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NYC mayor considers curfew as state’s George Floyd protests grow more violent

Click to play video: 'Protests fuelled by death of George Floyd sweep across U.S.'
Protests fuelled by death of George Floyd sweep across U.S.
WATCH: Protests fuelled by death of George Floyd sweep across U.S – May 31, 2020

New York’s mayor said Monday he was considering putting the nation’s biggest city under curfew after nights of destruction followed three days of largely peaceful protests over George Floyd’s death.

Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, had previously rejected imposing a curfew, as many other cities across the U.S. have done to try to curb violence that erupted amid demonstrations over Floyd’s May 25 death, police brutality and racial injustice.

But de Blasio said Monday he was talking with Police Commissioner Dermot Shea and Gov. Andrew Cuomo about the idea. The mayor emphasized that no decision had been made on a curfew, and “there are advantages and disadvantages.”

Earlier Monday, Shea said he didn’t think curfew would work.

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“The problem is: People need to listen to a curfew, and that’s not going to happen. If people think it will, they don’t understand what’s going on,” She said on NBC’s “Today.”

The deliberations came as workers swept up broken glass outside luxury stores in Manhattan’s chic SoHo neighbourhood, where people smashed windows and plundered shops overnight. “Hundreds and hundreds” were arrested, Shea said.

A 21-year-old man was shot in the neighbourhood around 12:30 a.m. and was taken to a hospital, police said. They said his injuries were not life-threatening.

Click to play video: 'George Floyd death: Video appears to show NYPD vehicles drive into protesters'
George Floyd death: Video appears to show NYPD vehicles drive into protesters

Groups of people rampaged down the sidewalks in Soho and other neighbourhoods including Union Square, breaking into Rolex, Kate Spade and Prada boutiques and electronics stores that have been shuttered for over two months because of the coronavirus.

“This is like a dream. Like a movie,” said New York City resident Sean Jones as he watched the destruction. “People are doing this so next time, before they think about trying to kill another black person, they’re going to be like, ‘Damn, we don’t want them out here doing this … again.”’

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For the third day in a row, protests across New York City were largely peaceful during the daylight hours Sunday but turned violent at night.

“When it got dark, it got ugly, and it got ugly quick,” Shea said.

Earlier Sunday, officers had made some gestures of solidarity with marchers. Some officers knelt with protesters in an intersection as an organizer called out the names of people killed by police.

But the police department has come under criticism for confrontations with demonstrators over the weekend, including an instance when two police vehicles plowed through a group of protesters Saturday in Brooklyn.

Shea said the confrontation is one of “about six” that the department’s internal affairs bureau is investigating.

Similar protests have flared up around the nation in response to Floyd’s death and other killings of black people, particularly by police.

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