
 
        
         
		2020 YEAR IN REVIEW 
 What protests against police brutality looked like in Queens 
 BY ANGÉLICA ACEVEDO 
 Even  during  a  global  pandemic  
 already  disproportionately  
 affecting Black, Brown  
 and low-income communities,  
 police brutality remained one of  
 the reasons those same communities  
 feared for their lives. As a  
 result, people took to the streets  
 to call for police accountability  
 and systemic change. 
 The  brutal  police  killing  
 of George Floyd, a 46-year-old  
 Minneapolis man accused of using  
 a fake $20 bill who was, as a  
 result of a 911 call, asphyxiated  
 by a policeman kneeling on his  
 neck for nearly nine minutes —  
 which millions watched after a  
 video recording by a passerby  
 was shared on social media —  
 is widely  considered  the  impetus  
 for the Black Lives Matter  
 (BLM)  protests  that  erupted  
 nationally and globally. 
 But Floyd’s was far from the  
 only story of Black people having  
 deadly  police  encounters  
 in  the  early  months  of  2020.  
 Breonna Taylor, a 26-year-old  
 essential worker in Kentucky,  
 was asleep in her home before  
 police executed a no-knock warrant  
 and killed her in March,  
 and Ahmaud Arbery, a 25-yearold  
 man, was jogging before two  
 white men shot him in a suburban  
 Georgia neighborhood in  
 February. 
 As a result of inaction from  
 the police and judicial system,  
 protests calling for an end to  
 police brutality began to take  
 place in New York City at the  
 end of May  — and with it, an aggressive  
 police response including  
 mass arrests, and a shortlived  
 curfew instated by Mayor  
 Bill de Blasio. 
 One of the first protests in  
 Queens  took  place  in  Jackson  
 Heights, where thousands of  
 people united to march for police  
 accountability. The demonstration  
 culminated in front  
 of the 115th Precinct, where  
 community members and some  
 elected officials also called for  
 accountability from all government  
 structures. 
 In another early protest, a  
 captain took a knee with demonstrators  
 in Jamaica. The moment  
 was  captured  by  Esther  
 Lauren, a Queens nurse on the  
 front lines of COVID, who offered  
 to help fellow protesters,  
 should they need it. 
 “I  think  people  should  be  
 finding their role and knowing  
 how to play it very well. I knew  
 that I am a nurse, and my role is  
 to be a nurse at all times,” Lauren  
 told QNS. 
 For the rest of the summer,  
 barely a day went by without a  
 demonstration. 
 Demonstrations and vigils,  
 most of them non-violent, occurred  
 in many neighborhoods  
 across Queens, from the Rockaways  
 to Astoria. Many of these  
 demonstrations were organized  
 by mutual aid groups and individual  
 community members  
 who came together as a result of  
 the unrest, such as the Queens  
 Liberation Project. 
 In  June,  hundreds  joined  a  
 paddle out in Rockaway Beach,  
 organized by the Black Surfing  
 Association in memory of Floyd  
 and Taylor. 
 In another instance at Rockaway  
 Beach, the Urban Youth  
 Collaborative, a grassroots  
 coalition of students fighting  
 for  transformative  education  
 reform, arranged a banner that  
 read “Police Free Schools!” to  
 fly over the beach. 
 In  Ridgewood,  two  mothers  
 organized the “Kids Peace  
 Movement,” a day of socially  
 distant talks and a march that  
 gave kids space to express their  
 own thoughts about the civil  
 unrest. 
 “Statistics state that one in  
 1,000 young Black males have  
 died at the hands of the police,”  
 said Emmanuel Gray, a 9-yearold  
 who gave a speech at the  
 event. “This is scary to me because  
 I’ve always looked up to  
 the police as protectors and role  
 models  in our community. But  
 as I’m getting older and older,  
 it’s becoming more confusing  
 to me when I hear the stories of  
 Black males being harassed and  
 killed … just because our skin  
 color appears to be a threat.” 
 Later in the summer, artists  
 gathered for a more light-hearted  
 yet emotional event outside  
 of the Queens Museum to honor  
 the lives of Taylor and Vanessa  
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.8     COM   |   DEC. 25-DEC. 31, 2020 
 Guillén, a 20-year-old U.S.  
 Army specialist based in Texas  
 who, after public and national  
 outcry, was found dead due to  
 an attack from a male soldier. 
 Even high school students  
 participated  in  the  racial  reckoning. 
   At  Archbishop  Molloy  
 High School, current and  
 former  students  called  on  the  
 school administrators to address  
 the BLM movement and  
 make improvements to their  
 own reported instances of racism. 
  The school responded with  
 the creation of a Council for Diversity  
 and Inclusion. 
 The  protests  in  Queens  
 weren’t nearly as violent as  
 those that took place in Manhattan  
 and Brooklyn, with barely  
 any  reported  instances  of  looting  
 — an attempted looting at  
 the Queens Mall was stopped  
 by police and a false alarm in  
 Corona caused local officials to  
 regret their approach. 
 As weeks of protest went on,  
 a wave of pro-police, or “Back  
 the Blue” rallies, emerged in  
 several neighborhoods, including  
 in Middle Village, Woodside  
 and Bayside. 
 “The police are necessary  
 and part of being in a city that’s  
 safe,” said a couple marching at  
 a “Blue Lives Matter” rally in  
 Woodside. “We feel the rhetoric  
 and the message has been lost.” 
 While non-violent demonstrations  
 prevailed in Queens,  
 there  were  instances  of  police  
 force and tense encounters between  
 community members. 
 In Whitestone, protesters  
 who hung signs in support of  
 the BLM movement were met  
 with racist and menacing attacks  
 from a 54-year-old Flushing  
 resident, who not only  
 brandished a claw-like weapon,  
 but also allegedly tried to mow  
 down protesters. The man was  
 later charged by Queens District  
 Attorney Melinda Katz. 
 Right before a large pro-police  
 rally at Bayside’s Crocheron  
 Park began, rally attendees  
 clashed with a small group of  
 BLM demonstrators. The short,  
 yet heated encounter resulted  
 in one BLM demonstrator getting  
 tackled by police and arrested  
 while a woman with the  
 BLM group got slapped across  
 the face by an older white man  
 wearing  an  NYPD  shirt.  Witnesses  
 told QNS the unidentified  
 man also spit at BLM protesters, 
   but  police  didn’t make  
 any attempts to detain him. 
 Attempts to get the 111th  
 Precinct to respond to the woman’s  
 complaints, however, went  
 unanswered. 
 Following the New York Police  
 Benevolent Association’s  
 (PBA) endorsement of former  
 President  Donald Trump,  Bayside’s  
 BLM group staged a surprise  
 protest outside the home  
 of PBA President Pat Lynch.  
 About four dozen demonstrators  
 were met with barricades  
 blocking Lynch’s home and other  
 streets near it, with a heavy  
 police presence following them  
 from start to finish. 
 One of the last large-scale  
 protests  in  Queens  took  place  
 in  Maspeth,  where  several  
 dozen demonstrators marched  
 through  the  mostly  conservative  
 neighborhood to protest  
 police unions and QAnon. The  
 protest ended after flags were  
 taken from private homes and  
 burned on the street — which  
 many residents and local electeds  
 objected to. 
 A resounding message of the  
 monthslong protests was to defund  
 the police. 
 In order to see concrete results, 
  activists and elected officials  
 called for at least a $1  
 billion cut from the NYPD’s  
 budget, which has an overall  
 budget of about $10 billion, as  
 the city negotiated its budget  
 for the 2021 fiscal year. Many  
 felt those funds should be directed  
 toward public services  
 that directly help communities  
 of color and are oftentimes underfunded  
 or the first to be cut  
 during a budget crisis, like the  
 one the pandemic brought onto  
 the city. 
 In anticipation of the final  
 budget, the city and state  
 passed some reforms: a ban on  
 chokeholds and the repeal of  
 50-A, which stopped the public  
 from uncovering an officer’s  
 disciplinary record. 
 While de Blasio said he’d cut  
 $1 billion from the NYPD’s budget, 
   later  comments  from  City  
 Council members and reports  
 noted that amount wasn’t actually  
 cut. Most Queens  Council  
 members voted in favor of it,  
 while the few who voted “no”  
 cited the NYPD’s cuts as either  
 too much or not enough. 
 Throughout  the  months  of  
 protests, de Blasio announced  
 task forces to address the inequalities  
 that  persist  in  NYC  
 and  followed  in  Washington  
 D.C.’s  footsteps  by  painting  a  
 “Black Lives Matter” street  
 mural in big, bold yellow across  
 some  city  streets,  including  in  
 Jamaica. 
 But the mayor appeared  
 to have a hard time fully condemning  
 the  police’s  forceful  
 response that hundreds of protesters  
 experienced and even  
 more watched online from protest  
 footage. 
 Attorney General Letitia  
 James conducted an investigation  
 of  the  summer’s  protests,  
 under the direction of Gov.  
 Andrew  Cuomo,  which  concluded  
 that  the  NYPD  needs  
 more reform. A report by the  
 New  York  City  Department  of  
 Investigation, which de Blasio  
 asked for, found the NYPD did  
 use excessive force during the  
 summer protests, affirming  
 the accounts by many activists  
 and protestors across the city.  
 In a video statement, de Blasio  
 agreed with the results. 
 A culmination of circumstances  
 added to the historic  
 civil unrest that took place in  
 cities across the U.S. and the  
 world, from a deadly virus to record  
 unemployment rates — but  
 it  was  the  continuous  killing  
 of  innocent  Black  individuals  
 by those meant to protect the  
 public  that  forced  the  country  
 to once again face the systemic  
 racism that makes up the fabric  
 of its history and present day. 
   Photo by Dean Moses