Dozens gathered in St. Paul on Sunday afternoon to protest the decision not to charge the St. Paul police officers who shot and killed Cordale Handy in March on the street outside a Dayton's Bluff apartment.
On Friday, Ramsey County Attorney John Choi cleared the two officers who shot Handy, who allegedly pointed his pistol at them in the early morning hours of March 15. Before police arrived, Handy, 29, of Waukegan, Ill., had been involved in a domestic dispute with his girlfriend, firing 16 shots inside a St. Paul apartment building.
Black Lives Matter and other groups organized the Justice 4 Cordale Handy event, held at the East Side Enterprise Center in St. Paul.
Handy's mother, Kimberly Handy Jones, spoke, as did community organizers and family members of others shot by police in Minnesota.
"Police, John Choi, whoever, don't ever ask me to fall back — no, I'm going to spring forward," Handy Jones said. "You don't get to kill my son and all these other sons and daughters of ours and think we're supposed to turn our back and tell you it's OK."
Handy Jones, visiting from Illinois, shared memories of her son, including his patience with kids and how he would rub her feet. She recalled once buying him the latest Air Jordans, only to find out that he gave the sneakers to a bullied boy. "He was a child who just loved life, but most of all he loved people," Handy Jones said.
Corydon Nilsson, a representative of activist group New North, said he questions the narrative police shared about the incident, including whether the gun was actually present at the scene of Handy's shooting, as police said, and why Handy was shot when his girlfriend told authorities his gun was not loaded.
"In our opinion, Cordale's death was more than avoidable," Nilsson said. "We need to start talking about mental health crises in nonwhite communities."