NFL owner refuses to
take down George Floyd tweet saying, 'I CAN BREATHE' after Derek Chauvin was
convicted of murder
The Las Vegas Raiders sent a tweet that read
"I CAN BREATHE" after Derek Chauvin was found guilty of
the murder of George Floyd on Tuesday.
The
tweet drew backlash for being tone-deaf and its similarity to a phrase echoed
by NYPD supporters after a New York City police officer killed Eric Garner by
putting him in a chokehold in 2014. Pro-police demonstrators wore shirts with
the phrase "I can breathe" as a counter-protest to those protesting
police brutality.
Raiders
owner Mark Davis admitted that he was the one who sent the tweet and did not do
so to incite pro-police sentiment. Davis said that the tweet was inspired by a
phrase from Floyd's brother Philonese, who said, "Today, we are able to
breathe again." after Chauvin's verdict.
"That's
my tweet," Davis told the Las Vegas Review-Journal.
"I don't want anyone in the organization taking heat. I take full
responsibility for that. I was driving home from a meeting when the verdict
came in. Soon after, I was listening to George Floyd's brother, Philonise,
speak. And he said, 'Today, we are able to breathe again.' I took my lead from
him. In my mind, that was all I needed to say, 'I can breathe.'"
Still,
despite many finding the tweet offensive, Davis also said that he wouldn't take
the tweet down, according to Tashan Reed of The Athletic.
"I
felt that was a powerful statement," Davis said. "Today was a day
where I can breathe, and we can all breathe again because justice was served.
But we have a lot of work to do still
on social justice and police brutality."
The
tweet was pinned to the top of The Raiders' official Twitter account for the
entirety of Tuesday evening. It has since been unpinned, but it is still live
on the account's media posts.
Several
high-profile figures in sports have called out the Raiders for the tweet and
leaving it up, citing a lack of sensitivity on the issue, including LeBron
James and Jemele Hill.
Insider
has reached out to the Raiders' communication team for comment but has not
heard back at the time of publication.