Denver police ordered to stop using tear gas and plastic bullets in protests

*Throngs of marchers have gathered around the state Capitol every day for more than a week, chanting and carrying signs protesting Floyd’s killing.
06 Jun, 2020

A U.S. District Court Judge ordered Denver police on Friday to stop using tear gas, plastic bullets and other “less-than-lethal” force such as flash grenades against protesters.

The temporary injunction was in response to a local lawsuit filed on Thursday in the Denver District Court by protesters complaining about excessive force used by officers during public demonstrations following the death of an unarmed black man, George Floyd, in police custody in Minneapolis last month.

The ruling cited examples of protesters and journalists being injured by police.

“Peaceful demonstrators’ legitimate and credible fear of police retaliation is silencing their political speech,” it said.

The death of Houston native Floyd during his arrest for a non-violent offense has touched off national protests against the use of force by police.

Video of Floyd’s arrest show an officer holding his knee on Floyd’s neck for almost nine minutes.

In Denver, throngs of marchers have gathered around the state Capitol every day for more than a week, chanting and carrying signs protesting Floyd’s killing.

Some people among the mostly peaceful crowd broke windows in the state Supreme Court building and a nearby museum overnight on May 29. Some store front windows were smashed and looters made off with merchandise.

While the lawsuit, brought by four activists, acknowledged that some demonstrators “engaged in destructive behavior,” and it also said the vast majority were peaceful.

“Nonetheless, the Denver Police Department ... and other police departments at their invitation, have engaged in injurious riot control tactics without issuing clear warnings and orders to disperse,” the complaint said.

At least one woman sustained a serious eye injury when she was struck by a projectile, the lawsuit said.

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