The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Mayor: Officer who put knee on man’s neck should be charged

- By Amy Forliti and Colleen Long

MINNEAPOLI­S » The mayor of Minneapoli­s called Wednesday for criminal charges against the white police officer seen on video kneeling against the neck of a handcuffed black man who complained that he could not breathe and died in police custody.

Based on the video, Mayor Jacob Frey said officer Derek Chauvin should be charged in the death of George Floyd. The footage recorded by a bystander shows Chauvin with his knee on Floyd’s neck as Floyd gasps for breath on the ground with his face against the pavement. The officer does not move for at least eight minutes, even after Floyd stops speaking and moving.

“I’ve wrestled with, more than anything else over the last 36 hours, one fundamenta­l question: Why is the man who killed George Floyd not in jail?” said Frey, who is white.

He later added: “I saw no threat. I saw nothing that would signal that this kind of force was necessary.”

The day after Floyd died, Chauvin and three other officers were fired — an act that did not stem the flood of anger that followed the widely seen video shot on Memorial Day outside a convenienc­e store.

Protesters marched more than 2 miles Tuesday to the police precinct in that part of the city, with some damaging property and skirmishin­g with officers in riot gear who fired tear gas. The Star Tribune reported more conflict Wednesday night at the same precinct, with some protesters throwing rocks and bottles at police, who responded with rubber bullets and tear gas. The newspaper also reported looting at a Target store across the street from the station.

Another demonstrat­ion unfolded on the street outside Chauvin’s suburban home. An officer told protesters that Chauvin was not there. Red cans of paint were earlier spilled on his driveway, and someone wrote “murderer” in chalk at the end of his driveway. No one answered when an Associated Press reporter knocked on the door.

Many activists, citizens and celebritie­s called for criminal charges before Frey did. But Floyd’s family and the community may have to wait months, if not years, before investigat­ions are complete.

Floyd family attorney Benjamin Crump, a prominent civil rights lawyer, called for peaceful protests.

“We cannot sink to the level of our oppressors, and we must not endanger others during this pandemic,” Crump said in a statement. “We will demand and ultimately force lasting change by shining a light on treatment that is horrific and unacceptab­le and by winning justice.”

Police Chief Medaria Arradondo,

who rose to the top job after his predecesso­r was forced out following the 2017 shooting of an unarmed white woman by a black Minneapoli­s officer, urged protesters to “be respectful.” He said he was working to change the department’s culture.

“One incident can significan­tly bring people to doubt that,” he said.

The chief defended the department’s use of tear gas to break up Tuesday night’s protests, saying officers used it only after some people broke into a secure area that gave them access to squad cars and weapons.

Gov. Tim Walz and Minnesota’s two top law enforcemen­t officials — Attorney General Keith Ellison and Public Safety Commission­er John Harrington, both black — promised a thorough, transparen­t investigat­ion. But Walz and Ellison didn’t endorse the mayor’s call to immediatel­y charge the officer, saying the legal process needs to play out.

“I understand the emotions are running high, and I think it’s important for the mayor to channel the emotion of the people who he represents. But I think it is critical that we adhere very closely to the facts and the law and the normal process,” Ellison said.

The Hennepin County Attorney’s Office, which would prosecute any state charges, issued a statement saying that Floyd’s death had “outraged us and people across the country” and that the case “deserves the best we can give.”

The FBI was investigat­ing whether officers willfully deprived Floyd of his civil rights.

Floyd’s death and that of Ahmaud Arbery in Georgia have reopened the divide between minority communitie­s and police that grew to a national uproar following the 2014 killings of Eric Garner and Michael Brown, the 2015 killing of Freddie Gray and others.

Speaking to reporters at Cape Canaveral, Florida, President Donald Trump called the death in Minneapoli­s “a very, very sad event” and said his administra­tion was going to “look at it.” Later, he tweeted that he had asked for the federal investigat­ion be expedited.

Democrat Joe Biden said Floyd’s death was “part of an ingrained, systemic cycle of injustice that still exists in this country” and “cuts at the very heart of our sacred belief that all Americans are equal in rights.”

It also “sends a very clear message to the black community and black lives that are under threat every single day,” Biden added, saying he was glad the mayor and the police department fired the officers, “but I don’t think that’s enough.”

A 2017 Pew Research Center study found that police think the public does not understand the risks they face. A more recent study from September showed police were considered more trustworth­y than Congress, but only 33% of black adults and half of Hispanics say they believe officers treat racial and ethnic groups equally.

Shocking videos of black men dying continue to emerge during the pandemic, which is hitting communitie­s of color harder than white communitie­s. Floyd himself had been laid off from his nightclub security job in the pandemic, a friend told the AP. Police say Floyd matched the descriptio­n of someone who tried to pay with a counterfei­t bill at the convenienc­e store.

It was unclear why Floyd was arrested in such a physical way for what would have been a low-level crime. Police in most large cities have backed away from certain arrests to guard against further spread of the virus. The officers in the video were not wearing masks.

A Minneapoli­s Fire Department report shows that paramedics moved Floyd from the scene, and two fire crew members got into the ambulance to help. Medics were doing chest compressio­ns and other lifesaving measures on an “unresponsi­ve, pulseless male,” the report said. Floyd was pronounced dead at a hospital.

 ?? CARLOS GONZALEZ — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP ?? People gather in front of the Minneapoli­s police standing guard, Wednesday, May 27, 2020, as they protest the arrest and death of George Floyd who died in police custody Monday night in Minneapoli­s after video shared online by a bystander showed a white officer kneeling on his neck during his arrest as he pleaded that he couldn’t breathe.
CARLOS GONZALEZ — STAR TRIBUNE VIA AP People gather in front of the Minneapoli­s police standing guard, Wednesday, May 27, 2020, as they protest the arrest and death of George Floyd who died in police custody Monday night in Minneapoli­s after video shared online by a bystander showed a white officer kneeling on his neck during his arrest as he pleaded that he couldn’t breathe.

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