Pleas for justice and poignant memories flowed in Wednesday for George Floyd, the man whose death soon after his takedown detention by police at a Minneapolis intersection led to unrest in the streets and the firings of the four officers involved.
"I would like for those officers to be charged with murder because that's exactly what they did," said a sister, Bridgett Floyd, in an interview on NBC-TV's "Today." "I don't need them to be suspended and able to work in another state or another county. ... Their jobs should be taken, and they should be put in jail for murder."
Referencing a witness' video documenting the incident Monday night, when a white officer had his knee on her brother's neck until he fell unconscious, she said that officer and the others at the scene "murdered my brother. He was crying for help."
His sister appeared before the camera wearing a shirt reading "I can't breathe," which George Floyd repeated to officers while down on the pavement, an officer's knee pinning his neck.
As of Wednesday evening, the video had been viewed more than 1.2 million times on the Facebook page of the witness who shot it. Darnella Frazier told the Star Tribune she posted the video because "the world needed to see what I was seeing."
Police were called to a store at the corner of E. 38th Street and S. Chicago Avenue on suspicion that George Floyd was trying to pass a fake $20 bill. They said the unarmed 46-year-old man from St. Louis Park was resisting arrest.
"He was a God-fearing man, regardless of what he [had] done," Bridgett Floyd said. "We all have our faults. We all make mistakes. Nobody's perfect."
Outrage and tears also flowed from a onetime National Basketball Association standout who knew George Floyd back in the day in the Houston area and called him "My Twin" in a series of sometimes tearful posts on Instagram.