VIOLENT protests have spread across the US as anger over George Floyd's killing mounts - as a Federal Protection and 19-year-old were shot dead and the Army put on standby.
Anger has been mounting since shocking video footage in Minneapolis showed white officer Derek Chauvin kneeling on Mr Floyd's neck after his arrest. The former truck driver, 46, died moments later.
Chauvin was arrested and charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter. He is due to appear in court in Minneapolis for the first time on Monday.
Days of looting and arson in the Minnesota city has escalated into nationwide protests against police brutality.
A 19-year-old man was killed after shots were fired into a crowd during protests in Detroit on Friday night.
Police said the shots were fired from an unknown suspect in a vehicle. An officer was not involved in the shooting.
In Oakland, California, where 8,000 protesters took to the streets, two Federal Protective Service officers suffered gunshot wounds, CNN reported.
One died from his injury.
A state of emergency has been declared in Georgia.
The Pentagon has ordered the Army to put several active-duty US military police units on the ready to deploy to Minneapolis.
Soldiers from Fort Bragg in North Carolina and Fort Drum in New York have been ordered to be ready to deploy within four hours if called. Also soldiers at Fort Carson, in Colorado, and Fort Riley in Kansas have been told to be ready within 24 hours.
Meanwhile the White House was briefly locked down yesterday as protesters faced off with the US Secret Service and burned American flags while chanting "No justice, no peace".
Others scaled the walls of buildings and vandalized them, spray-painting building with phrases like "F**k 12", an anti-police slang term.
Federal agents were seen arresting at least one person in front of the White House.
The Secret Service was forced to close entrances and exits.
A crew of three men, believed to be Fox News journalists, had their mic stolen and were showered with water by masked demonstrators outside the White House.
Protesters momentarily shut down the White House as:
- A preliminary autopsy report revealed that the contributed to Mr Floyd's death
- Officer
- Floyd's grieving girlfriend because violent riots "would devastate him"
- President and said the "sad" arrest footage is "an insult to policemen"
- Former President and said Americans "must be better"
In Minneapolis, where protests continue to rage, there were reports tonight that tear gas and rubber bullets had been used by police to try to disperse the crowd.
It comes as protesters ignored an 8pm curfew imposed by the city.
The Minnesota Department of Public Safety said shots had been fired at officers in Minneapolis.
Minnesota National Guard is preparing to deploy 1,700 soldiers to the streets to maintain law and order amid violent demonstrations.
Television pictures also showed looting in Minneapolis.
State Governor Tim Walz described the situation as "chaotic, dangerous and unprecedented".
He said the Guard deployment was the largest in state history but admitted "there's simply more of them than us".
He said those on the streets "don't give one damn" about the stay-at-home order.
Mr Walz said he believes "white supremacists" and "cartels" are "blending in" with the crowds.
A spokesman for Minnesota Department of Public Safety said: "We've got intel reports that have been confirmed but I cannot say we have confirmed we have cells of white supremacists."
Meanwhile Georgia's governor declared a state of emergency today.
Governor Brian Kemp said that up to 500 members of the Guard would be deployed immediately to protect people and property in Atlanta.
Demonstrators yesterday climbed the CNN sign at the network's headquarters in Atlanta and unfurled a Black Lives Matter flag.
Protesters also set ablaze an American flag, cheering as windows were broken near the entrance of the center.
The initially peaceful rally in downtown Atlanta quickly became violent when a police vehicle was set on fire.
At least three people were arrested and one officer was shoved to the ground, police said.
"Officers have been subjected to water bottles, eggs, and other items being thrown at them," said a spokesman for the Atlanta Police Department.
"However we remain hopeful this activity will cease and there will be no need for further arrests or clashes with protesters."
Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms issued a passionate plea, saying: "This is not a protest. This is not in the spirit of Martin Luther King Jr. You are disgracing our city. You are disgracing the life of George Floyd."
Bernice King, the youngest daughter of civil rights icon Martin Luther King, urged people to go home.
She said: "The only way we get what we really want is through non-violence. Let's do this the non-violent way to deal with the evil of our time."
In Denver, Mayor Michael Hancock has told of his sorrow over "needless, senseless and destructive" scenes as protests continue in the Colorado capital.
hit the streets for another night of demonstrations as large crowds flooded lower Manhattan to protest police brutality.
People hurled bottles at police and even stormed barricades outside Barclays Center in Brooklyn, where the reported several protesters were arrested.
The NYPD said arrests for disorderly conduct and blocking traffic were made in Foley Square and at the Brooklyn Bridge.
A former FBI special agent claimed protesters stormed the 88th Precinct in north Brooklyn just before 9:45pm.
The 84th Precinct was also "under siege" as officers from NYPD's special units raced to the location.
An NYPD van appeared to be set on fire in the Fort Greene neighborhood as reports of an officer down were called in just before 10pm.
Mayor Bill de Blasio pleaded with protesters to rally peacefully and reminded them to maintain social distancing.
He tweeted: "Our sole focus is de-escalating this situation and getting people home safe.
"There will be a full review of what happened tonight. We don’t ever want to see another night like this."
Meanwhile, protesters blocked roads in Los Angeles and also in Oakland, where windows were smashed and "Kill Cops" graffiti sprayed.
In Dallas, officers launched tear gas canisters after they were pelted with stones.
In Phoenix, Arizona, protesters left behind a trail of destruction.
Phoenix Police Department tweeted: "Property throughout the downtown Phoenix area has been vandalized as some demonstrators engage in criminal behavior, breaking windows and doors to municipal and private business and destroy cars parked along the street."
The protests across the US continued even after police arrested and charged Chauvin with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of Floyd.
The 44-year-old officer was taken into custody by the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension just before 11:45am Friday.
Chauvin was arrested four days after disturbing video showed him kneeling on the family man's neck during his brutal arrest.
just hours after he was booked in Minneapolis.
The footage sparked the torching of the Minneapolis 3rd Precinct - where Chauvin is believed to have worked - on Thursday night.
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said on Thursday that Floyd was killed "because he is black" and explicitly said arresting officer Chauvin "killed someone".
The 38-year-old politician told Floyd would not have been killed if he was white.
"He'd be alive today if he were white," Frey said of Floyd.
"I'm not a prosecutor, but let me be clear, the arresting officer killed someone."
Civil rights activist Jesse Jackson, 78, condemned Mr Floyd's arrest as a "lynching".
Earlier Donald Trump threatened to send in the military to control the protesters, saying: "When the looting starts, the shooting starts."
Mr Trump's inflammatory message came after rioters had set a police station ablaze and ransacked stores in Minneapolis.