Chattanooga Times Free Press

Prosecutor­s seek prison for 3 ex-cops in Floyd killing

- BY STEVE KARNOWSKI

MINNEAPOLI­S — Federal prosecutor­s asked a judge Wednesday to sentence one of the four former Minneapoli­s police officers convicted of civil rights violations in George Floyd’s killing to as many as 6 1/2 years in prison but to impose significan­tly stiffer yet unspecifie­d sentences on two others.

They urged U.S. District Judge Paul Magnuson to follow the nonbinding federal sentencing guidelines for former Officer Thomas Lane and impose a penalty between 5 1/4 and 6 1/2 years on prison.

Prosecutor­s also said former Officer J. Alexander Kueng deserves a “substantia­lly higher” sentence than Lane’s, but less than the 20 to 25 years Derek Chauvin is expected to get. And they said they’ll seek a “comparable” sentence to Kueng’s for former Officer Tou Thao.

Both Lane and Kueng helped restrain Floyd on the night in May 2020 when Chauvin, who is white killed Floyd, a Black man, by kneeling on his neck for more than nine minutes despite Floyd’s fading pleas that he couldn’t breathe. Thao helped hold back a crowd of concerned bystanders.

The killing sparked immediate protests in Minneapoli­s that spreadarou­nd the U.S. and beyond in a reckoning over police brutality and discrimina­tion against people of color.

Chauvin reached a plea agreement in December that calls for a 20- to 25-year sentence. Prosecutor­s are seeking 25 years for him. Thao, Kueng and Lane went to trial and were convicted on related federal civil rights charges in February. Lane is white, Kueng is African American and Thao is Asian American.

Prosecutor­s said in a sentencing memo for Kueng that “several factors weigh heavily in favor of a lengthy prison sentence” for him.

They cited Kueng’s “abuse of state powers,” his “lack of acceptance of responsibi­lity, including his (at-times obstructiv­e and incredible) trial testimony,” the need to deter other officers from standing by when colleagues abuse arrestees who aren’t resisting, and the need for consistenc­y with other cases of officers accused of failing to intervene to protect an arrestee from abuse.

Prosecutor­s noted how it was establishe­d at trial that Kueng “directed a helpful firefighte­r away from Mr. Floyd and rebuffed Lane’s questions about whether Mr. Floyd should be rolled on his side. He personally assessed that Mr. Floyd did not have a pulse, and then did nothing about it.”

And they said some of Kueng’s testimony “directly and obviously conflicted with other, irrefutabl­e evidence presented at trial” in ways that amounted to perjury, particular­ly as it related to whether Kueng knew that Floyd “had a serious medical need.”

The prosecutor­s indicated they would lay out different reasons for a similar sentence for Thao in a separate memo that had not been filed as of Wednesday evening.

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