He was a young man with a big personality and a smile that could light up a room.
A day after Daunte Wright, 20, was shot dead during a Sunday afternoon traffic stop, family and friends remembered him as someone who enjoyed every joke, every laugh, every lively moment he created.
They described him as a devoted son, brother and father who deserves to be remembered as more than the latest Black man to die at the hands of police.
"I just need everyone to know that he is much more than this," said his mother, Katie Wright, sobbing at a vigil attended by hundreds on the street where he died. "He had a smile that was angelic.
"My heart is literally broken in 1,000 pieces."
Jonathan Mason mentored Wright several years ago when he was a student at Edison High School in Minneapolis and Mason was a youth development specialist. Mason remembers a charming youth to whom he became very attached.
"I just loved his personality," Mason said, recalling that Wright hoped to own a business someday.
"He was someone who had a future. Daunte was funny, he was lively," Mason said. "He was the center of attention. He had a very, very welcoming personality. He would joke with you back and forth.