Black-owned businesses in ‘George Floyd Square’ plea for help, say skyrocketing crime is killing business

Black-owned businesses near the intersection where George Floyd was killed last year — now known as “George Floyd Square” — are begging for financial help because they say increased crime in their neighborhood is driving their businesses into the ground.

According to the New York Post, “Black merchants near the once-thriving corner of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue said police have abandoned the blocked-off intersection, creating a dangerous autonomous zone that has seen crime spike and business evaporate.”

The business owners have been forced to resort to GoFundMe to plea for help and ask for assistance to overcome revenue losses of over 75%.

The GoFundMe page explains just how dire the crime situation has become around George Floyd Square:

“The city left me in danger,” an impacted restaurant owner told the Post. “They locked us up on here and left us behind. … They left me with no food, no water, nothing to eat. The police, fire trucks, can’t come in here.”

“Business is bad,” one employee of another impacted business told the Post. “No one absolutely knows who runs this. It’s like a union. One person is selected as a leader one week and if they’re not fit they get thrown out.”

Anything else?

George Floyd Square, a so-called “autonomous zone” that is now controlled by left-wing militants, reportedly had a sign posted outside of the memorial area this week that included rules white people had to follow while inside the “sacred space.”

Minneapolis police have vowed to retake control of George Floyd Square, the Minneapolis Star-Tribune reported. Federal authorities are reportedly working with state and local officials to identify those wreaking havoc in the area.

*story by The Blaze