Police clashed with rallygoers in Los Angeles marking the 1-year anniversary of Breonna Taylor's death
- Police confronted protesters at a rally Saturday night for Breonna Taylor in Los Angeles.
- Videos posted to social media show a chaotic scene and two protesters clinging to the hood of a police car.
- Saturday marked the one-year anniversary of Taylor's death after police fired into her apartment.
Police clashed with some protesters in Los Angeles, California, who were marking the anniversary of Breonna Taylor's death Saturday night, according to videos posted to social media.
About 200 people were reported by local news outlet KABC to have attended a rally near the city's iconic intersection at Hollywood Boulevard and Vine Street for Taylor, a Black woman shot dead by the police last March.
Vishal Singh, who was present at the rally in Hollywood, posted a video to Twitter of two protesters standing in front of a Los Angeles Police Department car.
The protesters appeared to block the police car from passing and banged on the hood with their fists.
The two protesters then climbed up on the hood of the car before an officer behind the wheel continued to drive, speeding up and away. One of the demonstrators can be seen in the video clinging on to the hood. The other fell as the car sped away.
"One of your guys just ran somebody over, are you f------ kidding me right now?" someone can be heard saying in Singh's video.
In another video posted by user Sean Carmitchel to Twitter of the same incident, cries for a medic can be heard after the police car drove away with a protester on the hood.
It's unclear whether there was more than one officer in the car and if either of the protesters sustained injuries.
The LAPD declined Insider's request for comment on the videos.
Singh posted another video that showed officers in riot gear confronting an advancing crowd of protesters, firing a few shots from unidentified devices.
"LAPD throwing down protesters and opening fire at point-blank range," Singh tweeted. "Officers shot, beat, and arrested many activists as well as members of the press who were merely documenting."
Los Angeles was one of the many sites of protest against Taylor's death Saturday. Crowds gathered in Taylor's hometown of Louisville, Kentucky, in addition to Atlanta, Georgia, and New York City.
Taylor's family sued the city after police officers killed Taylor, 26, in her Louisville home on March 13. The officers, pursuing a narcotics bust, used a "no-knock" warrant, meaning they were not required to identify themselves before entering her home.
The officers fired 32 times and shot Taylor multiple times. They later argued that they were returning fire after one of the officers was shot in the thigh.
An attorney for Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, said that Walker fired a shot as a warning to the officers and that the officers did not identify themselves or knock.
One of the officers, Brett Hankison, has been removed from his job. None of the other officers has been arrested or charged with a crime.
The city of Louisville said in September that it would pay her family $12 million to settle their wrongful-death lawsuit. The settlement also includes reforms for Louisville's police department, such as a mandate that all search warrants be approved by a commander before heading to a judge.