Associated Press
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) â Several stores at the location where George Floyd was killed by Minneapolis police in 2020 have sued the city, accusing it of neglecting the area and hurting business.
The lawsuit, filed in mid-November in state court, also names Mayor Jacob Frey and other officials and accuses the city of not properly policing the area since Floydâs death. It also accuses the city of blocking the intersection that is now known as George Floyd Square with concrete barriers for more than a year after Floyd’s death, keeping customers from entering.
The combination has turned the area into a hub for violent crime, the lawsuit says.
âThe mayor, the city, the city council, and the Minneapolis Police Department collectively agreed to severely limit police response in the barricaded area surrounding plaintiffsâ businesses,â with police responding to only the most serious calls and otherwise actively avoiding the area, according to the lawsuit.
âCriminals know the area lacks police protection, and they have now made the area so dangerous that it has become known as the âNo Go Zone,ââ the lawsuit says.
The businesses include Cup Foods, the convenience store where Floyd was suspected of trying to pass a counterfeit $20 bill that led to the fatal encounter with police. The other businesses, including a tobacco shop and investment business, are run from inside Cup Foods or nearby and are all owned by the same family, according to the lawsuit.
The businesses are seeking about $1.5 million in damages.
The city has said it offered a range of support for businesses in response to both the civil unrest that followed Floyd’s killing and the COVID-19 pandemic. That included a $1.5 million forgivable loans program in 2021 specifically for businesses located in and around George Floyd Square.
A spokesman for the city said officials are aware of the lawsuit and have no comment on it.
Frey’s office said in a statement Wednesday that it did âeverything possible to open the street safely amid very tenuous circumstances.â
âWhen we finally did open the street, the city did so in a planned way where no one was hurt and the area remained safe for residents,â Frey spokeswoman Ally Peters said in the statement.
Floyd, who was Black, was killed on May 25, 2020, after former officer Derek Chauvin, who is white, pressed a knee on his neck for 9Âœ minutes on the street outside Cup Foods. Bystander video captured Floydâs fading cries of âI canât breathe.â His death touched off protests worldwide, some of which turned violent, and forced a national reckoning with police brutality and racism.
Three other former officers received lesser state and federal sentences for their roles in Floydâs death.
One of those former officers, Tou Thao, has asked the U.S. Supreme Court to reverse his federal civil rights conviction. In a petition posted on the high courtâs docket this week, Thaoâs attorneys argued that prosecutors failed to prove that Thaoâs actions or inactions were willful, as required by law.
Thao, who held back the crowd outside Cup Foods, testified previously that he did nothing wrong and served only as a âhuman traffic cone.â The request is a long shot; the high court last week rejected Chauvinâs request to hear his appeal.
Chauvin is serving a 21-year federal sentence for violating Floydâs civil rights and a 22Âœ-year state sentence for second-degree murder. Those sentences are being served at the same time. Chauvin is recovering from serious injuries after he was stabbed last week by another inmate at a federal prison in Arizona.