O'Brien for George Floyd's case: This should never have happened in America.

American National Security Adviser Robert O'Brien said on Sunday he felt “absolutely revolted” that three policemen in Minneapolis, Minnesota, stood by and looked out without interference last week, while another policeman was stuck to the ground with his knee in an African-American's neck, while he claimed he could not breathe. George [...]
American National Security Adviser Robert O'Brien said on Sunday he felt “absolutely revolted” that three policemen in Minneapolis, Minnesota, stood by and looked out without interference last week, while another policeman was stuck to the ground with his knee in an African-American's neck, while he claimed he could not breathe.
George Floyd, a 46-year-old African-American, who was chained down the street after allegedly using a $20 counterfeit bill, died during the incident last Monday. Derek Chauvin, the white policeman who kept him on the ground for a few minutes, was charged Friday with third degree murder.
The footage of the incident was widely broadcast in social media and news editions, causing five days of protests in dozens of cities in the United States. The demonstrations have often erupted in chaos, with protesters setting fire to police cars and buildings as they clashed with police forces. Robbers have destroyed shops and taken expensive consumer products.
Officer Chauvin and his three police colleagues at the scene were all dismissed by the city police force. The three police officers watching during the incident have been placed under investigation, but no charges have been filed against them.
“What were they thinking?”, the National Security Adviser asked during the “This wek” ABC News channel. O'Brien said he didn't judge the three ex-cops, but said, "The “I can't imagine they're not charged with”.
Mr. O'Brien said the American government mourns Floyd's death and prays for the Floyd family.
This should never have happened in America,” he said.
In an interview for CNN Canal O'Brien asked why Chauvin, who he called a “police officer dirty”, was still part of the police force in Minneapolis at the moment of this incident, while multiple complaints were filed against him in recent years.
<x) He dismissed the suggestion that racism exists in the American police force system, while acknowledging that “ka some bad police that have to be removed. We have some rotten apples that give law enforcement a bad name. I think they're minority”.
Some of the officials have blamed stimulants from the left and right extremes for violence in several cities, unprecedented rather than perhaps from the days of lengthy protests against the United States' involvement in the Vietnam War in the 1960s.
Mr. O'Brien told the ABC channel that “would keep our eyes open to anyone”, but blamed violence on the radical left group Antifa.
It's Antifa. They are operating in several states” to promote police violence and destruction of property, he said.
This should stop”, he said. This Antiphas violence must stop”.
One of the main democrat leaders, House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, said they have informed him that 80% of those arrested in the protests at Minneapolis were not local residents but coming from other countries abroad, Minnesota, located in the middle of the American West.
In the nearby town, called Saint Paul, Mayor Melvin Carter told CNN channel it became clear that some people who caused unrest and robbery in his town “were not guided by love for our community”.
Mr. O'Brien told CNN channel that, “who knows where they're from”, but pledged that, “we're going to go to the end of”.
Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms told the “Face the Nation” of the CBS Nesa channel that some of the protesters in her southern town were also unknown to her.
You know, I can't tell who they are,” said Bottoms. “It sounded different racial composition in our city compared to our normal protests. And it was just another group. So we don't know who they were, but many of them weren't natives. I can say that”
Mr. O'Brien mentioned four countries of China, Russia, Zimbabwe, and Iran that have brought to negative light the United States because of Floyd's death and violent demonstrations that followed all of these amid the coronary pandemic and the economic crisis it created. More than 40 million employees, about a quarter of the American workforce, have been laid off.
But O'Brien said the United States, where peaceful protests remain the basis of the country's democratic principles, are not like authoritarian countries where police often arrest even non-violent anti-government demonstrators.
This is what separates America from other countries,” he said.
O'Brien said other countries that attack the reputation of the United States “will not benefit by exploiting this” situation.












