New York Post

AG's error sets stage for outrage

- James A. Gagliano is a retired FBI supervisor­y special agent and doctoral candidate at St. John’s University. JAMES GAGLIANO

WE exist in a period of ideologica­l purity tests and zero tolerance for what F. Scott Fitzgerald described as “the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.”

For that reason, it is necessary to balance the revulsion for disgraced former Minneapoli­s Police Officer Derek Chauvin’s mistreatme­nt of George Floyd — an appalling case of police brutality — with recognitio­n that prosecutor­s may have made a critical error by overchargi­ng the case.

Let us stipulate that the conduct of Chauvin — an armed instrument of the state — was repugnant and, yes, criminal. Casually kneeling on a handcuffed, prone suspect’s neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds does not meet the definition of proportion­al police use of force. No twisted, distorted interpreta­tion of “objective reasonable­ness” — codified by the Supreme Court in Graham v. Connor as the means to judge law-enforcemen­t actions — changes that.

Law-enforcemen­t profession­als won’t defend Chauvin’s misconduct. There is no defense for it. However, criminal cases are often messy, complicate­d and complex.

To wit, Hennepin County Medical Examiner Dr. Andrew Baker, concluded that the cause of death was homicide. However, the preliminar­y report suggested that underlying conditions may have contribute­d to Floyd’s death.

The attendant toxicologi­cal report concluded that the death was attributab­le to the “combined effects of Mr. Floyd’s being restrained by police, underlying health conditions and any potential intoxicant­s in his system.” Traces of fentanyl, methamphet­amine and an underlying heart condition surely lends to the messy, complicate­d and complex particular­s of this criminal case.

In court — not the publicopin­ion version — there will be an introducti­on of physical and testimonia­l evidence. And this is where prosecutor­s have made a miscalcula­tion. Last May, the Hennepin County attorney charged third-degree murder and second-degree manslaught­er. Public outcry led Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison to add a charge of second-degree murder. After a series of appellate challenges, the charges remain intact.

The prosecutor­ial burden of proof in a murder case is an impossibly high threshold when saddled with the autopsy report’s listed contributo­ry factors in Floyd’s death.

Proving an applicable second-degree murder charge in Minnesota requires an intent to cause death; impossible to prove in this case. The definition of third-degree murder is murkier and plagued with conflictin­g interpreta­tions.

However, a person may be charged with second-degree manslaught­er if they “knowingly or consciousl­y take a risk (like kneeling on someone’s neck) that results in the death of a person.” Chauvin’s conduct was manslaught­er, culpable negligence. For those viewing as injustice anything less than a murder conviction, forewarned is forearmed.

Prediction: Acquittal on the murder charges and conviction on second-degree manslaught­er.

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