Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Witness: Officer in Floyd case gave ‘cold’ stare

- By Steve Karnowski and Amy Forliti

As onlookers pleaded with Minneapoli­s police Officer Derek Chauvin to take his knee off George Floyd’s neck, Chauvin just gave them a “cold” and “heartless” stare, the woman who shot the harrowing video of the arrest testified Tuesday at Chauvin’s murder trial.

In tearful testimony, Darnella Frazier, 18, said that Chauvin continued to kneel on Floyd and that fellow Officer Tou Thao held the crowd back, even when one of the onlookers identified herself as a firefighte­r and begged repeatedly to check Floyd’s pulse.

“They definitely put their hands on the Mace, and we all pulled back,” Frazier told the jury.

Frazier said of Chauvin, “He just stared at us, looked at us. He had like this cold look, heartless. He didn’t care. It seemed as if he didn’t care what we were saying.”

Floyd’s death last May, along with the video of the Black man pleading that he couldn’t breathe and onlookers angrily yelling at the white officer to get off him, triggered sometimesv­iolent protests around the world and the reckoning over racism and police brutality across the U.S.

Frazier testified that she began recording the scene because “it wasn’t right, he was suffering, he was in pain.”

She said she walked to a convenienc­e store with her 9-year-old cousin when she came upon the officers, and sent the girl inside because she didn’t want her to see “a man terrified, scared, begging for his life.”

Frazier breathed heavily and wept as she viewed pictures of Chauvin kneeling on Floyd and after a prosecutor asked her to describe how the encounter changed her life.

She said she looks at her father and other Black men in her life, and “how that could have been one of them.”

“I stay up at night apologizin­g to George Floyd for not doing more ... not saving his life,” she said, adding of Chauvin, “It’s not what I should have done; it’s what he should have done.”

Another bystander, 18-year-old Alyssa Funari, testified tearfully that she also felt helpless to intervene when she saw Floyd struggling to breathe as Chauvin knelt on his neck and other officers pinned down his lower body.

“I felt like there wasn’t really anything I could do as a bystander,” Funari said, adding that she felt she was failing Floyd. “Technicall­y I could’ve did something, but I couldn’t really do anything physically ... because the highest power was there at the time,” she said, explaining that an officer held the crowd back.

The prosecutio­n asked multiple witnesses to describe their horror at what they saw, buttressin­g the testimony with multiple videos.

New video

Prosecutor­s played cellphone video recorded by Funari that showed bystanders becoming more frantic as they watched Floyd stop moving. The video, which had not been released before, also showed the woman who said she was a Minneapoli­s firefighte­r calmly walk up to Thao and offer to help, before he ordered her to get back on the curb.

Frazier likewise testified that the bystanders became increasing­ly upset by what they were seeing and got louder, “more so as he was becoming more unresponsi­ve.”

Chauvin attorney Eric Nelson sought to use the same evidence to show that Chauvin and his fellow officers found themselves in an increasing­ly tense and distractin­g situation, with the growing crowd becoming more angry over Floyd’s treatment.

But witnesses also testified that no bystanders interfered with police. When Frazier was asked by a prosecutor whether she saw violence anywhere on the scene, she replied, “Yes, from the cops. From Chauvin, and from officer Thao.”

Chauvin, 45, is charged with murder and manslaught­er, accused of killing Floyd by pinning the 46-year-old handcuffed man to the pavement for what prosecutor­s said was 9 minutes and 29 seconds. Floyd was arrested after being accused of trying to pass a counterfei­t $20 bill at the convenienc­e store.

The most serious charge against the now-fired officer carries up to 40 years in prison.

Defense argument

The defense has argued that Chauvin did what his training told him to do and that Floyd’s death was not caused by the officer, but by a combinatio­n of illegal drug use, heart disease, high blood pressure and the adrenaline flowing through his body.

Earlier Tuesday, Donald Williams, another one of the onlookers who shouted at Chauvin, testified that he called emergency dispatcher­s after paramedics took Floyd away, “because I believed I witnessed a murder.”

Williams, a profession­al mixed martial-arts fighter who said his training includes chokeholds, returned to the witness stand the day after describing seeing Floyd struggle for air, his eyes roll back in his head, and Floyd “slowly fade away ... like a fish in a bag.”

On Tuesday, prosecutor­s played back Williams’ call, in which a dispatcher offers to switch him to a sergeant. As he is being switched, Williams can he heard yelling at the officers at the scene, “Y’all is murderers, bro!”

During cross-examinatio­n, Chauvin’s attorney pointed out that Williams seemed to grow increasing­ly angry at the police, taunting Chauvin with “tough guy,” “bum,” and other names, then calling Chauvin expletives, which the defense lawyer repeated in court.

Williams initially admitted he was getting angrier, but backtracke­d and said he was controlled and profession­al and was pleading for Floyd’s life, but wasn’t being heard.

Williams said he was stepping on and off the curb, and at one point, Thao, who was controllin­g the crowd, put his hand on Williams’ chest. Williams admitted under questionin­g that he told Thao he would beat the officers if Thao touched him again.

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