut down Highway 101, and some people took to vandalism. By the end of Friday, at least 38 people were arrested and several officers were injured by thrown objects including glass bottles, and one officer went to the hospital after a protester punched him in the face.

 

“I found the video of Officer Yuen’s statements disturbing, and his conduct undermines what was overwhelmingly excellent work by San Jose police officers to exercise restraint and professionalism amid very difficult, intense moments,” Mayor Sam Liccardo said Sunday. “It’s apparent that the officer allowed his emotions to undermine his professional duty to the public.”

 

Through the police department, Yuen declined to comment for this story. Police Chief Eddie Garcia, who told this news organization Saturday that the officer’s actions were a product of an environment in which “emotions were running high,” offered a wider response Sunday that firmly denounced the incident while also extending support for Yuen.

 

“I’m not happy about this, and I’m not defending this,” Garcia said. “He let his emotions get the best of him, and it’s not right.”

 

The chief, who was among the first police leaders in the country to condemn Floyd’s killing, said Yuen will be held accountable for his conduct, but stopped short of saying whether Yuen’s career was on the line. He said Yuen is a good police officer “who has put his life on the line for the city multiple times.” In 2016, Yuen was deemed a victim officer in an encounter where an auto-theft suspect rammed his car during an escape attempt, prompting two other officers to open fire on the suspect.

 

“He’s a good kid and a good cop. He will have to deal with this. And I will have to deal with this,” Garcia said. “This is not going to get swept under the rug.”

 

The San Jose Police Officers’ Association sought to toe a similarly fine line between acknowledging the damaging power of Yuen’s acts and trying to offer a sense of measure.

 

“San Jose police officers are performing an extremely delicate job, in an incredibly dangerous and difficult time, and our entire community is under an enormous amount of stress. That stress manifested itself in language directed at a protester that is appropriately being investigated by the department,” Sgt. Paul Kelly said in a statement Sunday. “We urge everyone to protest peacefully and know that San Jose police officers remain committed to ensuring the safety of protesters and all residents of our city.”

 

more:

https://www.mercurynews.com/2020/05/31/lets-get-this-motherf-ker-san-jose-officers-viral-protest-comments-draw-wide-condemnation/

Anonymous ID: 7a8664 May 31, 2020, 4:37 p.m. No.9401673   🗄️.is 🔗kun

‘Free-for-all’: San Francisco businesses looted in night of havoc after George Floyd killing

 

May 31, 2020 2:33 pm

 

Widespread damage from overnight riots greeted San Francisco business owners on Sunday morning following a second night of havoc in the wake of the police killing of George Floyd in Minnesota.

 

Market Street was mostly quiet Sunday, a day after vandalism and looting stained the city’s main commercial thoroughfare.

 

What started as peaceful protests Saturday afternoon turned into a storm of looting once the sun set, according to observers, and left a wake that appeared to be scattershot a day later.

 

Late Sunday morning, an alarm was still chirping inside a CVS, which had its front glass door smashed at 581 Market St., while the 7-Eleven across the street went untouched.

 

Retired Marine Frank Asaro said the looting was way more precise than it seemed in the aftermath. He watched as vans and trucks double-parked on Market Street and waited for people to make multiple trips into businesses to shuttle stolen goods into the waiting vehicles.

 

“It was a free-for-all,” Asaro said. “People were saying that they were doing this in the name of George Floyd, but they shouldn’t drag his name through the mud with these actions.”

 

A security guard at a Market Street hotel who didn’t want to be identified had similar observations. Standing behind a makeshift barricade in front of the hotel, he said that the protests were calm until 8 or 9 p.m.

 

Then, people started breaking windows, entering businesses and stealing goods. The guard said it wasn’t until 1 or 2 a.m. that police were able to stop the looting.

 

Boarded-up windows and graffiti-marked businesses were common for stretches of Market Street. At the 6th and Market Muni stop, someone scribbled “Kill Cops.”

 

Around Union Square, hammering, buzz saws and the scrubbing of spray paint were heard in the famous shopping district. Businesses including the AT&T store on Powell Street as well as the Urban Outfitters and Swatch stores a block away had broken windows and signs of theft.

 

Crate & Barrel employees were boarding broken windows at the multi-floor store at Stockton and O’Farrell, while at Stockton and Geary workers barricaded broken windows at the Louis Vuitton boutique as employees inside surveyed what was left of the merchandise.

 

more:

https://www.sfchronicle.com/bayarea/article/Free-for-all-as-San-Francisco-businesses-15306701.php