Orlando Sentinel

First trial to start in Floyd’s death

Several key questions await in ex-officer’s case as jurors to be selected

- By Amy Forliti

MINNEAPOLI­S — A Minneapoli­s police officer was swiftly fired and charged with murder after bystander video showed him pressing his knee into George Floyd’s neck, ignoring the Black man’s cries that he couldn’t breathe.

But even with that powerful footage, legal experts say the case isn’t a slam dunk.

Jury selection begins Monday in Derek Chauvin’s trial, which is expected to come down to two key questions: Did Chauvin’s actions cause Floyd’s death, and were his actions reasonable?

“It’s hard not to watch the video and conclude that the prosecutor­s will not have any trouble with this case,” said Susan Gaertner, the former head prosecutor in neighborin­g Ramsey County. “But it’s not that simple.”

Floyd was declared dead May 25 after Chauvin, who is white, pressed his knee against Floyd’s neck for about nine minutes, holding his position even after

Floyd went limp as he was handcuffed and lying on his stomach. Floyd’s death sparked sometimes violent protests in the U.S. and led to a nationwide reckoning on race.

Chauvin is charged with second-degree unintentio­nal murder and second-degree manslaught­er, and a panel of appeals court judges ruled Friday that the judge must consider reinstatin­g a third-degree murder charge that he dismissed last fall. Three other officers, all of whom also were fired, face trial in August on charges of aiding and abetting the second-degree murder and manslaught­er counts.

The second-degree murder charge requires prosecutor­s to prove Chauvin caused Floyd’s death while committing or trying to commit a felony — in this case, third-degree assault. The manslaught­er charge requires proof that Chauvin caused Floyd’s death through negligence that created an unreasonab­le risk, and consciousl­y took the chance of causing severe injury or death.

Exactly how Floyd died is shaping up as a major flashpoint of the trial.

Chauvin’s attorney, Eric Nelson, argues in court documents that Floyd likely died from fentanyl he consumed, or a combinatio­n of fentanyl, methamphet­amine and underlying health conditions — not as a result of Chauvin’s knee on his neck.

But Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill wrote last fall that for the second-degree murder charge, prosecutor­s don’t have to prove that Chauvin was the sole cause of Floyd’s death, only that his conduct was a “substantia­l causal factor.”

Still, defense attorneys who aren’t connected to the case say all Nelson has to do is raise reasonable doubt in a single juror’s mind.

“Although he had him pinned under his knee and he’s yelling ‘I can’t breathe! I can’t breathe!’ there’s an argument that (Chauvin) wasn’t exerting pressure and his inability to breathe was due to the drugs in his system or something to that effect, or his anxiety,” said F. Clayton Tyler, a prominent local defense attorney.

Criminal defense attorney Mike Brandt and Tyler said Chauvin will likely have to take the stand to explain why he felt he had to hold Floyd down for so long. Brandt said he’ll likely say he followed his training, and that it was necessary because his experience with other suspects under the influence of drugs shows that things can suddenly become erratic and dangerous.

Prosecutor­s, however, have submitted a list of previous instances in which Chauvin used chokeholds or similar restraints on the job. Cahill ruled they can admit only one as evidence: a 2017 arrest in which Chauvin restrained a female by placing his knee on her neck while she was prone on the ground.

Cahill also ruled that prosecutor­s can tell jurors about a 2015 incident in which Chauvin saw other officers place a suicidal, intoxicate­d male in a side-recovery position after using a stun gun on him. Cahill said prosecutor­s can introduce that if they can show Chauvin was present when a medical profession­al said that the male could have died if officers had prolonged the detention.

Brandt said telling the jury about those events will allow prosecutor­s to show that Chauvin knew the proper way to restrain someone and provide relief, and that he had done it wrong before.

Brandt said the third-degree murder charge could be easier for prosecutor­s to prove if it’s reinstated because they wouldn’t have to show Chauvin intended to commit assault. Instead, they must prove his actions caused Floyd’s death, and that they were reckless and without regard for human life.

The second-degree manslaught­er count alleges Chauvin took a risk that a reasonable person would have known could cause death. To defend against that, Brandt said, Chauvin could argue that he had used the same hold in the past and didn’t think it would cause a problem.

However, Brandt said “the whole case” against Chauvin is the video capturing the amount of time he restrained Floyd.

“You hear on the video the passersby, the onlookers saying, ‘Dude, he can’t breathe. Let him up. What are you doing? You are killing him,’ ” Brandt said. “I mean, it’s almost like they are giving a play-by-play.”

Tyler said if he were a prosecutor, he’d use a still shot of Chauvin’s expression­less face from that video and keep it in view for the jury.

“You want to show indifferen­ce? Just look at him,” Tyler said.

 ?? JIM MONE/AP ?? George Floyd Square is shown Feb. 8 in Minneapoli­s. Ten months after Floyd’s death at the hands of police, the square remains a makeshift memorial.
JIM MONE/AP George Floyd Square is shown Feb. 8 in Minneapoli­s. Ten months after Floyd’s death at the hands of police, the square remains a makeshift memorial.

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