San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SNAP-DECISION DEFENSE MAY NOT WORK FOR MINNEAPOLI­S OFFICER

- BY COLLEEN LONG & CLAUDIA LAUER Long and Lauer write for The Associated Press.

Convicting a police officer of killing someone is notoriousl­y difficult, in part because juries hesitate to second-guess the defendant when the officer claims to have made a split-second decision in a life-or-death situation. But that’s probably not an argument Derek Chauvin can make.

The fired Minneapoli­s police officer who goes on trial Monday was captured on video pinning George Floyd to the pavement, his knee on the Black man’s neck, for about nine minutes last May. Onlookers repeatedly shouted at Chauvin to get off, asked him to check for a pulse and warned that Floyd no longer seemed to be breathing.

“If I’m a prosecutor, I’m holding my stopwatch up for 8 minutes and 47 seconds and showing the jury how long that is,” said Geoffrey Alpert, a criminolog­y professor at the University of South Carolina who cowrote “Evaluating Police Uses of Force.”

Still, Alpert and other experts said that despite the strength of the video that prompted a nationwide outpouring of fury over Floyd’s death, prosecutor­s could be hard-pressed to convict Chauvin of murder because of both the facts of the case and attitudes toward police.

Chauvin’s lawyers are expected to argue that Floyd’s swallowing of drugs during his arrest — along with the 46-year-old man’s underlying health conditions, including high blood pressure and heart disease — caused or at least contribute­d to his death.

As for Chauvin, “the jury will have to overcome the suggestion that he was just trying to do his job well,” said former federal prosecutor Taryn Merkl, now senior counsel at the Brennan Center’s Justice Program at New York University. “Most jurors don’t want to believe officers go to work and think ‘I’m going to kill someone today.’”

Phil Stinson, a criminolog­ist at Bowling Green State University who tracks cases against police, said that out of thousands of deadly police shootings in the U.S. since 2005, fewer than 140 officers have been charged with murder or manslaught­er. Only seven of those were convicted of murder.

Historical­ly, juries have been more willing to give officers the benefit of the doubt that they acted reasonably during violent or fatal encounters. Stinson said juries seem to also opt for lesser charges or acquit officers who have lost their job, seemingly asking themselves if the officers have been “punished enough already.”

“Officers’ criminal actions are not recognized as such by juries sometimes because everyone recognizes that policing in this country is often violent,” he said.

In many cases, defense attorneys for police officers describe in great detail the chaos of the moment, the darkness of the street, the sound of what they thought was a weapon, a speeding car — circumstan­ces that might have left an officer with little time to think about how to react.

In reviewing his research last week, Stinson found at least 25 officers who were charged over deaths or injuries sustained during chokeholds or restraints since 2005, and very rarely with murder or manslaught­er. But many more officers were not charged.

Some police officers have been found guilty in cases where prosecutor­s were able to show that a reasonable person would not have reacted in the same way. In Texas, officer Roy Oliver was convicted of killing 15-yearold Jordan Edwards by opening fire on a car full of teenagers as they left a house party. Oliver’s partner testified that he had not perceived a threat.

Prosecutor­s in Chauvin’s case hope the pleas from onlookers to check on Floyd will serve the same purpose.

On the citizen video, bystanders can be heard shouting at Chauvin and other officers at the scene over several minutes: “Is he breathing right now?” “Check his pulse. Check his pulse. Check his pulse, bro.” “Bro, he has not moved, not one time!” “He’s dying!” and “Get off of his neck! Get off of his neck!“

Alpert, the criminolog­y professor, said that beyond the initial moments of the confrontat­ion between Chauvin and Floyd, there was little of the chaos that can affect sound decisionma­king.

“There may have been a split-second decision on what to do when Mr. Floyd would not get into the car and how do you handle it,” he said. “But each second after that, there was no need for a split-second decision.”

 ?? JOHN MINCHILLO AP ?? Protesters against police brutality chant during a rally at Cadman Plaza Park in New York on June 4.
JOHN MINCHILLO AP Protesters against police brutality chant during a rally at Cadman Plaza Park in New York on June 4.

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