The photo is from 2014 and there’s a dark history behind it.
We need less finger pointing and more of THIS!! It's the only thing that's going to fix it..... #FreeHugs #LoveOneAnother pic.twitter.com/DfclRbODxG
— .⋆* (@Car0lina_Queen) May 28, 2020
The image, which shows 12-year-old Devonte Hart hugging a police officer during a rally in Portland, Oregon, on 25 November 2014, went viral at the time.
The rally was to protest yet another police killing of a black American: Michael Brown Jr., who was fatally shot by white police officer Darren Wilson on 9 August 2014.
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Devonte Hart was at the rally with his white adoptive mother Jennifer Hart, holding a sign offering ‘Free hugs’. There are different versions of the interaction with the police officer, but many now regard the incident as having been staged by Jennifer Hart.
Four years later, in March 2018, Jennifer Hart drove her wife, Sarah Hart (also white), and their six adopted black children off a cliff in California.
Devonte Hart’s body was never found, but he is presumed dead along with the rest of the family.
After their deaths, a history of familial abuse came to light. Authorities had repeatedly been warned by concerned neighbours, successive schools and family friends that the two Hart women were abusing their children by beating them and withholding food.
The Harts had moved states several times prior to the crash, each time state child protection agencies began to take an increased interest in the family.
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Just days before Jennifer Hart killed them all, a neighbour had called a child welfare agency to report physical abuse of the children.
One of Devonte's sisters had reportedly asked the neighbour for help, saying that her mothers were racist.
Now, as many protesters take to the streets across America, a new debate about hugging police officers is animating social media.
I can’t believe it. Police took a knee. Protesters and police embrace. pic.twitter.com/5jwBJTBbp3
— Kaley Johnson (@KaleyAJohnson) June 2, 2020
Some protesters vow that they will never hug police officers, saying police officers represent and enforce a system of discrimination and inequality.
Do not, under any circumstances, hug a cop, march with a cop, kneel with a cop, or hand a cop your mic.
— Radio Free Amanda 余美娜 (@catcontentonly) June 1, 2020
Others are calling for compassion and respectful interaction between police officers and protesters.
We need more rational beautiful souls like this man right now. Riots must end. pic.twitter.com/WJn31yQgZn
— Robby Starbuck (@robbystarbuck) May 31, 2020
Devonte Hart became known as a symbol of reconciliation between white and black people, bridging the divide between African Americans and police, but he was himself the target of racial abuse at home.
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