George Floyd protests in New York (state)


There have been a series of George Floyd protests in New York.

List of protests in New York

Central New York

Nearly 100 protesters assembled in Union Square on May 28; in addition, 72 protesters were arrested and several police officers were lightly injured. Protesters marched to City Hall and shut down traffic in Lower Manhattan. The following day, May 29, peaceful protests resumed around Foley Square in Manhattan, but later protesters clashed with police at Barclays Center in Brooklyn and demolished two police vehicles in the Fort Greene neighborhood. Governor Andrew Cuomo spoke with New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio and announced an independent review, done by Attorney General Letitia James, of actions taken during the protests that occurred on May 29. In Brooklyn, a video of a crowd of protesters clashing with two NYPD vehicles that appeared to accelerate and push a number of people was released.
on June 9
In the borough of Staten Island, Reverend Al Sharpton, Gwen Carr—the mother of Eric Garner, who was killed in 2014 from being chokeholded by police—and other community activists held a vigil for George Floyd on May 30.
On June 1, Governor Cuomo and Mayor de Blasio declared an 11 pm curfew for New York City, to last until 5 a.m. the next morning, the first since the Harlem riot of 1943, which followed a white police officer shooting an African American soldier. The next day, a curfew from 8 p.m. to 5 a.m. was announced, until June 7.

North Country

20-year-old Courtland Renford threw a green basket with a box on fire inside a City Hall tax office. Mayor Byron Brown condemned the violence and called Renford an 'idiot'. The following day, on May 31, another curfew was issued effective from 9:00PM until 6:00AM. Various degrees of protesting and rioting continued the following days, causing a curfew to be issued for only the city of Buffalo from 8:00PM to 5:00AM every night from June 2 to June 7. Police officers pushed 75-year-old Martin Gugino, causing him to fall to the ground, which resulted in serious injury.
in Buffalo
On June 4, in Niagara Square in Buffalo, police officers from the Buffalo Police Department pushed 75-year-old Martin Gugino, causing him to fall to the ground and leaving him bleeding from the head. He was brought to the hospital and was in a "serious but stable condition." He was later described as "alert and oriented."
The incident was quickly condemned in the media, by the New York Civil Liberties Union, and two officers were suspended. The police initially claimed Gugino had been "injured when he tripped & fell". Cuomo asked why the officers' actions were necessary, described their behavior as "just fundamentally offensive and frightening", and said the city of Buffalo should consider firing them and should carry out a criminal investigation.
The Buffalo police union was angered by the suspensions of the two officers, and it retaliated on June 5 by withdrawing its legal fees support for any other Buffalo officers for incidents related to the protests. The police union's president claimed that the suspended officers "were simply following orders" and "simply doing their job", while also saying that the victim "did slip". 57 police officers from the Buffalo Police Department resigned from an emergency response team, leaving the team empty, although they did not resign from the department. According to the police union's president, the mass resignations were a show of solidarity with the two suspended officers.
On June 6, officers Robert McCabe and Aaron Torgalski were charged with second-degree assault, a felony. In a virtual arraignment, they pleaded not guilty and are scheduled for a July 20 felony hearing.