<p>Four police officers in Minneapolis were sacked Tuesday as a video showing one of them kneeling on the neck of a handcuffed black man who later died sparked street protests in the midwestern US city.</p>.<p>Protesters, many wearing face masks because of the coronavirus outbreak, held signs saying "Justice for George Floyd" and "Black Lives Matter" during a rally near the scene of Monday's death in custody.</p>.<p>In the video filmed by a bystander, a shirtless Floyd -- thought to be in his 40s -- is pinned on the ground by a white officer who kneels on his neck for more than five minutes.</p>.<p>"Your knee in my neck. I can't breathe... Mama. Mama," Floyd pleaded.</p>.<p>Floyd slowly grew silent and motionless, unable to move even as the officers taunted him to "get up and get in the car."</p>.<p>He was taken to hospital where he was later declared dead.</p>.<p>After firing the four officers involved, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey expressed outrage as calls rose for them to be prosecuted for murder.</p>.<p>"What I saw was wrong at every level," he said of the video.</p>.<p>"For five minutes, we watched as a white officer pressed his knee into the neck of a black man," Frey added.</p>.<p>"Being black in America should not be a death sentence."</p>.<p>Civil rights attorney Ben Crump said he had been retained by Floyd's family.</p>.<p>In a statement, Crump said Floyd had been stopped by police over a forgery accusation, a charge often used for writing bad checks or using fake banknotes for purchases.</p>.<p>"This abusive, excessive and inhumane use of force cost the life of a man who was being detained by the police for questioning on a non-violent charge," he said.</p>.<p>Floyd's death recalled the 2014 choking death of New Yorker Eric Garner by police, who was being detained for illegally selling cigarettes.</p>.<p>His death helped spark the nationwide Black Lives Matter movement.</p>.<p>Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said he had passed the case to the FBI for investigation, which could turn it into a federal rights violation case.</p>.<p>But there were mounting calls for the officers' arrest on homicide charges.</p>.<p>"This is pure evil," tweeted Nekima Levy Armstrong, an African-American Minneapolis civil rights attorney.</p>.<p>"Those same officers need to be charged and convicted of murder."</p>.<p>Bernice King, daughter of the civil rights leader Martin Luther King, tweeted a composite image showing a screenshot of the officer kneeling on Floyd's neck next to a photo of NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick kneeling during the US national anthem in protest over police brutality and social injustice.</p>.<p>"If you're unbothered or mildly bothered by the 1st knee, but outraged by the 2nd, then, in my father's words, you're "more devoted to order than to justice"," King tweeted.</p>.<p>Floyd's death came as a video showing a white woman calling the police about a black birdwatcher in New York's Central Park also went viral.</p>.<p>The woman was later fired from her job after her actions were condemned as racist.</p>.<p>It also followed two other deaths of African-Americans that involved police wrongdoing.</p>.<p>On March 13 in Louisville, three white Kentucky policemen forced their way into the home of a black woman, Breonna Taylor, and shot her in a drug investigation.</p>.<p>And police and prosecutors in Brunswick, Georgia allegedly covered up the killing of a young black jogger by the son of a retired investigator for local law enforcement.</p>.<p>The police allegedly withheld for two months a video showing Ahmaud Arbery, 25, being followed and then shot with a shotgun in broad daylight.</p>.<p>The families of Arbery and Taylor are also being represented by Crump.</p>.<p>The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said the Minneapolis case showed that US police continue to use harsh treatment against African-Americans accused of minor charges.</p>.<p>"This tragic video shows how little meaningful change has emerged to prevent police from taking the lives of black people," said ACLU policing specialist Paige Fernandez.</p>.<p>"Even in places like Minneapolis, where chokeholds are technically banned, black people are targeted by the police for low-level offenses and are subjected to unreasonable, unnecessary violence."</p>
<p>Four police officers in Minneapolis were sacked Tuesday as a video showing one of them kneeling on the neck of a handcuffed black man who later died sparked street protests in the midwestern US city.</p>.<p>Protesters, many wearing face masks because of the coronavirus outbreak, held signs saying "Justice for George Floyd" and "Black Lives Matter" during a rally near the scene of Monday's death in custody.</p>.<p>In the video filmed by a bystander, a shirtless Floyd -- thought to be in his 40s -- is pinned on the ground by a white officer who kneels on his neck for more than five minutes.</p>.<p>"Your knee in my neck. I can't breathe... Mama. Mama," Floyd pleaded.</p>.<p>Floyd slowly grew silent and motionless, unable to move even as the officers taunted him to "get up and get in the car."</p>.<p>He was taken to hospital where he was later declared dead.</p>.<p>After firing the four officers involved, Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey expressed outrage as calls rose for them to be prosecuted for murder.</p>.<p>"What I saw was wrong at every level," he said of the video.</p>.<p>"For five minutes, we watched as a white officer pressed his knee into the neck of a black man," Frey added.</p>.<p>"Being black in America should not be a death sentence."</p>.<p>Civil rights attorney Ben Crump said he had been retained by Floyd's family.</p>.<p>In a statement, Crump said Floyd had been stopped by police over a forgery accusation, a charge often used for writing bad checks or using fake banknotes for purchases.</p>.<p>"This abusive, excessive and inhumane use of force cost the life of a man who was being detained by the police for questioning on a non-violent charge," he said.</p>.<p>Floyd's death recalled the 2014 choking death of New Yorker Eric Garner by police, who was being detained for illegally selling cigarettes.</p>.<p>His death helped spark the nationwide Black Lives Matter movement.</p>.<p>Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said he had passed the case to the FBI for investigation, which could turn it into a federal rights violation case.</p>.<p>But there were mounting calls for the officers' arrest on homicide charges.</p>.<p>"This is pure evil," tweeted Nekima Levy Armstrong, an African-American Minneapolis civil rights attorney.</p>.<p>"Those same officers need to be charged and convicted of murder."</p>.<p>Bernice King, daughter of the civil rights leader Martin Luther King, tweeted a composite image showing a screenshot of the officer kneeling on Floyd's neck next to a photo of NFL quarterback Colin Kaepernick kneeling during the US national anthem in protest over police brutality and social injustice.</p>.<p>"If you're unbothered or mildly bothered by the 1st knee, but outraged by the 2nd, then, in my father's words, you're "more devoted to order than to justice"," King tweeted.</p>.<p>Floyd's death came as a video showing a white woman calling the police about a black birdwatcher in New York's Central Park also went viral.</p>.<p>The woman was later fired from her job after her actions were condemned as racist.</p>.<p>It also followed two other deaths of African-Americans that involved police wrongdoing.</p>.<p>On March 13 in Louisville, three white Kentucky policemen forced their way into the home of a black woman, Breonna Taylor, and shot her in a drug investigation.</p>.<p>And police and prosecutors in Brunswick, Georgia allegedly covered up the killing of a young black jogger by the son of a retired investigator for local law enforcement.</p>.<p>The police allegedly withheld for two months a video showing Ahmaud Arbery, 25, being followed and then shot with a shotgun in broad daylight.</p>.<p>The families of Arbery and Taylor are also being represented by Crump.</p>.<p>The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) said the Minneapolis case showed that US police continue to use harsh treatment against African-Americans accused of minor charges.</p>.<p>"This tragic video shows how little meaningful change has emerged to prevent police from taking the lives of black people," said ACLU policing specialist Paige Fernandez.</p>.<p>"Even in places like Minneapolis, where chokeholds are technically banned, black people are targeted by the police for low-level offenses and are subjected to unreasonable, unnecessary violence."</p>