Belfast Telegraph

I wish that i hadn’t taken his fake note, shop cashier tells Floyd trial

Witness who sparked black man’s arrest admits feeling guilty and helpless over death

- By Steve Karnowski

THE convenienc­e store cashier who sold cigarettes to George Floyd and was handed a counterfei­t $20 note in return has given evidence at police officer Derek Chauvin’s US murder trial as prosecutor­s laid out the sequence of events that led to Mr Floyd’s arrest and death.

Cashier Christophe­r Martin (19) said that as he stood on the kerb a short time later, his hands on his head as he watched Mr Floyd’s arrest, he felt “disbelief and guilt”.

“If I would’ve just not taken the bill, this could’ve been avoided,” he said, joining a list of onlookers who said they felt a sense of helplessne­ss and lingering guilt over the death last May.

Prosecutor­s also played store security footage showing Mr Floyd in Cup Foods for about 10 minutes, adding to the mountain of video footage documentin­g what happened. Mr Martin said he immediatel­y believed the $20 note Mr Floyd gave him was fake, but he accepted it even though store policy was that the amount would be taken out of his wages.

He said he initially planned to just put the bill on his “tab” but then second-guessed himself and told a manager, who sent him outside to ask Mr Floyd to return to the store.

Mr Floyd was later arrested outside, where Chauvin pinned his knee on his neck for what prosecutor­s said was nine minutes and 29 seconds as a handcuffed Mr Floyd lay face-down on the road.

The 46-year-old black man was subsequent­ly pronounced dead at a hospital.

Mr Martin said that inside the store, he asked Mr Floyd if he played baseball, and he replied that he played football, but it took him some time to respond, so “it would appear that he was high (on drugs)”. The defence has argued that Chauvin did what his training told him to do and Mr Floyd’s death was not caused by the knee on his neck, as prosecutor­s contend, but by a combinatio­n of illegal drug use, heart disease, high blood pressure and the adrenaline flowing through his body.

Mr Martin went outside as people were gathering on the kerb and yelling at officers.

He took out his phone and began recording but later deleted the footage, explaining that the ambulance did not take the fastest route to hospital, so he thought Mr Floyd would die.

“I just didn’t want to have to show it (the video) to anyone,” he said.

Earlier, a Minneapoli­s firefighte­r, who wept on Tuesday as she recalled being prevented from using her training to help Mr Floyd, returned briefly to the witness box.

Genevieve Hansen, one of several bystanders seen and heard shouting at Chauvin as he pinned Mr Floyd down, described her desperatio­n as she recounted how she was unable to go to Mr Floyd’s aid or tell police what to do, such as administer­ing chest compressio­ns.

“There was a man being killed,” said Ms Hansen, who gave evidence in her uniform and detailed her emergency medical technician training.

“I would have been able to provide medical attention to the best of my abilities,” she said.

“And this human was denied that right.”

Chauvin (45) is charged with murder and manslaught­er.

The most serious charge against him carries a sentence of up to 40 years in prison. The trial continues.

‘I would have been able to give medical attention... (but) this human was denied that right’

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