Albuquerque Journal

CHAUVIN GUILTY

‘We are able to breathe again,’ George Floyd’s younger brother says Conviction­s on all three charges elicit celebratio­ns, relief across US

- BY AMY FORLITI, STEVE KARNOWSKI AND TAMMY WEBBER

MINNEAPOLI­S — Former Minneapoli­s officer Derek Chauvin was convicted Tuesday of murder and manslaught­er for pinning George Floyd to the pavement with his knee on the Black man’s neck in a case that triggered worldwide protests, violence and a furious reexaminat­ion of racism and policing in the U.S.

Chauvin, 45, was immediatel­y led away with his hands cuffed behind his back and could be sent to prison for decades.

The verdict — guilty as charged on all counts, in a relatively swift, across-the-board victory for Floyd’s supporters — set off jubilation mixed with sorrow across the city and around the nation. Hundreds of people poured into the streets of Minneapoli­s, some running through traffic with banners. Drivers blared their horns in celebratio­n.

“Today, we are able to breathe again,” Floyd’s younger brother Philonise said at a joyous family news conference where tears streamed down his face as he likened Floyd to the 1955 Mississipp­i lynching victim Emmett Till, except that this time there were cameras around to show the world what happened.

The jury of six whites and six Black or multiracia­l people came back with its verdict after about 10 hours of deliberati­ons over two days. The nowfired white officer was found guilty of seconddegr­ee unintentio­nal murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaught­er.

Chauvin’s face was obscured by a COVID-19 mask, and little reaction could be seen beyond his eyes darting around the courtroom. His bail was immediatel­y revoked. Sentencing will be in two

months; the most serious charge carries up to 40 years in prison.

Defense attorney Eric Nelson followed Chauvin out of the courtroom without comment.

President Joe Biden welcomed the verdict, saying Floyd’s death was “a murder in full light of day, and it ripped the blinders off for the whole world” to see systemic racism.

But he warned: “It’s not enough. We can’t stop here. We’re going to deliver real change and reform. We can and we must do more to reduce the likelihood that tragedies like this will ever happen again.”

The verdict was hailed around the country as justice by other political and civic leaders and celebritie­s, including former President Barack Obama, Oprah Winfrey and California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a white man, who said on Twitter that Floyd “would still be alive if he looked like me. That must change.”

At a park next to the Minneapoli­s courthouse, a hush fell over a crowd of about 300 as they listened to the verdict on their cellphones. Then a great roar went up, with many people hugging, some shedding tears.

At the intersecti­on where Floyd was pinned down, a crowd chanted, “One down, three to go!” — a reference to the three other fired Minneapoli­s officers facing trial in August on charges of aiding and abetting murder in Floyd’s death.

Jamee Haggard, who brought her biracial 4-year-old daughter to the city’s George Floyd Square, said: “There’s some form of justice that’s coming.”

The verdict was read in a courthouse ringed with concrete barriers and razor wire and patrolled by National Guard troops, in a city on edge against another round of unrest — not just because of the Chauvin case but because of the deadly police shooting of a young Black man, Daunte Wright, in a Minneapoli­s suburb April 11.

The jurors’ identities were kept secret and will not be released until the judge decides it is safe to do so.

It is unusual for police officers to be prosecuted for killing someone on the job. And conviction­s are extraordin­arily rare.

Out of the thousands of deadly police shootings in the U.S. since 2005, fewer than 140 officers have been charged with murder or manslaught­er, according to data maintained by Phil Stinson, a criminolog­ist at Bowling Green State University. Before Tuesday, only seven were convicted of murder.

Juries often give police officers the benefit of the doubt when they claim they had to make split-second, life-or-death decisions. But that was not an argument Chauvin could easily make.

Floyd, 46, died May 25 after being arrested on suspicion of passing a counterfei­t $20 bill for a pack of cigarettes at a corner market. He panicked, pleaded that he was claustroph­obic and struggled with police when they tried to put him in a squad car. They put him on the ground instead.

The centerpiec­e of the case was the excruciati­ng bystander video of Floyd gasping repeatedly, “I can’t breathe” and onlookers yelling at Chauvin to stop as the officer pressed his knee on or close to Floyd’s neck for what authoritie­s say was 9 1/2 minutes. Floyd slowly went silent and limp.

Prosecutor­s played the footage at the earliest opportunit­y, during opening statements, and told the jury: “Believe your eyes.” From there it was shown over and over, analyzed one frame at a time by witnesses on both sides.

After Floyd’s death, demonstrat­ions and scattered violence broke out in Minneapoli­s, around the country and beyond. In the months that followed, numerous states and cities restricted the use of force by police, revamped disciplina­ry systems or subjected police department­s to closer oversight.

Police-procedure experts and law enforcemen­t veterans inside and outside the Minneapoli­s department, including the chief, testified for the prosecutio­n that Chauvin used excessive force and went against his training.

Medical experts for the prosecutio­n said Floyd died of asphyxia, or lack of oxygen, because his breathing was constricte­d by the way he was held down on his stomach, his hands cuffed behind him, a knee on his neck and his face jammed against the ground.

Chauvin’s attorney called a police use-of-force expert and a forensic pathologis­t to try to make the case that Chauvin acted reasonably against a struggling suspect and that Floyd died because of a heart condition and his illegal drug use. Eighteen-year-old Darnella Frazier, who shot the crucial video, said Chauvin gave the bystanders a “cold” and “heartless” stare. She and others said they felt a sense of helplessne­ss and lingering guilt from witnessing Floyd’s slow-motion death.

“It’s been nights I stayed up, apologizin­g and apologizin­g to George Floyd for not doing more, and not physically interactin­g and not saving his life,” she testified.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Lisa Robinson shows her joy in Washington, D.C., after the announceme­nt Tuesday of three guilty verdicts in the murder trial of former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin. Major cities across the country saw celebratio­ns.
ALEX BRANDON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Lisa Robinson shows her joy in Washington, D.C., after the announceme­nt Tuesday of three guilty verdicts in the murder trial of former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin. Major cities across the country saw celebratio­ns.
 ??  ?? Derek Chauvin
Derek Chauvin
 ?? SOURCE: COURT TV ?? Former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin is taken into custody Tuesday after verdicts were read at his trial for the 2020 death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. Chauvin’s attorney, Eric Nelson, stands at left. Chauvin was convicted on all three charges, including second-degree murder.
SOURCE: COURT TV Former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin is taken into custody Tuesday after verdicts were read at his trial for the 2020 death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s. Chauvin’s attorney, Eric Nelson, stands at left. Chauvin was convicted on all three charges, including second-degree murder.

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