Black man shot by police in Wisconsin speaks out

Reuters
Jacob Blake, the black man who was shot in the back by a white police officer in Wisconsin last month, spoke out for the first time from his hospital bed.
Reuters
Black man shot by police in Wisconsin speaks out
AFP

In this social network video released on by his lawyer Ben Crump, Jacob Blake delivers a message from a hospital bed in Kenosha, Wisconsin on Saturday.

Jacob Blake, the black man who was shot in the back by a white police officer in Wisconsin last month, spoke out for the first time from his hospital bed as dueling demonstrations over racial justice and policing continued to roil a handful of US cities.

In a video posted on Twitter, Blake, dressed in a green hospital gown, described being in constant pain after the shooting — in front of his three children — that paralyzed him from the waist down.

“I got staples in my back, staples in my damn stomach,” he said in the video posted by his attorney, Ben Crump, late on Saturday. “It hurts to breathe, it hurts to sleep, it hurts to move from side to side, it hurts to eat.”

The August 23 shooting of Blake, 29, reignited protests over racism and police brutality that swept the US after another black man, George Floyd, died in May when a Minneapolis police officer knelt on his neck for nearly nine minutes.

The demonstrations have coincided with widespread upheaval over the social and economic consequences of the coronavirus pandemic, which has killed nearly 190,000 people in the United States, the highest toll in the world.

The protests have also moved to the forefront of the presidential election campaign.

Trump now focused on a platform of law and order in his effort to be re-elected on November 3.

At the start of the three-day Labor Day weekend, police in Rochester, New York, used tear gas to disperse 2,000 protesters in the fourth night of unrest over the death of Daniel Prude, a black man who died after an encounter with police in March.

Nine people were arrested and three police officers were treated at hospitals for injuries, the Rochester police department said on Sunday.

Mayor Lovely Warren announced that Rochester was moving its family crisis intervention team and its funding out of the police department and into the Department of Youth and Recreation Services in response to the demands for change.


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