The murder of George Floyd by a Minneapolis police officer on 25 May 2020 sparked the largest nationwide demonstrations since the civil rights era, as 26 million people gathered in cities across the US to protest against police racism and brutality.
Three years on, at least 19 US cities will pay more than $80m (£65m) in total to protesters who sustained various injuries as a result of law enforcement action, including being teargassed and being shot with projectiles.
Justin Hansford, a professor at Howard University School of Law and executive director of the Thurgood Marshall Civil Rights Center, said: “I have never seen a wave of settlements for police brutality like this in American history .”
Some people were permanently injured. “You don’t recover from something like this,” said Linda Tirado, who was partially blinded after being fired on by the police while covering the protests that engulfed Minneapolis as a journalist.
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