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In a recent tragic incident, a Minneapolis mother, identified as Arabella Foss-Yarbrough, was seen on a video yelling at a group of protesters who gathered outside of an apartment building inside the Seward neighborhood where a Black man, Andrew "Tekle" Sundberg, was shot and killed by police on July 14. She shouted, “This is not a George Floyd situation."
Many protesters were at the south-side apartment on July 16 where the 20-year-old Sundberg was shot following a six-hour standoff, when the mother of a two and four-year-old children, who first called 911 on the night of the incident, showed up. She yelled, “The shot went through my door, through a pillar to the kitchen, I was cooking for my kids. My kids have to deal with this and probably have a mental illness now because they almost lost their lives. There’s bullet holes in my kitchen because he sat in the f–ing hallway watching me move. He tried to kill me in front of my kids."
BLM and Sundbeg's parents claimed Tekle was a good kid who was just suffering from a mental health crisis but a recent video uploaded by LibsOfTikTok tells a different story.
In the video, Sundberg is heard saying “If a b*tch came to me as a woman, I’m coming to her with a bullet.”
This post wipes out the notion Sundberg wasn't a violent individual who openly talked about gun violence towards women.
As per reports by CBS, 20-year-old Sundberg fired multiple gunshots on the night of July 14 his neighbor, Arabella, called 911, saying a bullet went through her wall. She told, "The first loud bang that I heard, I didn't know it was a gunshot.” “I thought, 'We're not going to make it, we're not going to make it,’” she narrated how she grabbed her two young sons and hid in the bedroom, where she called the police, who came to the spot and saved them.
fter the police officials got Arabella’s sons out of the apartment, Sundberg isolated himself and the officials had to spend over six hours trying to deal with him. Then, around 4.30 am on July 15, two snipers shot Sundberg, fatally wounding him. Later, he died at Hennepin Healthcare.