NEW YORK (Reuters) -
Protests over U.S. police violence against minorities, sparked by
grand-jury decisions not to charge officers in two high-profile cases,
were peaceful on their third night in New York although 20 arrests took
place, authorities said on Saturday.
Protesters were arrested for disorderly conduct and
blocking traffic on the city's FDR Drive, a major artery that runs along
the eastern side of Manhattan, police said.
"The protests remained very peaceful throughout the
night," said Detective Michael DeBonis, a spokesman for the New York
Police Department.
The wave of angry protests began on Wednesday when a New York grand
jury declined to bring charges against white officer Daniel Pantaleo in
the chokehold death of Eric Garner, a black 43-year-old father of six.
The decision came nine days after a Ferguson, Missouri
grand jury chose not to indict a white policeman for the shooting death
in August of an unarmed black teenager, spurring two nights of arson and
unrest there.
More
protests were planned in New York for Saturday, as was the funeral of an
unarmed black man shot dead by police in a Brooklyn housing project.
The death of Akai Gurley, 28, has added fuel to the public
outrage over what many perceive as race-based violence by law
enforcement.
The Brooklyn district attorney said on Friday a grand jury would be
convened to consider charges against the officer who shot Gurley. Police
have said the officer, Peter Liang, may have accidentally discharged
his gun.
While
the first two nights of protests saw thousands of demonstrators pouring
into the streets of New York, the turnout on Friday dropped to the
hundreds as a cold, steady rain fell.
Still, more than 100 people stormed into an Apple Store on
Fifth Avenue to stage a brief "die-in," sprawling on the floor as
shoppers and employees watched.
Similar demonstrations were staged at Macy's flagship
department store in Herald Square and at Grand Central Terminal.
Protests unfolded in Chicago, Boston, Washington, D.C.,
New Orleans and Oakland, California where marchers chanted phrases such
as "Black lives matter."
In Cleveland on Friday, the
family of a black 12-year-old boy fatally shot by police filed a
lawsuit against the city, a day after the federal government found the
police department systematically uses excessive force.
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