USA TODAY International Edition

Charges upgraded in Floyd’s death

3 other officers accused of aiding and abetting

- Lorenzo Reyes

All four police officers in the killing of George Floyd will face charges, Minnesota’s attorney general announced Wednesday, and court papers described more details about how officers did nothing to stop Floyd from dying on the ground.

Attorney General Keith Ellison said at a news conference that evidence “supports a stronger charge” for Derek Chauvin. He had been charged with third- degree murder and manslaught­er May 29 and was taken into custody the same day.

Thomas Lane, J. A. Keung and Tou Thao were the other officers on the scene. Thao was charged with aiding and abetting second- degree murder in the commission of a felony; the other officers face similar charges of aiding and abetting. The bail for all four officers was set at $ 1 million.

“Trying this case will not be an easy thing,” Ellison said. “Winning a conviction will be hard.

“We are following the path of all the evidence, wherever it leads,” Ellison said. “We are investigat­ing as quickly as we can because speed is important. We’re also investigat­ing as thoroughly as we can because being complete and thorough is critically important. But it takes time. The reason thoroughne­ss is important is because every single link in the prosecutor­ial chain must be strong. It needs to be strong because trying this case will not be an easy thing. Winning a conviction will be hard.”

Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehensi­on superinten­dent Drew Evans said one of the three other officers is in custody and the other two were expected to be taken into custody by the end of the day.

Thao, according to a criminal complaint filed Wednesday, stood by as Floyd repeatedly said he could not breathe. Court papers describe Thao as being more concerned about controllin­g the nearby crowd than Floyd’s welfare.

Thao “became concerned about a number of citizens who had gathered and were watching the officers subdue Mr. Floyd, and potential traffic concerns, and so the defendant stood between those citizens and the three officers restrainin­g Mr. Floyd,” the charging papers said. The officer had moments earlier “looked directly at how Chauvin was restrainin­g Mr. Floyd, with Chauvin’s knee on Mr. Floyd’s neck area,” according to the court records. “When one citizen stepped off the curb, imploring Chauvin to get off Mr. Floyd, ( Thao) put his hands on the citizen to keep him back.”

Despite Floyd’s pleas that he could not breathe and was about to die, Chauvin had his knee on Floyd’s neck for eight minutes and 46 seconds. Two minutes and 53 seconds of that time was after Floyd was unresponsi­ve, the court records said.

“Police officers are trained that this type of restraint with a subject in a prone position is inherently dangerous,” the charging papers concluded. “Officer Chauvin’s restraint of Mr. Floyd in this manner for a prolonged period was a substantia­l causal factor” in Floyd’s death.

An official autopsy found that Floyd had arterioscl­erotic and hypertensi­ve heart disease, and toxicology testing revealed the presence of fentanyl and evidence of recent methamphet­amine use, court records show. A medical examiner “opined that the effects of the officers’ restraint of Mr. Floyd, his underlying health conditions and the presence of the drugs contribute­d to his death. … The ME concluded the manner of death was homicide.”

The incident led to mass protests over questions of police brutality and racial inequality and has shaken the nation. Once news of the additional charges broke, Floyd family attorney Benjamin Crump called the moment “bitterswee­t” and said the family was “deeply gratified” for Ellison’s action.

“This is a significant step forward on the road to justice, and we are gratified that this important action was brought before George Floyd’s body was laid to rest,” Crump said in a statement. “That is a source of peace for George’s family in this painful time. Attorney General Ellison has informed the family that his office will continue to investigat­e and will upgrade the charges to first- degree murder if the evidence supports it.”

Crump thanked people nationwide but pleaded for calm on city streets.

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