Twelve hours after Minneapolis police dismantled the encampment outside Fourth Precinct headquarters in north Minneapolis, about 300 protesters filled the City Hall rotunda Thursday afternoon to rally against the shutdown and demand more answers about the police shooting of Jamar Clark.
Leaders of Black Lives Matter Minneapolis told a cheering crowd that they were proud of what had happened in the course of their 18-day occupation of the police precinct, including the launch of a federal investigation into Clark's death and the release of the names of two officers involved in the shooting.
Protesters continue to push for other demands not yet met: release of video of Clark's shooting and prosecution of the officers without a grand jury. They say witnesses to the shooting saw that Clark, who is black, was handcuffed when he was shot by an officer. Police have said that Clark was not handcuffed.
"It's because we showed up in the streets and we showed up at the door and said, 'You have to stop killing us,' " organizer Adja Gildersleve told the crowd. "You don't have the power. This is real power."
Clark's cousin, Alexander Clark, told those assembled, "The people are tired. It's time for the people to fight back."
About 90 minutes into the rally, protesters filed downstairs and into a tunnel that links City Hall to the nearby Government Center building. They paused outside of Wings Financial, a credit union rally organizers said is a major financial supporter of the police union. Protesters used window paint to write messages on the bank's glass windows — some supporting "Justice for Jamar" and others using expletives opposing the police — before heading back to City Hall.
Around 6 p.m., the protesters headed out of City Hall into freezing temperatures to march to a law enforcement social function at Elsie's Restaurant, Bar and Bowling Center in northeast Minneapolis.
At the same time, about 100 people gathered at Bottineau Park, also in northeast Minneapolis, for a protest targeting police union president Bob Kroll. Demonstrators said they want Kroll, who has been outspoken in defending the officers involved in Clark's shooting, removed from his position and from the department over allegations of discrimination and mistreatment of minorities while on and off the job.