Jacob Blake: Father 'Refuses to Play Politics' as Trump Visits Kenosha

The father
of a black man shot by police has refused to "play politics" with his
son's life when Donald Trump visits the city of Kenosha on Tuesday.
Jacob
Blake's shooting sparked a fresh wave of anti-racism protests in the US,
prompting calls for President Trump to acknowledge him and his family.
The
president will meet police officers on the visit, but not the Blake family.
The visit
comes with "law and order" becoming highly politicised ahead of the 3
November presidential election.
In an
interview with CNN, Mr Blake's father, Jacob Blake Sr, said his son's life was
more important than a meeting with President Trump.
"I'm
not getting into politics. It's all about my son, man. It has nothing to do
with a photo op," he said.
Local
officials have urged Mr Trump to not visit Kenosha, in the state of Wisconsin,
fearing his presence in the city may reignite protests that have calmed down in
recent days.
But Mr Trump
has rejected their pleas, accusing Democratic mayors and governors of failing
to get a grip on the violence. He has made law and order a key issue in his bid
to a win a second term in the White House.
Ahead of the
Kenosha trip, the president said he would not meet Mr Blake's family because
they wanted lawyers to be present.
"This
is not politics. This is about the life of my son," Mr Blake Sr said,
adding that his son was still paralysed from the waist down, "holding on
for dear life".
Jacob Blake,
29, was shot several times in the back by a police officer during an arrest, as
Mr Blake tried to get into a car where his three children were seated.
"We are
dealing with an individual that a couple of weeks ago was running around with
the boys and talking to me on the phone and laughing, to an individual that
cannot move his leg," Mr Blake Sr said.
The officer
involved in the shooting on 23 August, named as Rusten Sheskey, has been placed
on administrative leave while an investigation takes place.
Mr Blake Sr
said that since his son's shooting he had "received some threats".
Asked how
his family was coping, Mr Blake Sr said he had had to take his other son, 20,
to hospital because he was depressed.
The father
gave no further details but added: "It's sad to me how people don't
understand the kind of pressure this family is under."
The governor
of the state, Democrat Tony Evers, has urged Mr Trump to reconsider his trip,
warning his presence will "hinder our healing" and arguing that the
citizens of the town are already traumatised.
The White
House said the president was expected to meet with law enforcement and tour
"property affected by recent riots".
Mr Trump has
also defended a teenage supporter accused of fatally shooting two men amid
demonstrations over Mr Blake's shooting in Kenosha last week.
He suggested
that Kyle Rittenhouse, 17, was acting in self-defence, telling reporters:
"I guess he was in very big trouble, he probably would have been
killed."
Portland,
Oregon has also become a major flashpoint for demonstrations since a wave of
Black Lives Matter protests were touched off by the killing of another African
American George Floyd in May.
Mr Floyd
died in Minneapolis after a police officer knelt on his neck for a prolonged
period during an arrest.
In July, the
Trump administration deployed federal forces to Portland, ostensibly to protect
a federal courthouse and other federal property. But they were later withdrawn
amid allegations their heavy-handed tactics only heightened the unrest.
On Saturday
night, right-wing activist Aaron "Jay" Danielson, 39, was shot
dead in the city after he was seen going to protect a caravan of Trump
supporters from counter protesters.
Asked to
condemn supporters who had fired paint pellets during a confrontation with
anti-racism demonstrators on the same night, Mr Trump described the protest as
"peaceful" and said paint was "a defensive mechanism, paint is
not bullets".
He told a reporter: "Your supporters, and they are your supporters indeed, shot a young gentleman who - and killed

him, not
with paint but with a bullet. And I think it's disgraceful."
Media
reports say a man who calls himself an anti-fascist is being investigated over
the death of Mr. Danielson.
Meanwhile, protests
erupted in Los Angeles, California, on Monday night after an incident in which
police shot dead a black man in a southern neighbourhood of the city.
Police say
the man in his 30s fled after officers spotted him riding a bicycle in
violation of vehicle codes. According to the police, the man was shot at the
end of a pursuit, after he allegedly struck an officer and dropped a handgun in
a bundle he was carrying.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-us-Canada
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