A jury found former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin guilty on all counts over the murder of George Floyd. The three counts include: unintentional second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.
Floyd's murder launched civil rights protests over the summer and a nationwide reckoning over racism and police brutality.
'This Is Only The Beginning'
Dallas resident Rogelio Meixueiro, founder of the civic organization Latin-X Dallas, was one of the protesters marching in North Texas last year.
馃УThread: North Texans are reacting to the guilty verdict.
— 四虎影院 (@keranews)
Meixueiro said he felt indifferent after the verdict was read because the work is not done.
鈥淪i no tengo duda de que esto significa solamente el comienzo. Debemos seguir luchando por resposibilidad desde el department de policia y de nuestro oficiales electos," he said in Spanish. "I have no doubt that this is only the beginning. We must continue fighting for responsibility from the police department and our elected officials."
"Moving forward, We need to hold police accountable," he added in English.
He鈥檚 advocating for policies that set standards for police behavior, pointing to the federal George Floyd Justice in Policing Act as a first step. The bill would make changes like banning chokeholds and setting up a national registry for police misconduct.
The guilty verdict offered no comfort for Lula Villa. The Dallas community organizer works with Mothers Against Police Brutality, an organization founded last summer in the wake of George Floyd's killing. She said she still lives in fear.
鈥淲e know that Derek Chauvin is not an exception, that he's not one rotten apple in the bunch,鈥 Villa said. 鈥淭here's no amount of conviction or training or reform that can cure the fact that policing as an institution is rotten from the inside out. We know that we have Derek Chauvins still on the force across this country, including in our own city here.鈥
They hope the verdict will be an important step locally and lead to more concrete methods toward police accountability, Villa said.
'We Will Get There.'

Jennifer Miller is the co-chair of the Dallas Alliance Against Racist And Political Repression. Speaking outside Dallas City Hall on Tuesday evening, she had a straightforward message to the crowd of about 30 people.
鈥淭he way that things are going right now, does not work for any of us. It doesn鈥檛 work for Black and brown people especially,鈥 Miller said.
The full-time technical support specialist and part-time activist said the current structure of policing was completely untenable. She reminded the group that despite getting a guilty verdict for Derek Chauvin, they would need to keep pushing to change the system.

Protest organizer Marissa Rodriguez says she agrees. She was in the crowd holding a sign that read 鈥淪top the War On Black America.鈥 Rodriguez said she was happy George Floyd鈥檚 killer was found guilty on all charges. But she also knew nothing was going to change overnight.
鈥淚t鈥檚 slow-going; it鈥檚 painful; it鈥檚 like childbirth. But it happens eventually. We will get there. It鈥檚 just slow-going," Rodriguez said.
When asked about the small crowd and if the movement to reimagine policing still had momentum, Rodriguez said the size of a protest doesn鈥檛 matter. What does is that people are talking to one another. Having difficult conversations, she says, is how change happens.
'We've Been Looted For Years'
In response to the verdict, some advocates are continuing to call for cuts to the city's police budget. They advocated for slashing police funding during the last budget cycle, but it remained largely intact.
Mercedes Fulbright is an organizer with the social justice organization In Defense of Black Lives Dallas. She said the verdict is one form of accountability, but real justice doesn鈥檛 come from the courts.
鈥淭he legal court system has given us collective trauma, hurt and heartache,鈥 she said. 鈥淔or us, it really is important about being able to get beyond these moments of injustices and actually get to a place of justice in which police don't actually have the means to take someone else's life.鈥

Fulbright is pushing for the creation of an office of violence prevention in Dallas. She's also keeping a close eye on discussions about the city budget.
Dallas resident Kristian Hernandez said Tuesday's guilty verdict in the Derek Chauvin murder trial was one she expected. After last summer protests, Hernandez co-founded the group Our City Our Future.
The group informed residents about the importance of the city budget while pushing to end the over-policing of Black and brown communities.
鈥淚 think it's important that this verdict be a turning point, a recommitment to fight for our communities to take back what we deserve,鈥 Hernandez said. 鈥淲e've been looted for years by landlords, by billionaires, by corporations who keep us policed and keep us in poverty. While police budgets sit there with bloated budgets and continue to harm and kill with impunity.鈥
She said she'll continue to call on the city to defund the police department and invest more in neighborhoods.
'We Stand In Solidarity'
Advocates with Next Generation Action Network came together to watch the verdict as it was announced.
I was with today as the verdict from the was announced. There was joy, pain & hope in these people鈥檚 eyes. But also, they say this is a 鈥渇irst step鈥 towards reimagining policing in Dallas & elsewhere.
— hady mawajdeh (@hadysauce)
Dominique Alexander said this is a moment of accountability, but this is only the beginning of the conversation.
"When we are out here marching in Dallas for something that鈥檚 in Minneapolis, Los Angeles, New York and we stand in solidarity in this movement, it is about the entire culture of policing. There is a lot left to be done."
He said as an organizer he's ready to hold local leaders accountable for continued change.
"I鈥檓 ready to see these laws say that Black lives matter," he said. "I鈥檓 ready to see these ordinances. I鈥檓 ready to see the Mayor Eric Johnson put real change into effect in Dallas Police Department. I鈥檓 ready to see Chief Eddie Garcia do real things inside of DPD."
Laylani Russell agreed with Alexander that the moment is "bittersweet."
"It鈥檚 bittersweet because it鈥檚 so exciting that somebody is held accountable for their actions, but it鈥檚 bittersweet because we鈥檒l never get George Floyd back," she said.

Russell said she's running for the city council in District 4 because she wants to see leaders who care.
"I鈥檓 sick and tired of begging leadership to care enough about us to know that our lives truly matter," she said. "To truly understand that it is not a one-off situation, that every time I see sirens, every time I hear something about an officer, I get scared."
She said it's a time of celebration, but there's more to be done to hold Chauvin accountable.
"It is time now for us to be excited, yes. Celebrate, yes. But we still have to wait on sentencing," Russell said. "We still have to wait on if he鈥檚 going to be able to appeal. We still sit at home and wonder if the justice system is going to work for us."
四虎影院's spoke with DPD Officer Terrance Hopkins who says the verdict in Derek Chauvin's murder trial is a win for society. He added this gives law enforcement an opportunity to build trust with the community.
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'Today, The System Worked'
Local officials also shared their thoughts about the verdict Tuesday.
Dallas Mayor Eric Johnson issued a statement saying "ultimately, the rule of law prevailed."
"A jury of Derek Chauvin鈥檚 peers has delivered justice in the only way that they could," Johnson said. "We still have more work ahead of us to make our city stronger, safer, and more equitable. But today, the system worked."
Terrance Hopkins, a Dallas police officer and president of the Black Police Association of Greater Dallas, said the verdict in Derek Chauvin's murder trial is a win for society. Hopkins said it gives law enforcement an opportunity to build trust with the community.
鈥淚 will continue working in a community to basically just explain to communities, how we act as law enforcement, how we need our community to respond and how we can all work together to accomplish the same goal,鈥 he said. 鈥淎nd just remind the community that when officers, the very few that make these very bad judgment calls, we've got to maintain the ability to hold them accountable.鈥
Hopkins said officers must own up to their mistakes.
Next Generation Action member Changa Higgins, who's also running for a District 7 Dallas City Council seat, said the guilty verdict was a direct result of the summer protests.
"If we did not see the kind of people power on the streets that we saw this summer, protesting and the outrage because of George Floyd鈥檚 death, we would not have gotten those guilty verdicts today 鈥 make no doubt about it," he said.
He called on Dallas organizers and activists not to let up, emphasizing the importance of staying on the streets and making the city uncomfortable.
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