As violence and looting erupted in Chicago last Sunday, rioters blatantly used the political movement to steal, and pursue their criminal activity.

In a live Facebook video, a woman unabashedly made fun of an African-American man, George Floyd, who died under police custody. The woman, along with other men looted a high-end Chicago store while she yelled Floyd’s dying words, “I can’t breathe,” the words had since become a slogan for the Black Lives Matter movement.

In the footage, the woman could be heard saying that she was trying to find a tool that would help her remove a “Canada goose” security tag while looting a department store. “I don’t know where the f***ing keys at!” she yelled as she tried to look for it in the drawers. The woman continued, “Let me see, does that say, Valentino, does that say Dolce and Gabbana?” She then ran around the store, screaming the words, “I can’t breathe!”

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In a Twitter post, Ryan Baker, an anchor for WBBM-TV, described the entire incident as “absolute chaos.” Baker believed that it was a “coordinated effort” among rioters, which spread around social media. He went on to say that while rioters claimed that the attack was a form of “retaliation” against the alleged shooting of a 15-year old boy by police officers, it should not be an excuse for a “discouraging,” “disrespectful,” and “disgusting’ end results, leading to what he called as an “opportunistic crime.”

Another local media outlet, CBS-Chicago, also agreed that it was a “coordinated attack.” CBS Chicago cited that dozens of stores had been ransacked and looted, while banks and other businesses were broken down. The damage has spread from the Loop to the Near North Side.

The incident all began around 2:30 p.m on Sunday, when rumors spread that a police officer had shot a 15-year old, unarmed boy while he was running in an alleyway. However, the Deputy Chief Delonda Tally denied such allegations. He clarified that the police had shot a 20-year-old armed man who had a long list of criminal offenses after he fired a shot against the police. Law enforcement officers fired back, injuring the man. Shortly after the shooting, Tally claimed that the crowds targeted the police in retaliation, as they hurled objects against the officers.

Chicago Tribune reported that shortly after midnight, rioters parked their cars outside the city’s “Magnificent Mile” carrying bags of luxury goods. Some of the rioters broke stores and leaned out stores such as Tesla, Apple, BestBuy, Omega, Macy’s, Nordstrom, Coach, Gucci, Sally Beauty Supply, and Louis Vuitton.