Chanting "Justice for Justine, justice for all," about 75 community activists and residents of the neighborhood where Justine Damond lived and died gathered Tuesday, saying their fight is not over.
"We celebrate right now," activist John Thompson said. "But make no mistake, we're not here celebrating that there are charges. We won't accept anything less than a conviction."
Minneapolis police officer Mohamed Noor was charged Tuesday with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the July shooting death of Damond, 40, who had called police to report a possible assault behind her home. Noor, sitting in the passenger seat of the squad car that was dispatched, shot and killed her.
Thompson said several people called him Tuesday, asking if he thought Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman charged Noor in Damond's death because Noor is black.
"No, I think he charged him because he broke the law," he said.
Katherine Hamberg, one of several neighbors who represented Justice for Justine at the vigil, said, "We can no longer fool ourselves that this happens to people only in underprivileged communities ... it can happen again to any of us."
Damond would have been at the rally if something like this had happened to someone else, Hamberg said. She shared an e-mail Damond sent to friends in her native Australia after a terrorist attack there in 2014.
"It seems that things have to happen to wake people up, to move people, to shock people into coming together for love and freedom," the e-mail said. "And so at times like this, I see these beautiful souls who gave their lives as teachers to the community around them."