Two women had to hit the sidewalk as gunshots popped off during the day outside Finish Touch Boutique, a store near the south barricade of George Floyd Square, shop owner Willie Frazier said. Frazier's car was stolen from the square recently, too, he said, and it later turned up at the impound lot with the hood smashed.
Now Frazier is sending a distress call along with other Black business owners whose shops and restaurants have been cut off from the outside world by concrete barricades guarded by civilian gatekeepers surrounding 38th Street and Chicago Avenue. As violence disrupts the once-peaceful memorial where Floyd died during an encounter with Minneapolis police, the business owners said they felt abandoned by a city that has failed to protect their safety and livelihoods.
"Last year when it first started, it was all about George [Floyd]. People came from all over the world," Frazier said. "We didn't know when it was closed that it would be closed this long. … And when everybody in town found out that it was locked down like this … nobody wanted to come here and risk this stuff, and I don't blame them."
City Council Member Alondra Cano pushed for reopening the intersection before the first snowfall.
"I get to hear from all the people no one wants to listen to," she said. "I get to hear from the Black elderly woman who has to sleep in her bathtub so she can avoid being shot at night. I get to hear from the other Black elderly woman who has chronic pain and can't access the bus and therefore can't go grocery shopping, and I get to hear from the residents who text me when there's bullets zinging by their faces in the middle of the day as they're gardening."
After bystander video of then-police officer Derek Chauvin kneeling on Floyd's neck went viral, the city installed concrete barriers to prevent cars from colliding with mourners. The area evolved into a protest zone, and committed activists have guarded the barricades ever since while taking care of the Floyd memorial in front of the Cup Foods convenience store.
George Floyd Square has drawn well-wishers from all over the world. But trouble hasn't left the area.
"This was Bloods territory," said Pastor Curtis Farrar of Worldwide Outreach for Christ, which sits across the intersection. "A lot of the gangs are right over there now. A lot of people that go to this church used to be in that gang, drug dealers and all of that."