Police Arrest 41 in Black Lives Matter Protest Calling for the ‘Abolition of Policing’

Black Lives Matter Protest

More than 40 people were arrested after a protest in support of the Black Lives Matter movement shut down southbound Interstate 35W near downtown Minneapolis Wednesday morning.

Minnesota State Patrol quickly moved in to defuse the large crowd. At around 9 a.m, state troopers blocked off an entrance, preventing more protesters’ access to the interstate — but not before traffic had backed up, prompting delays reportedly as long as 90 minutes.

The group of protesters called themselves the Coalition to Wake Your Ass Up.

Its membership consists of mostly white people.

“Coalition to Wake Your Ass Up calls for abolition of policing in response to police killings of Black people,” the group writes in a press release. “This group demands the dismantling of the police department, which includes disarming, defunding, demilitarizing, and disbanding police. We believe that security for all of us does not lie in use of aggression and force.”

The release stated: “Real security occurs when all of us have meaningful employment, educational opportunities that help us pursue our own life choices and the adequate healthcare needed to live fruitfully.”

Minnesota State Patrol Sgt. Jesse Grabow says the 41 arrested individuals “will be charged appropriately for their actions which endangered the motoring public.”

“The State Patrol supports the right to exercise one’s First Amendment rights, but the freeway is not the place to do so,” Col. Matt Langer, Minnesota State Patrol Chief, said in a press statement. “The closure of an interstate freeway for the purposes of a demonstration is unacceptable. They are used by everyone and are an artery for emergency vehicles. It is illegal to walk on the freeway and blocking traffic is dangerous for both pedestrians and motorists.”

The protests held on Wednesday were in response to the death of Philando Castile, the 36-year-old man who was a fatally shot and killed last week by a Minnesota police officer.

Follow Jerome Hudson on Twitter: @jeromeehudson

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