
Above: A screenshot from Thursday night's KSTP report.
A KSTP report about a photo of Betsy Hodges has generated a social media firestorm under the label "#pointergate" for making the assertion that her hand gesture in a photo was actually a gang sign.
The mayor's office said they are deferring comment on the story -- for now -- but may address it at a 1 p.m. news conference on body cameras. The story has generated national attention from outlets including the Huffington Post and Vanity Fair.
The photo, taken before the election, shows Hodges and a Neighborhoods Organizing for Change organizer pointing to each other while canvassing. Reporter Jay Kolls' story noted that the man has a criminal history, quoting both a retired officer and the head of the police union as saying her hand gesture was innapropriate.
"Is she going to support gangs in the city or cops?" said John Delmonico, president of the city's police union, in an on-camera interview. Delmonico recently penned an op-ed critical of Hodges comments about officers.
"I believe it is an ancient symbol used by our ancestors meaning "hey, look where my finger is pointing!" retorted Becky Zosia Dernbach, who took the photo, on Twitter.
The man in the photo is Navell Gordon, who was featured in a video taken the day of the canvassing. "I made some mistakes in life," he says in the video. "I can't vote. I'm not ashamed to say that. But I'm working on fixing that right now so I can be able to vote for my next president."
Activists stood up for Gordon in September after cops allegedly tackled and handcuffed him while he was collecting signatures outside Cub Foods.