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    Friday, April 19, 2024

    Black Lives Matter activist shot, killed in New Orleans

    FILE - In this April 9, 2015 file photo, Muhiyidin d'Baha speaks during a meeting with North Charleston city council about the killing of Walter Scott by a North Charleston police officer after a traffic stop in North Charleston, S.C. Muhiyidin d'Baha, whose legal name was Muhiyidin Elamin Moye, was shot in the thigh, Tuesday, Feb. 6, 2018, and died in a hospital, New Orleans police spokesman Beau Tidwell said Wednesday. The circumstances of the shooting were not immediately clear. (AP Photo/Chuck Burton)

    NEW ORLEANS — A man fatally shot in New Orleans has been identified as a Black Lives Matter activist known for his leap through police tape at a South Carolina demonstration last year as he attempted to seize a Confederate battle flag from a protester.

    A police officer answering a call about gunfire early Tuesday found Muhiyidin Elamin Moye, 32, on the ground, asking for help near the Treme neighborhood, about eight blocks from the French Quarter, according to a police report.

    He was better known as Muhiyidin d'Baha. Moye's family told South Carolina news outlets Muhiyidin Elamin Moye was his legal name.

    The report says a bloody trail to the body circled two blocks, and a bloody bicycle lay across the street.

    Moye was shot in the thigh about 1:30 a.m. and died in a hospital, New Orleans police spokesman Beau Tidwell said Wednesday. It was not immediately clear what led to the shooting.

    "No further information on this incident is currently available," police spokesman Gary Scheets said in an email.

    The responding officer saw a traffic camera and a car repair business's surveillance camera in the area, according to the police report. Officials did not say if the camera captured images that might help the investigation.

    Last February, a news camera recorded Moye jumping through police tape in Charleston, South Carolina, as he tried to take a protester's large Confederate battle flag before being tackled by police and arrested. At the time, demonstrations were going on outside a theater at the College of Charleston for a speech by Bree Newsome, an activist who climbed a flagpole and temporarily removed a Confederate flag from in front of the South Carolina Statehouse in 2015.

    DeRay Mckesson, a prominent figure in the Black Lives Matter movement, said Moye was a fearless, kind man whose death is a big loss for Charleston and the movement. He said they met in 2015, after the highly publicized fatal shooting of Walter Scott by a white North Charleston police officer.

    "He was a strong leader who deeply understood the role of community and the power of helping other people recognize that role," Mckesson said.

    Moye was taking a personal trip to New Orleans, niece Camille Weaver told the Post and Courier of Charleston.

    She told the newspaper that her uncle was born in Poughkeepsie, New York, and grew up in Hollywood, South Carolina, just west of Charleston.

    "He loved Charleston and loved fighting for what's right," she said. "I've never met anyone more committed and hardworking than him. He was an asset to the Charleston community and will be greatly missed."

    As word of Moye's death spread, members of the Black Lives Matter movement in Charleston, South Carolina, gathered outside of North Charleston City Hall.

    It was the same place Moye first made a name for himself with passionate speeches in the days after Scott, an unarmed black man, was killed by a white North Charleston police officer as he ran from a traffic stop. Moye would later interrupt City Council meetings to demand leaders change policies to give the public more power to assure police accountability.

    "What better place than where he actually catapulted the justice mission and message to the world," Thomas Dixon, a pastor and activist who worked with Moye, said of the place for the vigil.

    Another activist at the vigil said Moye is irreplaceable.

    "The intellectualism, the fire, the desire, the motivation, the way he rallied people in the city was just second to none," Johnathan Thrower said.

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    Associated Press reporters Michael Kunzelman in Baton Rouge and Jeffrey Collins in Columbia, South Carolina, contributed to this story.

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