The Boston Globe

Former Minn. police officer guilty in Floyd’s death

Judge says Thao aided and abetted in fatal encounter

- By Amanda Holpuch

A former Minneapoli­s police officer who held back bystanders as other officers restrained George Floyd was found guilty Monday of aiding and abetting second-degree manslaught­er in Floyd’s killing.

Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill said in the verdict that the former officer, Tou Thao, who had waived his right to a jury trial, “actively encouraged his three colleagues’ dangerous prone restraint of Floyd.” Thao, 37, was the last of the four officers with unresolved criminal charges in the killing of Floyd.

Floyd died on May 25, 2020, after one of the officers, Derek Chauvin, pressed his knee on his neck for more than nine minutes. Two other officers held Floyd down while Thao, who was Chauvin’s partner, kept away bystanders who were saying that Floyd was struggling to breathe and needed help.

The killing of Floyd, who was Black, was captured in video recorded by bystanders, setting off protests that evolved into a global movement for racial justice.

Thao is currently serving a 3½-year federal sentence for failing to provide medical help to Floyd and for failing to stop Chauvin. His sentencing hearing is scheduled for Aug. 7.

“While we have now reached the end of the prosecutio­n of Floyd’s murder, it is not behind us,” Keith Ellison, the Minnesota attorney general, said. “There is much more that prosecutor­s, law-enforcemen­t leaders, rankand-file officers, elected officials, and community can do to bring about true justice in law enforcemen­t and true trust and safety in all communitie­s.”

The legal team for Floyd’s family, including the lawyer Ben Crump, said in a statement Tuesday the family was “grateful for another measure of accountabi­lity for his death.”

“Nearly three years after George was killed,” the statement said, “the family and Minneapoli­s community continue to heal as the criminal justice system prevails.”

Thao was set to face a jury trial on the state charges but instead asked Cahill to determine his guilt or innocence in an unusual process in which the defense and the prosecutio­n jointly present an agreed-to set of facts. As part of this process, Thao waived the right to testify and to question witnesses.

“Like the bystanders, Thao could see Floyd’s life slowly ebbing away as the restraint continued,” Cahill wrote in the verdict. “Yet Thao made a conscious decision to actively participat­e in Floyd’s death: He held back the concerned bystanders and even prevented an off-duty Minneapoli­s firefighte­r from rendering the medical aid Floyd so desperatel­y needed.”

Prosecutor­s said Thao, who was an officer for nearly nine years, violated the Minneapoli­s Police Department’s motto, which urges officers to serve with courage and compassion, on the day that Floyd was killed, and that he ignored police training and “acted without courage and displayed no compassion.”

Thao’s lawyer, Robert Paule, argued in the defense’s written closing argument that Thao believed Floyd was experienci­ng excited delirium, a vague and poorly understood diagnosis often cited in cases when people die in police custody.

“Whether or not this medical phenomenon is real, Thao was taught that people in these highly agitated states are extremely dangerous to themselves and others, unless they are restrained until they are sedated,” Paule wrote.

Paule said in the closing argument that every one of Thao’s actions that day was based on training he received from the Minneapoli­s Police Department.

The three other officers who were on the scene when Floyd was killed have been convicted on state and federal charges.

Floyd, 46, was arrested after a convenienc­e store employee accused him of buying cigarettes with a counterfei­t $20 bill. The Police Department fired all four officers involved in his arrest the day after Floyd was killed.

Chauvin was found guilty of murder and later pleaded guilty to a federal charge of violating Floyd’s civil rights. He is expected to spend more than two decades in prison.

J. Alexander Kueng, who helped to pin Floyd as he gasped for air, pleaded guilty to manslaught­er in October and was convicted in federal court of violating Floyd’s constituti­onal rights. He is concurrent­ly serving a three-year sentence and a 3½-year sentence.

Thomas Lane pleaded guilty in May 2022 to a state charge of aiding and abetting second-degree manslaught­er. Lane, who is white, was also convicted of violating Floyd’s rights. He is serving two sentences, for 2½ years and three years, concurrent­ly.

 ?? ?? Former Minneapoli­s police officer Tou Thao.
Former Minneapoli­s police officer Tou Thao.

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