The Commercial Appeal

Cop: Chauvin trained to avoid neck

- Amy Forliti, Steve Karnowski and Tammy Webber

MINNEAPOLI­S – Minneapoli­s police are taught to restrain combative suspects with a knee on their back or shoulders if necessary but are told to “stay away from the neck when possible,” a department use-of-force instructor testified Tuesday at former Officer Derek Chauvin’s murder trial.

Lt. Johnny Mercil became the latest member of the Minneapoli­s force to take the stand as part of an effort by prosecutor­s to dismantle the argument that Chauvin was doing what he was trained to do when he put his knee on George Floyd’s neck last May.

Several experience­d officers, including the police chief himself, have testified that Floyd should not have been kept pinned to the pavement for close to 9 1⁄2minutes by prosecutor­s’ reckoning as the Black man lay face-down, his hands cuffed behind his back.

According to testimony and records submitted Tuesday, Chauvin took a 40hour course in 2016 on how to recognize people in crisis and how to use deescalati­on techniques to calm them down.

Sgt. Ker Yang, the Minneapoli­s police official in charge of crisis-interventi­on training, said officers are taught to “slow things down and re-evaluate and reassess.”

Records show Chauvin also underwent training in the use of force in 2018. Mercil said those who attended were taught that the sanctity of life is a cornerston­e of department­al policy and that officers must use the least amount of force required to get a suspect to comply.

Under cross-examinatio­n by Chauvin attorney Eric Nelson, Mercil testified that officers are trained in some situations to use their knee across a suspect’s back or shoulder and employ their body weight to maintain control.

But Mercil added: “We tell officers to stay away from the neck when possible.”

Nelson has argued that the nowfired white officer “did exactly what he had been trained to do over his 19-year career,” and he has suggested that the illegal drugs in Floyd’s system and his underlying health conditions are what killed him, not Chauvin’s knee.

In fact, Nelson sought to point out moments in the video footage when he said Chauvin’s knee did not appear to be on Floyd’s neck.

Nelson showed Mercil several images taken from officers’ body-camera videos, asking after each one whether it showed Chauvin’s knee appearing to rest more on Floyd’s back, shoulder or shoulder blades than directly on Floyd’s neck. Mercil often agreed.

Nelson acknowledg­ed the images were difficult to make out. .

In other testimony, Jody Stiger, a Los Angeles Police Department sergeant serving as a prosecutio­n use-offorce expert, said officers were justified in using force while Floyd was resisting being put into a squad car. But once he was on the ground and stopped resisting, “at that point the officers … should have slowed down or stopped their force as well.”

Stiger said that after reviewing video of the arrest, “my opinion was that the force was excessive.”

Chauvin, 45, is charged with murder and manslaught­er in Floyd’s death.

 ?? COURT TV VIA AP, POOL ?? Minneapoli­s Police Crisis Interventi­on Coordinato­r Ker Yang testified Tuesday for the prosecutio­n.
COURT TV VIA AP, POOL Minneapoli­s Police Crisis Interventi­on Coordinato­r Ker Yang testified Tuesday for the prosecutio­n.

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