Updated 6 hours ago
For decades, demonstrators against acts of violence targeting Black Americans have chanted: No justice, no peace. Since 2013, protesters in the streets and on social media have shouted that Black Lives Matter.
After Breonna Taylor was shot dead in March 2020 by police who raided her apartment with a no-knock warrant, protesters demanding accountability urged the country to Say her name. Following the murder of George Floyd by an officer who knelt on his neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds, protesters who rallied nationwide told anyone listening to Say his name.
Despite the efforts to stop the bloodshed by both protesters and some law enforcement agencies through reforms, names continue to be added to the list of those killed by law enforcement.
Updated on May 24, 2021 at 5:21 pm
For decades, demonstrators against acts of violence targeting Black Americans have chanted: No justice, no peace. Since 2013, protesters in the streets and on social media have shouted that Black Lives Matter.
After Breonna Taylor was shot dead in March 2020 by police who raided her apartment with a no-knock warrant, protesters demanding accountability urged the country to Say her name. Following the murder of George Floyd by an officer who knelt on his neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds, protesters who rallied nationwide told anyone listening to Say his name.
Despite the efforts to stop the bloodshed by both protesters and some law enforcement agencies through reforms, names continue to be added to the list of those killed by law enforcement.
Trigger Warning: This story includes details about graphic violence.
Oluwatoyin “Toyin” Salau had dreams of opening her own lending library in Tallahassee. It would’ve had a wide selection of Black and African American history books, her friends say, and was supposed to be a testament to her love for the Black community.
Another testament of that love was her participation in 2020’s summer of racial reckoning. Her friends, who described her as shy and reserved, recalled that the 19-year-old sprang to life when speaking about systemic racism and police brutality.
“She had such a powerful voice, oh, my gosh,” Ashley Laurent, 23, a senior at Florida A&M University, told
Updated on May 24, 2021 at 2:21 pm
For decades, demonstrators against acts of violence targeting Black Americans have chanted: No justice, no peace. Since 2013, protesters in the streets and on social media have shouted that Black Lives Matter.
After Breonna Taylor was shot dead in March 2020 by police who raided her apartment with a no-knock warrant, protesters demanding accountability urged the country to Say her name. Following the murder of George Floyd by an officer who knelt on his neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds, protesters who rallied nationwide told anyone listening to Say his name.
Despite the efforts to stop the bloodshed by both protesters and some law enforcement agencies through reforms, names continue to be added to the list of those killed by law enforcement.