"You had people who were really upset already, then you provoke a crowd that's already at the brink of their breaking point. These are the people who've watched their brothers get killed on live video."
"Seen just about every day in a week where shootings with 15 and 16 and 17 year olds are dying. ... Yesterday, y'all witnessed these people who are our biggest statistic right now come together in unity for justice in their community."
"I don't think it should have been like that," Cashay Williams, 20, said Thursday. "I tried to tell people don't do what they doing, because they want us to act like animals because that's what they see us as."
"We came with voices, they came with bats and guns, which is always the problem. ... This society wants to be heard. They want to be heard. Why can't you hear us?"
"You just have to know it’s a big deal whenever we’re in a national pandemic, and there’s so many people gathering right now over something so cruel, and there’s still police officers who are shooting us with rubber bullets and tear gas."
#loumedia Please share anything else you've heard that local protesters have to say.
"Though some of these cops may not have done personally anything to deserve a rock to the face or a water bottle to the shield or whatever, that's what you sign up for, baby. As you see, people want justice."
"I ran into my old high school buddy (on the force). He's black. He was on the line & I was talking to him face-to-face ... but he couldn't say nothing to me. ... I messaged him when I got home, asking if he was safe, & he wished me to be safe, too."
"The goal is to not be violent. We don't want to become violent. Cop protesting measures will cause violence to surface. Frustration will cause violence to surface. You can't stop that."
"I was on my knees, hands up and they fired a gas canister directly at my face and multiple rubber bullets before we could get away from all the chaos."
As @FBruceWilliams said: "It kills me when people ask, 'Well, what do you want?' ... Why is it so difficult for people to believe (a Black community) wants for its residents the same opportunities, services, convenience and quality in their neighborhood?"
A few hundred people have gathered at Tyler Park for a march organized by @MurphyCartoons. Many here are attending a march for the first time since protests for Breonna Taylor began May 28
“If the president says to white nationalists ‘stand down and stand by,’ we say today ‘stand up and stand with,’” @MurphyCartoons
Trying to upload a few videos but not having luck at the moment. Hopefully they’ll go through soon
I've been covering Breonna Taylor protests in Louisville with @HayesGardner for several months and I really don't want this point to be lost:
Black people here - especially women - are deeply sad. They saw themselves in Breonna. They didn't want to let her down. 1/
Yesterday I saw women who I've formed strong professional relationships with break down, unable to speak. I heard distress and anger in their voices and watched them still work to calm tensions so that destruction would not occur. 2/
Through the night, fires were set outside the Hall of Justice. 127 people were arrested. Two police officers were shot. Those facts and images will likely lead national news reports and coverage. 3/
At least 150 people in the intersection of 6th and Broadway in Louisville following the announcement that just one of 3 officers will be indicted in the Breonna Taylor case
The anger here is palpable. Protesters knew this was a possibility. But now that the decision is here, frustrations are clearly boiling over
Approaching an LMPD point at 5th and Broadway. This is outside the perimeter set up by police downtown
"I do not know what the decision from the AG will be. What is important is that all the facts come out on what occurred on the night of Breonna Taylor's death."
"No matter what Attorney General Cameron announces, I urge everyone to commit once again to a peaceful, lawful response like we've seen for the majority of the past four months." @louisvillemayor
Curfew announced from 9 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. in Louisville in response to announcement in Breonna Taylor case.
About 20 people protesting now at Mitch McConnell’s home in Louisville. They’re here to speak against the Senate Majority Leader’s statement on the death of Ruth Bader Ginsberg.
A lot of cars are honking as they pass.
One neighbor came out onto his porch.
“If we shout, we’ll shout that way.” A woman in a Ginsberg shirt said.