Philando Castile shooting: Fury and tears follow calm Facebook broadcast

Girlfriend Diamond Reynolds live-streamed events after boyfriend was shot by police

Diamond Reynolds: “The police are not here to protect and serve us. They are here to assassinate us . . . Because we are black.”  Photograph: Eric Miller/Reuters
Diamond Reynolds: “The police are not here to protect and serve us. They are here to assassinate us . . . Because we are black.” Photograph: Eric Miller/Reuters

Diamond Reynolds was cool and composed as an anchorwoman on Wednesday night, her voice strong as she narrated the horrific scene around her into her phone that was streaming live on Facebook.

"Please, officer, don't tell me that you just did this to him," she said, as her boyfriend, Philando Castile, lay slumped and bleeding in the car next to her, fatally shot by a police officer. "You shot four bullets into him, sir. He was just getting his licence and registration, sir."

By Thursday, Reynolds had given into tears, fury and grief. "She's not calm right now," said an aunt, Joyce Doty, who lives in Indiana and was rushing to Minnesota to be with her niece. "She's a hot mess. She is very, very upset right now."

Four million views

About Reynolds’s Facebook video, which had been viewed more than four million times by Thursday afternoon, Doty said, “She was doing what she had to do.”

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Overnight, Reynolds (26) had emerged as an extraordinary figure in the latest shooting of an African-American at the hands of a police officer. Apparently seconds after Castile was shot, she began to broadcast the scene live on Facebook, pointing her phone in the direction of the police officer, whose gun was still drawn, and at Castile, who was in the driver’s seat and wearing a seat belt, his T-shirt soaked in blood.

In doing so, she became not only a poised and influential witness, but a teller in real time of her own treatment by the police.

Handcuffed

Ordered out of the car, then to kneel near the car, she was handcuffed and put in the back of a police cruiser. Yet the Facebook report continued, a mix of confusion, outrage, shock and poised determination to tell her version of what had happened.

On social media and on television, Reynolds was praised for her strength. “I truly believe Diamond Reynolds was spared her life because she’s got a greater purpose,” wrote the user @full_of_moxie on Twitter. “She’s going to get justice for #PhilandoCastile.”

Castile, Reynolds and her four-year-old daughter had spent part of Wednesday running errands and going grocery shopping, she told reporters. At about 9pm, she said, they were pulled over by the police, apparently for a traffic violation.

While she streamed video in the aftermath of his shooting, dozens of friends on Facebook wrote messages of concern. Some said they were praying. Others urged her to stay calm and avoid angering the officer. A few tried to ascertain where she was and co-ordinate efforts to go and pick her up.

But she was taken into police custody immediately after the shooting and was not released, she said, until police officers dropped her off at her home at 5am.

Hours later, Reynolds stood in front of the governor’s mansion, surrounded by crowds of people protesting the killing of Castile, who was a longtime employee of the St Paul school district.

Message to the world

“I didn’t do it for pity, I didn’t do it for fame,” she told the cameras and people assembled. “I did it so that the world knows that the police are not here to protect and serve us. They are here to assassinate us. They are here to kill us. Because we are black.”

It was unclear if Reynolds had slept since her boyfriend was killed. She met Governor Mark Dayton of Minnesota, who later spoke about the shooting in unusually forceful terms, saying that he did not believe it would have happened if Castile had been white.

Reynolds, who goes by Lavish on Facebook, identifies herself on her page as a native of Chicago who works as a housekeeper at a hotel.

She said on Thursday that she had no family in Minnesota. Family members said she had spent her early childhood living on the South Side of Chicago.

No last words

“They took my lifeblood,” she told reporters. “That was my best friend. I never got to say my last words to that man.” Dawn Spikes, Reynolds’s great-aunt, said from her home in Chicago that the day had passed in a haze of confusion. For hours early on Thursday, they did not know where Reynolds was and feared that she had been harmed.

By the end of the day, she was surrounded by friends and activists. Rev Al Sharpton, Spikes said, had called to offer to pay the air fare for Reynolds's mother to travel from Indiana to be with her daughter.

Spikes had not brought herself to watch the full video from Wednesday night. But she said she was not surprised that Reynolds, whom she described as strong and outspoken, reacted the way that she did.

“Diamond was calm, and the baby was calm,” she said. “Like they go through this every day. But they don’t.”

–(New York Times service)