The Fiji Times

Chauvin broke force policy – police chief

- ■ REUTERS

MINNEAPOLI­S - Derek Chauvin violated Minneapoli­s Police Department rules and its ethics code on respecting the “sanctity of life” during the deadly arrest of George Floyd last May, the city’s police chief testified at the former officer’s murder trial on Monday.

“It’s not part of our training, and it is certainly not part of our ethics and our values,” said Chief Medaria Arradondo, referring to how Mr Chauvin, who is white, held his knee on the neck of Floyd, a 46-yearold Black man, for more than nine minutes. A bystander’s video of Mr Floyd’s dying moments sparked global protests against police brutality.

Over 3-1/2 hours of testimony, Mr Arradondo disputed the defence’s claim that Mr Chauvin, who has pleaded not guilty to murder and manslaught­er charges, was following the training he had received in his 19 years on the force.

According to law experts who track police prosecutio­ns, it is highly unusual for a city’s senior police official to testify that one of his former subordinat­es used excessive force. Mr Chauvin, who along with three other officers was fired by Mr Arradondo a day after the arrest, sat nearby in a suit, taking notes.

In opening statements last week, a prosecutor told the jury that it would hear from Mr Arradondo, who would not “mince words.” Last year, the chief released a statement castigatin­g Mr Chauvin, saying: “This was murder — it wasn’t a lack of training.”

On Monday, he appeared dressed in a blue uniform, placed his chief’s hat on a ledge in front of him with its golden badge visible to the jury, and spoke with his hands clasped in front of him.

“I vehemently disagree that that was appropriat­e use of force for that situation on May 25,” he said.

He said officers are trained to treat people with dignity and are sworn to uphold the “sanctity of life.” They are trained in basic first aid and given annual refresher courses, be it in tying a tourniquet to a bleeding gunshot victim or using a naloxone inhaler to reverse an opioid overdose.

Mr Chauvin failed to follow his training in several respects, Mr Arradondo said.

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