Connecticut Post

Advocates: New charges in Floyd case right move

Community hails Minn. steps, wants more

- By Pat Tomlinson and Tara O’Neill

Prominent members of Connecticu­t’s black community reacted Wednesday to the charges being elevated against former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin and the arrests of three others in the death of George Floyd.

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison plans to upgrade the charge against Chauvin to seconddegr­ee murder, while also charging Thomas Lane, J. Kueng and Tou Thao with aiding and abetting second-degree murder.

Scot X. Esdaile, president of the Connecticu­t NAACP, called Ellison’s decision the “right thing to do.”

“It’s a shame that we have to go through all this just for them to do

the right thing, which they should have done from the start,” Esdaile said. “Police are supposed to protect and serve, but when something like this happens, we have to jump through all these hoops and twists and turns, with riots, burning of buildings and we have to turn the whole country upside down just to get justice.”

While Esdaile said the decision to prosecute Chauvin for second-degree murder, as well as charging the three other officers who were present when Floyd died, was a step in the right direction, he warned that this is “by no means a victory yet.”

“That’s why we have to stay vigilant and continue to keep the pressure to make sure that justice is truly served,” he said.

The charges come days after Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz asked Ellison to take over the prosecutio­n, which until Sunday had been led by the Hennepin County Attorney's Office.

The Rev. Boise Kimber, pastor of First Calvary Baptist Church in New Haven and a longtime civil rights activist, said he thanks the governor of Minnesota for appointing the attorney general there to lead this investigat­ion.

“It ceases to amaze me again that the district attorney could only come up with third-degree murder and manslaught­er and did not move to arrest the other three officers expeditiou­sly, but they are arrested today,” Kimber said. “I think that we should ask the governor of our state to give police brutality cases to our attorney general.”

Dorie Dumas, president of the Greater New Haven Branch of the NAACP, said the arrests are what has been advocated for by so many, and it is an important move in the right direction.

“But we do not want just the arrests; we want to see conviction­s,” Dumas said.

“We are going to keep watching … for them to do the right thing,” Dumas said.

Dumas said she hopes to see real, systemic changes. She said in the wake of Floyd’s death, she has seen many young people confused, angry and upset.

“I think people are at a point where they can’t take it anymore and they have to see some real change,” she said. “Everyone should be treated with dignity. Nobody deserves the injustice we have seen.”

Greg Johnson, who heads the Valley NAACP, said all of the officers should be prosecuted “to the full extent of the law.”

“Racism and hate should not be welcome in any community,” Johnson said. “Looking at the video . ... I’m not an attorney, but my gut feeling is the state and federal government should prosecute to the full extent of the law.”

He said a federal grand jury should be impaneled to bring charges of violating constituti­onal rights.

“Not only should there be federal and state charges, but a civil suit must be filed,” Johnson said.

“There’s always been questions in the minority community that police are not held accountabl­e for their actions,” he said.

Johnson has been a leader in calling for an end to racism in the Naugatuck Valley communitie­s.

He questioned Ansonia police in 2018 when the Central Connecticu­t State University Institute for Municipal and Regional Policy listed the department among eight in the state as having a disparate percentage of motor vehicle stops involving minorities.

He sought an investigat­ion into the Derby Police Department following a 2018 complaint that officers singled out a group of minority teenagers who lingered after the annual Fourth of July fireworks display.

Last year, he urged Shelton’s school system to institute racial bias protocols and schedule diversity workshops after a series of racially insensitiv­e incidents involving students. One involved an Intermedia­te School student spitting on a black person during a school trip to the Smithsonia­n’s National Museum of African American History and Culture in Washington, D.C. This led to all of the Shelton students being asked to leave.

 ?? Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media ?? Protesters take a knee in the middle of Interstate 84 to protest police brutality in Danbury on Wednesday. The protest was one of dozens all over the country after the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.
Christian Abraham / Hearst Connecticu­t Media Protesters take a knee in the middle of Interstate 84 to protest police brutality in Danbury on Wednesday. The protest was one of dozens all over the country after the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

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