Prince William and Duchess Kate Middleton are used to drawing massive crowds everywhere they go, but probably not like what was waiting for them Monday outside Barclays Center in Brooklyn.
With Britain’s royal family in New York as the honored guests for Monday night’s NBA game between the Brooklyn Nets and the Cleveland Cavaliers, hundreds of demonstrators took advantage of the extra limelight to protest a string a police shootings that have roiled communities across the country.
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Just minutes before tip-off, scores of demonstrators staged a “die-in” outside the sports arena, laying on the ground in silent protest. But it wasn’t just those outside Barclays Center who joined calls for police reform in the days since a grand jury decided last Wednesday not to indict the white New York police officer who put an unarmed black man named Eric Garner in an apparent chokehold, which eventually led to Garner’s death.
Die-in happening now at Barclays Center pic.twitter.com/SaLaN6sv47
— Amanda M. Sakuma (@iamsakuma) December 9, 2014
Players inside the stadium — including Cleveland Cavaliers star Lebron James — joined in solidarity with the protesters by wearing shirts printed with Garner’s final words, “I can’t breathe.”
Carmen Perez was the first to break the news to crowd outside the arena that the demonstrations earned some star endorsements on the court inside. “The players wore our ‘I can’t breathe’ shirts in solidarity tonight,” she yelled through a microphone as the crowd erupted in cheers. Perez’s group, the New York Justice League, were behind the demonstrations Monday in Brooklyn, and the group had arranged for the players to wear the organization’s message.
“We’re here for a reason,” Perez told msnbc. “We’re here because we want justice, and we want it now.”
An array of groups had joined the night’s protests, which were staged to capture attention not just from the American media, but also internationally with the royal family in town.








