No justice, no streets : Still grieving, Minneapolis residents wonder how city will move forward after Derek Chauvin trial Trevor Hughes, USA TODAY © Trevor Hughes/USA TODAY A man carries a sign in downtown Minneapolis on the first day of the trial against former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin, who is charged in the death of George Floyd last spring.
MINNEAPOLIS Ten months after his death, George Floyd s face looks out across a city still raw from his death. The intersection where he died under the knee of a police officer. The neighborhood burned and looted over the following days. The fortified courthouse where that former police officer is on trial for murder charges in Floyd s death.
Derek Chauvin trial: Minneapolis reckons with George Floyd s death
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No justice, no streets : Still grieving, Minneapolis residents wonder how city will move forward after Derek Chauvin trial
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looking at how the community has transformed the site of George Floyd’s killing 38th Street and Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis and at the people behind its transformation. It is the culmination of reporting over several months, and a partnership with South High School to engage neighborhood youth in telling their community’s story.
The summer s unrest, coupled with financial hardship caused by the pandemic, led to an outpouring of donations and volunteerism in south Minneapolis. Metro State student Huda Yusuf was one of the people who stepped up.
She started out serving food to mourners at the intersection where police killed George Floyd. Yusuf then began helping people experiencing homelessness.