Chattanooga Times Free Press

Battle over Floyd arrest in 2019 highlights issue

- BY STEVE KARNOWSKI AND AMY FORLITI

MINNEAPOLI­S — A lawyer for the former Minneapoli­s police officer who pressed his knee against George Floyd’s neck wants to bring up Floyd’s history of drug use and a previous arrest in an effort to show jurors that Floyd was partly to blame for his own death.

A prosecutor says it’s irrelevant and that Derek Chauvin’s lawyer is trying to smear Floyd to excuse his client’s actions. Chauvin is charged with murder and manslaught­er.

Now it’s up to Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill to decide the critical question of how much the high-profile trial will revolve around Floyd’s own actions on May 25, when the Black man died after Chauvin, who is white, pressed his knee against his neck for about nine minutes. Floyd’s death, captured on a widely seen bystander video, set off weeks of sometimes-violent protests across the country and led to a national reckoning on racial justice.

The judge previously rejected Chauvin’s attempt to tell the jury about Floyd’s May 2019 arrest — a year before his fatal encounter with Chauvin — but heard fresh arguments Tuesday from both sides. He said he would rule on the request Wednesday morning at the earliest.

Defense attorney Eric Nelson argued that new evidence makes the earlier arrest admissible: Drugs were found last December during a second search of the car Floyd was in, and were found in a January search of the squad car into which the four officers attempted to put Floyd.

He also argued the similariti­es in both encounters are relevant: Both times, as officers drew their guns and struggled to get Floyd out of the car, he called out for his mother, claimed he had been shot before and cried, and put what appeared to be pills in his mouth. Both searches turned up drugs in the cars. Officers noticed a white residue outside his mouth both times, although that has not been explained.

In the first arrest, several opioid pills were found, along with cocaine. An autopsy showed Floyd had fentanyl and methamphet­amine in his system when he died.

“The similariti­es are incredible. The exact same behavior in two incidents, almost one year apart,” Nelson said.

Paramedics who examined Floyd in 2019 warned him that his blood pressure was dangerousl­y high, putting him at risk for a heart attack or stroke, and took him to a hospital for examinatio­n. Nelson argued that shows Floyd knew that swallowing drugs might result in going to the hospital rather than jail.

But prosecutor Matthew Frank argued that evidence from the 2019 arrest was prejudicia­l. He said the defense wants it as a backdoor way of depicting Floyd as a bad person. He called it “the desperatio­n of the defense to smear Mr. Floyd’s character, to show that what he struggled with an opiate addiction like so many Americans do, is really evidence of bad character.”

And he argued that the only relevant thing in Floyd’s death is how he was handled by Chauvin and the other officers.

“What these officers were dealing with is what they were responsibl­e for,” Frank said. “What is relevant to this case is what they knew at the scene at this time.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/JIM MONE ?? A group of protesters march in the snow around the Hennepin County Government Center on Monday in Minneapoli­s where the second week of jury selection continues in the trial for former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin.
AP PHOTO/JIM MONE A group of protesters march in the snow around the Hennepin County Government Center on Monday in Minneapoli­s where the second week of jury selection continues in the trial for former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States