Murder charge for US ex-police officer
WORLD: The Minneapolis police officer who was seen on video kneeling on the neck of a handcuffed black man who died in custody after pleading that he could not breathe, has been charged with third degree murder.
State investigators arrested Derek Chauvin, who was one of four officers fired this week.
THE MINNEAPOLIS police officer who was seen on video kneeling on the neck of George Floyd, a handcuffed black man who died in custody after pleading that he could not breathe, has been arrested and charged with third degree murder.
Public Safety Commissioner John Harrington said state investigators arrested Derek Chauvin, one of four officers who was fired this week. It later emerged the officer had been charged.
Third degree murder is often called voluntary manslaughter. It is said to be a murder that is intentional but carried out in special or unusual circumstances.
News of the arrest came moments after Minnesota Governor Tim Walz acknowledged the “abject failure” of the response to this week’s protests and called for swift justice for officers involved.
Mr Walz said the state would take over the response to the protests and that it is time to show respect and dignity to those who are suffering.
“Minneapolis and St Paul are on fire. The fire is still smouldering in our streets. The ashes are symbolic of decades and generations of pain, of anguish unheard,” Mr Walz said, adding. “Now generations of pain is manifesting itself in front of the world – and the world is watching.”
The governor cited a call he received from a state senator who described her district “on fire, no police, no firefighters, no social control, constituents locked in houses wondering what they were going to do. That is an abject failure that cannot happen”.
His comments came the morning after protesters torched a police station that officers abandoned during a third night of violence.
Livestream video showed protesters entering the building, where intentionally set fires activated smoke alarms and sprinklers. President Donald Trump threatened action, tweeting “when the looting starts, the shooting starts,” which prompted a warning from Twitter for “glorifying violence”.
The governor faced tough questions after National Guard leader Major General Jon Jensen blamed a lack of clarity about the Guard’s mission for a slow response. Mr Walz said the state was in a supporting role and that it was up to city leaders to run the situation.
He said it became apparent as the third Precinct was lost that the state had to step in, which happened at 12:05am. Requests from the cities for resources “never came,” he said.
Yesterday, nearly every building in the shopping district around the abandoned police station had been vandalised, burned or looted. National Guard members were in the area, with several of them lined up, keeping people away from the police station.
Dozens of fires were also set in nearby St Paul, where nearly 200 businesses were damaged or looted. Protests spread across the US, fuelled by outrage over Mr Floyd’s death, and years of violence against African Americans at the hands of police. Demonstrators clashed with officers in New York and blocked traffic in Columbus, Ohio, and Denver.
President Trump criticised the “total lack of leadership” in Minneapolis. Protests first erupted on Tuesday, a day after Mr Floyd’s death in a confrontation with police captured on video.
Attorney Ben Crump, who is representing Mr Floyd’s family, called for an independent investigation.