From the BBC:
“Seattle sued by family of man
killed in autonomous protest zone”
The family of a 19-year-old man
who was killed in Seattle's autonomous protest zone in June have filed a
wrongful-death lawsuit against the city. Lorenzo Anderson's family say Seattle
created unsafe conditions by allowing the existence of the Capitol Hill
Occupied Protest (Chop) zone. The area set up after George Floyd's death
spanned six city blocks before it was torn down on 1 July. Protests have
continued, and President Trump has threatened to send troops. Anderson's
mother, who filed the lawsuit on Monday, argued that medical officials failed
to give life-saving assistance to her son after he was shot in the early hours
of 20 June. "I just feel like the city let us down," Donnitta
Sinclair told KOMO-TV on Monday. "It let my son down, it let me down. It
let the community down," she said, adding that Anderson, an aspiring
rapper who graduated high school the day before his death, would have been
celebrating his 20th birthday this week. No suspect has yet been arrested in
connection to his shooting death. According to the family, video recorded from
the scene shows medical officials refusing to enter the Chop zone without a
police escort. The lawsuit claims Anderson lay bleeding in the street for 20
minutes before a volunteer medic transported him to hospital, where he died. The
Anderson family's lawyer Mark Lindquist told KIRO-TV that officers on the
ground waited too long for authorisation to act. "Politics got ahead of
public safety here," he said. "City leaders seemed to be more focused
on their own agenda than on the safety of the community." "I wish one
or two or three [commanders] would have taken it into their own heart and
compassion to say, 'I'm just gonna help this young man, period',"
Anderson's mother told KOMO-TV. "And not about being a police or not being
police, but just being a human being." Anderson was wounded just before
another 33-year-old man was also shot in an incident that is not thought to be
connected. Over the next ten days, three more shootings took place in Chop,
ending the public's tolerance for the three-week occupation. Protests have
continued around the country since the 25 March death of George Floyd, and have
been particularly large in West Coast cities such as Seattle and Portland,
Oregon. On Sunday, a large protest in Seattle turned violent and 12 police
officers were injured. In Portland, unidentified federal agents have been
accused by state officials of snatching non-violent protesters off the streets.
The lawsuit filed on Monday is not
the first against Seattle related to the Chop zone: Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan is facing a
class-action lawsuit from business owners - including an auto shop, a tattoo
parlour and a property management company - who accuse her of allowing Chop
protesters to violate the constitutional rights of workers and their customers.
Local lawyer Jacob Bozeman has also sued Mrs Durkan and other city officials
for allegedly abdicating their ability to govern after they abandoned the East
Precinct building, which was inside the perimeter of the Chop zone.
^ I agree that the Seattle Mayor
is guilty for allowing the Seattle Purge Zone and all the violence it created.
I also believe that any protester in the Purge Zone (including the victim) is
guilty for helping to end law and order in Seattle. I do not agree that the EMS
or the Seattle Police are guilty. They wanted to help, but Mayor Durkan effectively
stopped them by supporting the Purge Zone. While the family can sue Seattle –
especially the Mayor – they also have to acknowledge that their son is partly
to blame for being in the Purge Zone as a protester. I hope the businesses destroyed or impacted win their lawsuit over the Mayor's support for the destruction and violence. ^
https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-53491223
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