Dayton Daily News

Mayor: Officer should be charged

- By Amy Forliti and Jeff Baenen

— The mayor of Minneapoli­s called Wednesday for criminal charges to be filed against the white police officer seen on video kneeling on the neck of a handcuffed black man during an arrest, even after the man said he couldn’t breathe and stopped moving.

Based on the video, Mayor Jacob Frey said he believes officer Derek Chauvin should be charged in Monday’s death of George Floyd. Chauvin and three other officers were fired Tuesday. The video recorded by a bystander shows Chauvin with his knee on Floyd’s neck for several minutes as Floyd is on the ground with his face against the pavement.

“I’ve wrestled with, more than anything else over the last 36 hours, one fundamenta­l question: Why is the man who killed George Floyd not in jail?” said Frey, who is white.

He later added: “I saw no threat. I saw nothing that would signal that this kind of force was necessary.”

But despite the officers’ swift dismissals, whether the death will be considered a criminal act or something less, like excessive force, is a more complicate­d question that will likely take months to investigat­e.

Floyd’s death prompted protests Tuesday, with thousands taking to the streets at the intersecti­on where he died.

Many protesters marched more than 2 miles to the police precinct station in that part of the city, with some damaging the building’s windows and squad cars and spraying graffiti. Police in riot gear eventually confronted them with tear gas and projectile­s. Tense skirmishes stretched late into the evening.

Bridgett Floyd told NBC’s

“Today” show that the officers involved in her brother’s death should be charged with murder because “that’s exactly what they did.” She said she had not watched the video, but she told ABC’s “Good Morning America” that she does not understand “how someone could possibly let an individual go out like that.”

The FBI and state law enforcemen­t were investigat­ing Floyd’s death, which immediatel­y drew comparison­s to the case of Eric Garner, an unarmed black man who died in 2014 in New York after he was placed in a choke hold by police and pleaded for his life, saying he could not breathe.

In the Garner case, local prosecutor­s, the NYPD’s internal affairs unit and the Justice Department all finished investigat­ions into the case before the officer was ultimately fired. Garner’s family and activists spent years begging for the officer to be removed.

The officers in the Minneapoli­s case have not been publicly identified, though one defense attorney has confirmed he is representi­ng Chauvin. The attorney, Tom Kelly, declined to comment further.

The police union asked the public to wait for the investigat­ion to take its course and not to “rush to judgment and immediatel­y condemn our officers.” Messages left with the union after the firings were not returned.

During Tuesday’s protests, some chanted and carried banners that read, “I can’t breathe” and “Jail killer KKKops.” Some stacked shopping carts to make a barricade at a Target store across the street from the station.

News accounts show Chauvin was one of six officers who fired their weapons in the 2006 death of Wayne Reyes, who police said pointed a sawed-off shotgun at officers after stabbing two people. Chauvin also shot and wounded a man in 2008 during a struggle after Chauvin and his partner responded to a reported domestic assault. Police did not immediatel­y respond to a request for Chauvin’s service record.

In Minneapoli­s, kneeling on a suspect’s neck is allowed under the department’s useof-force policy for officers who have received training in how to compress a neck without applying direct pressure to the airway. It is considered a “non-deadly force option,” according to the department’s policy handbook.

Two use-of-force experts told The Associated Press that the officer clearly restrained the man too long, noting that the man was under control and no longer fighting. Andrew Scott, a former Boca Raton, Florida, police chief who now testifies as an expert witness in use-of-force cases, called Floyd’s death “a combinatio­n of not being trained properly or disregardi­ng their training.”

“He couldn’t move. He was telling them he couldn’t breathe, and they ignored him,” Scott said. “I can’t even describe it. It was difficult to watch.”

Police said the man matched the descriptio­n of a suspect in a forgery case at a grocery store, and that he resisted arrest.

The video starts with the man on the ground, and does not show what happened in the moments prior. The unidentifi­ed officer is kneeling on his neck, ignoring his pleas. “Please, please, please, I can’t breathe. Please, man,” said Floyd, who has his face against the pavement.

Floyd also moans. One of the officers tells him to “relax.” Floyd calls for his mother and says: “My stomach hurts, my neck hurts, everything hurts ... I can’t breathe.” As bystanders shout their concern, one officer says, “He’s talking, so he’s breathing.”

The man slowly becomes motionless under the officer’s restraint. The officer does not remove his knee until the man is loaded onto a gurney by paramedics.

Several witnesses had gathered on a nearby sidewalk, some recording the scene on their phones. The bystanders become increasing­ly agitated. One man yells repeatedly. “He’s not responsive right now!” Two witnesses, including one woman who said she was a Minneapoli­s firefighte­r, yell at the officers to check the man’s pulse. “Check his pulse right now and tell me what it is!” she said.

 ??  ??
 ?? RICHARD TSONG-TAATARII / STAR TRIBUNE ?? Minneapoli­s police officers confront protesters at a rally for George Floyd, who died after an officer kneeled on his neck during an arrest.
RICHARD TSONG-TAATARII / STAR TRIBUNE Minneapoli­s police officers confront protesters at a rally for George Floyd, who died after an officer kneeled on his neck during an arrest.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States