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Protest live updates: Rayshard Brooks' widow to speak in Atlanta; Minneapolis officers quit amid George Floyd fallout; Robert Fuller updates - USA TODAY

Rayshard Brooks' widow Tomika Miller and other family members will address media on Monday morning, along with family attorneys L. Chris Stewart and Justin Miller.

Brooks was fatally shot by police in Atlanta on Friday night outside of a Wendy's after police responded to a call about him being asleep in his car in the drive-thru lane. The Fulton County Medical Examiner's office ruled his death a homicide Sunday night, caused by two shots to the back.

Also Monday, Los Angeles County officials will provide updates on the death of Robert Fuller, a Black man whose body was found hanging from a tree near Palmdale City Hall. Fuller is one of two Black men whose hanging deaths are being investigated in California.

A closer look at some recent developments:

  • As protests continued in Minneapolis, some police officers have quit while others are resigning, citing a lack of support from department and city leaders.
  • Beyonce sent Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron a letter calling for the arrest of the officers involved in Breonna Taylor's death.
  • A California woman apologized for 'disrespectful' behavior after a viral video shows her threatening to call the police on a man who stenciled 'Black Lives Matter' on his property.
  • Sen. Tim Scott said President Donald Trump was not aware of the significance of Juneteenth in Tulsa, Oklahoma, when his team scheduled a rally for the same day.

Our live blog will be updated throughout the day. For first-in-the-morning updates, sign up for The Daily Briefing.

Minneapolis police officers quit, resign amid George Floyd protests

At least seven Minneapolis police officers have resigned since widespread unrest began following the death of George Floyd last month, and more than half a dozen are in the process of leaving, department officials told The Star Tribune.

Some officers said they were upset with Mayor Jacob Frey’s decision to abandon the Third Precinct station during the protests where demonstrators set the building on fire after officers left.

The department currently has about 850 officers, almost 40 short of the number authorized for this year, the newspaper reported.

LaFace Skincare CEO Lisa Alexander apologizes after viral video backlash

The woman in a video that gained national attention last week has apologized for confronting and threatening to call police on a Filipino man stenciling “Black Lives Matter” on his San Francisco property.

Lisa Alexander, founder and CEO of LaFace Skincare, was later identified on social media. She issued an apology Sunday saying, "I should have minded my own business."

“There are not enough words to describe how truly sorry I am for being disrespectful to him last Tuesday when I made the decision to question him about what he was doing in front of his home,” Alexander said in a statement.

The video shows Alexander and a man, later identified as Robert Larkin, asking James Juanillo whether he lives in the house before asserting that they know he doesn’t live there and is therefore breaking the law. Juanillo doesn’t answer the couple, but invites them to call the police.

Juanillo told KGO-TV he believed the couple accused him of defacing private property because they didn’t think he belonged in the wealthy Pacific Heights neighborhood.

Protests continue in Berlin, Milan against police brutality

Protests against police brutality continued abroad Sunday in the wake of George Floyd demonstrations across the U.S.

In Berlin, demonstrators formed a human chain across the city in a message against racism, discrimination and social inequality. They were linked by colored ribbons, forming what organizers called a "ribbon of solidarity."

In Milan, Italy, protesters scrawled ’’rapist” and "racist’’ in Italian on the statue of late Italian journalist Indro Montanelli on Saturday. Montanelli was a correspondent for a fascist newspaper in the 1930s and had a 12-year-old Eritrean while stationed there.

Activist group Retestudentimilano said in an Instagram post that “ignoring or underestimating the seriousness of having before our eyes, in the center of Milan, a statue testifying to racist crimes denotes an obvious lack of historical and moral awareness.”

Protesters in California, New York seek justice for the Black LGBTQ community

Demonstrators in California and New York took to the streets on Sunday to honor and demand justice for Black queer and trans people who have died in police custody.

In Los Angeles, thousands marched along a stretch of Hollywood Boulevard, where an 'All Black Lives Matter' mural was painted in rainbow colors, the Los Angeles Times reported. The march, also called 'All Black Lives Matter,' was organized by Black leaders in the LGBTQ+ community.

Meanwhile, in New York, thousands gathered in the courtyard of the Brooklyn Museum and surrounding parkway Sunday for a silent march in support of Black transgender lives, NBC News reported.

The protest comes after the killings of two Black trans women  Riah Milton in Ohio and Dominique “Rem’Mie” Fells in Pennsylvania in the last week, as well as Tony McDade, who was fatally shot by a Tallahassee police officer in May, Layleen Polanco, who died while in solitary confinement on Rikers Island, and Nina Pop, who was stabbed to death in Missouri in May.

“Show them what community sounds like! This is what community sounds like,” the protesters, clad in white, chanted as they walked, according to Twitter posts.

Beyonce urges arrest of police officers involved in Breonna Taylor's death

More than three months after Breonna Taylor was fatally shot in her Kentucky apartment by Louisville Metro Police officers, Beyonce is calling on the state to "take swift and decisive action in charging the officers."

In a letter addressed to Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron and shared on her website, Beyonce called for criminal charges to be brought against LMPD Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly and officers Myles Cosgrove and Brett Hankison, and for the AG to "commit to transparency" during the investigation and prosecution processes. 

"Three months have passed – and Breonna Taylor's family still waits for justice," Beyonce wrote. "Ms. Taylor's family has not been able to process and grieve. Instead, they have been working tirelessly to rally the support of friends, their community, and the country to obtain justice for Breonna."

– Hannah Yasharoff and Sarah Ladd, USA TODAY

A Michigan case similar to Floyd's death may reopen six years later

Six years after his death, the family of McKenzie Cochran — a Ferndale, Michigan, man who died when security officers pinned him to the floor at a mall — may get the justice they have long been seeking in the wake of the George Floyd protests.

Like Floyd, Cochran died at the hands of white security officers who held him face down on a mall floor, including one who said: "If you can talk, you can breathe."

Cochran died that day. The autopsy said the cause was compression asphyxiation. No charges were filed, his death ruled an accident. On Friday, Oakland County Prosecutor Jessica Cooper, facing mounting pressure from protesters amid a thundering Black Lives Matter movement, asked the state Attorney General's Office to review the case.

– Tresa Baldas, Detroit Free Press

Sen. Tim Scott: Trump didn't know the significance of Tulsa and Juneteenth

President Donald Trump was unfamiliar with the significance of June 19 when his campaign scheduled a rally for that date in Tulsa, Oklahoma, but rescheduled the event when he learned the day know as Juneteenth marks the end of slavery in the U.S., according to South Carolina Sen. Tim Scott. 

"I'm thankful that he moved it," Scott – the only African-American Republican in the Senate and one of only three Black senators in total – said on CBS News' "Face the  Nation" Sunday. "The president moving the date by a day once he was informed on what Juneteenth was, that was a good decision on his part." 

Coupled with the significance of the date, the choice of Tulsa – where a white mob killed hundreds in 1921 as it burned and looted an affluent Black neighborhood – was decried by many as racially insensitive amid nationwide protests against discrimination. 

– William Cummings, USA TODAY

More on protests:

  • California authorities investigate the separate deaths of two Black men whose bodies were found hanging from a tree
  • Rayshard Brooks was a father of 4 who celebrated his daughter's birthday hours before police shot him in Atlanta
  • Barbra Streisand makes George Floyd's six-year-old daughter, Gianna, a Disney stockholder
  • What is Juneteenth? And how is it celebrated?

Contributing: The Associated Press

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