
Video footage widely shared on social media showed Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey pausing at George Floyd’s casket during a memorial. He dropped to one knee, sobbed, and appeared to whisper something.
This display of grief for a career criminal stood in sharp contrast to his response after the August 27, 2025, shooting at Annunciation Catholic School in Minneapolis, where trans-identifying shooter Robin Westman killed two children and wounded 17 others.
Rather than focusing on the tragedy, Frey used the press conference to criticize Christians for praying and to voice support for the transgender community over alleged insults.
The murder of 19 innocent people, mostly children, as they prayed is a far greater loss than that of George Floyd. Court documents from Harris County, Texas, where Floyd lived most of his life, show he faced nine criminal charges, including three drug cases, two theft charges, trespassing, and aggravated robbery.
His most serious conviction came in 2007, when he and five accomplices forced their way into a woman’s apartment during an armed robbery. He served five years in prison for that crime.
Floyd ultimately died in 2020 after ingesting fentanyl and methamphetamine—substances that kill over 70,000 Americans each year—and resisting arrest for nearly 25 minutes.
The Hennepin County medical examiner reported “fentanyl intoxication” and “recent methamphetamine use” as contributing factors in his death, which was ruled a heart attack.
The person Frey defended, Robin Westman, left behind a manifesto and online posts filled with hatred and violent intent. Authorities are investigating the attack as both a hate crime and an act of domestic terrorism after uncovering extensive anti-Catholic and anti-Christian material.
Westman’s writings and videos revealed a fascination with mass violence. He idolized past killers such as Adam Lanza, Anders Behring Breivik, Brenton Tarrant, and Dylann Roof, often referencing them in posts, videos, and even on his weapons.
The shooter’s arsenal was marked with names of notorious mass murderers responsible for massacres at Sandy Hook, the Tree of Life Synagogue, and Christchurch mosques. In one 20-minute video, Westman repeatedly declared, “I can’t wait to kill and kill and kill,” alongside the refrain, “I fall apart, I break and I die.”
His weapons carried messages that underscored his extremist ideology. Firearms bore slogans such as “Where’s your God now?” and “Kill Donald Trump.” Magazines carried antisemitic and Holocaust denial phrases including, “6 million wasn’t enough.”
A smoke grenade was inscribed with “Jew Gas,” alongside the declaration “Israel must fall” and “Free Palestine.” Other weapons carried phrases like “psycho killer” and “suck on this.”
The manifesto opened with the words, “I don’t expect forgiveness … I do apologize for the effects my actions will have on your lives.”
Later, he admitted, “I have wanted this for so long. I am not well. I am not right. I am a sad person, haunted by these thoughts that do not go away… I am severely depressed and have been suicidal for years. Only recently have I lost all hope and decided to perform my final action against this world.”
The writings also revealed an obsession with killing children and a belief that school shootings were the “awful slaughter of innocents” he most admired.
Acting U.S. Attorney Joseph Thompson summarized the scope of the hate: “The shooter expressed hate towards almost every group imaginable… The shooter appeared to hate all of us. There appears to be only one group that the shooter didn’t hate: other school shooters and mass murderers.”
Early warning signs had been visible. A former classmate, Josefina Sanchez, recalled Westman praising Hitler in school and described his behavior as “demonic,” adding, “I think we need Jesus. He needed him.”
Together, the manifesto, online content, and weapon inscriptions reveal a deeply disturbed individual consumed by hate, glorification of mass murder, and a fixation on killing the innocent.
Mayor Frey used this tragedy to attack Christians for praying and to defend the trans community ahead of criticism.
Yet research shows this group faces extremely high rates of mental illness, over 60 percent compared to less than 40 percent in the general population.
Adding powerful hormone treatments to an already vulnerable population heightens risks of aggression, mood swings, depression, and even suicidal behavior.
In earlier generations, gender identity disorder was treated with therapy to help patients reconcile with reality.
Today, the push for drugs and surgery ignores the psychiatric dangers, creating safety concerns that leaders like Frey refuse to acknowledge.