A POLICE officer comforted a little girl who feared she might be shot at a George Floyd protest.
Simone Bartee, 5, from can be heard sobbing as she asks the officer “are you gonna shoot us?” at the peaceful demonstration she attended with her family on Tuesday.
Her dad, Simeon, shared the emotional video on , where it rapidly amassed over 91,000 likes, more than 21,000 retweets and over 2,000 replies amid the nationwide unrest.
"During the protest in Houston yesterday one of the police officers noticed my daughter crying," he wrote on June 3.
"She asked him 'Are you gonna shoot us' he got down on one knee wrapped his arm around her and responded."
The cop in question can be seen hugging Simeon as he tells her "we’re here to protect you, okay?"
"We’re not here to hurt you at all," he said. “You can protest, you can party, you can do whatever you want."
The clip was not the only act of solidarity during the widespread unrest, violent clashes between police and protesters, and curfews.
On June 2, Houston police chief Art Acevedo was spotted chatting with members of the community gathered to mourn the death of during the march.
Elsewhere in the Texas city, cops were pictured walking with protesters from Discovery Green to City Hall in downtown Houston – a march 's family also participated in.
Several cops took take selfies with the mural honoring the former Houston resident on Wednesday afternoon in Third Ward.
But earlier , the Houston police department confirmed more than two hundred people were arrested the previous night.
"Are you gonna shoot us?”
Simone Bartee, 5
The news comes as thousands of Americans of their respective states to decry the 46-year-old dad during.
The kids' network Nickelodeon went black on Tuesday for 8 minutes and 46 seconds – the length of time knelt on Floyd's neck – to the sound of a person inhaling and exhaling.
White text flashed “I can’t breathe," echoing his last words in a bid to educate children about the issues of systemic .
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“I have seen a spike in anxiety for my black kid clients because they are having access to the news,” said clinical mental health counselor Javonte’ Bass.
“When the parents are watching, they’re listening.”