PHOENIX — Protesters returned to the streets of downtown Phoenix on Saturday for a third consecutive night. At one point, the crowd broke out with calls of, "enough is enough is enough." “Not once have you acknowledged, all you say is ‘we’re working on it, we’re working on it, we’re working on it.’”Sunday’s demonstrations started a little earlier than previous nights, with people congregating downtown around 6 p.m. For most of the night, it remained peaceful, with activists giving speeches to the crowd of hundreds — if not thousands — of demonstrators.Maupin will head to Minneapolis with other Arizona residents on June 7 to take part in a larger, nationwide demonstration.The death of 46-year old George Floyd in Minneapolis this week has sparked several protests in the Phoenix area and around Arizona.Phoenix police declared an unlawful assembly at around 10:20 p.m., and rioters stayed on the streets until 3:30 a.m.. More than 100 people were arrested on charges of unlawful assembly and assaulting a police officer.After holding space at a vigil in a nearby park, the crowd of hundreds was met with tear gas and rubber bullets launched by officers in riot gear in front of the Phoenix Police headquarters.“Why shouldn’t you trust the police department?” Gonazles replied, to jeers from the crowd.“We had criminal damage at at least 18 different properties with windows and doors destroyed, graffiti on multiple buildings, damage to multiple vehicles," Phoenix Police Chief Jeri Williams said. “People were telling me all day we couldn’t have a peaceful protest and it would never work, but look at it.”Protesters continued to flood the streets outside the Phoenix Police Department headquarters shortly before 11:30 p.m. Church On Saturday Night in Phoenix on YP.com. Studying the physical universe beyond Phoenix’s urban atmosphere while exploring the open desert away from the city lights, will be an ultimate adventure that you will definitely enjoy. “I can give you a list of thousands of names, and each one of those names is a reason why the public doesn’t trust the police,” the demonstrator said.

It wasn't clear where they were headed.Organizers then began to set up an open mic for protesters to speak.The group of protesters reached the Capitol shortly before 6:15 p.m. "Police fired what appeared to be rubber bullets or another non-lethal object at a car headed north on 7th Avenue toward the I-10.
One woman who identified herself as Trisha MacIntosh — told The Arizona Republic she was tear-gassed by police there.“If I see something, I’m going to intervene,” he said. In Phoenix, cleanup crews swept up broken glass in front of boarded-up doors and windows and used a power-wash to remove spray-painted messages on a building.+Once the 8 p.m. curfew went into effect, officers began ordering the crowds to disperse, occasionally using flash bangs.While Floyd was top of mind for protesters nationwide, activists in Phoenix marched for a different man — 28-year-old Dion Johnson, who died after being shot by an Arizona Department of Public Safety trooper Monday.Officers used rubber bullets, tear gas and flash-bangs on the crowd. The property was shut down hours early, possibly in anticipation.A large group of protesters were seen kneeling with their hands up in the streets outside Phoenix police and municipal buildings.Numerous police cars blocked the entrance to Interstate 10 as protesters approached. "The 5 p.m. protest started with demonstrators gathering outside Phoenix City Hall before marching to the Arizona state Capitol and back. She made a flyer promoting Saturday's protest and posted it on her social media. Night Splash, Mesa. We were peaceful protesters, and the way that you police received us, you guys are ready for war. Even attractions that normally close early come alive.

Their chants echoed through the grassy area.Some social media posts circulating earlier in the night encouraged the destruction of the shopping center. "My heart is filled with joyful happiness that I didn’t say no to the voice in my head.

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PHOENIX (3TV/CBS 5) - Multiple people were arrested during a protest that took place Saturday night in downtown Phoenix. After a third night of demonstrations in downtown Phoenix, police declared an unlawful assembly and began arresting demonstrators. Scottsdale police said the area sustained some property damage, but information about the extent of the damage wasn’t immediately available.Phoenix police continued to disperse unidentified gasses at the handful of lingering protesters in an attempt to get them to disperse from the intersection of Seventh Avenue and Washington Street.Police officers began broadcasting a message telling protesters this was an unlawful assembly, and they needed to disperse immediately.Officials said anyone who refused to leave the area risks arrest.It's unknown if the approaching storm will affect any other demonstrations scheduled for later in the night.“I promise you that in the operating room, in the ICU and on the street,” he said.