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Increasingly, in the United States, white police are forced to hide the necks of non-resisting black citizens. Beyond burning and looting, there was a time when the protesters flocked to the White House and once blocked.

Correspondent Correspondent Kim Soo-hyung of Washington.

<Reporter> In

Minneapolis, the main defense forces were put in, and night traffic was prohibited, but looting and arsoning continued overnight.


Protesters also flocked in front of Atlanta's CNN headquarters, smashing glass windows and damaging the sculptures. 

Protesters attempting to enter the interior also burned a police car. 

In Los Angeles, police were besieged and beaten by protesters.


[I can't breathe! You can't breathe!] In

Washington, DC, the protesters once surrounded the White House and all the entrances were once blocked. 

President Trump's tweet to fire if plundered fueled the protests.

[Christie / Protester: This is a remark showing the complete double standard (of President Trump). So people are really dissatisfied. Because order only matters, justice doesn't matter.]

Trump President picked up yesterday's tweets saying he was firing on looting as protests spread beyond the reach of over 20 cities across the United States. 

[Trump / US President: (Yesterday's Twitter comments) meant that people were shot and killed in a looting scene. You'll see what happened last night.]

White police Derek Shobin, who pressed a black man's neck to hide him, was charged with third-class murder.

In American law, third-degree murder is a crime that, unlike the planned first-degree murder, has committed a very dangerous behavior without respect for humans, causing people to die.

(Video coverage: Jungsik Oh, Video editing: Yonghwa Jung)