Las Vegas Review-Journal

Lombardo: Floyd’s death alarming

Nevada law enforcemen­t critical of Minneapoli­s officer’s actions

- By Rio Lacanlale Las Vegas Review-journal

Joining a choir of disapprova­l on social media from police chiefs and sheriffs across the country, Nevada law enforcemen­t leaders on Thursday distanced their agencies from the actions of a Minneapoli­s officer involved in the death of an unarmed black man.

“The deplorable incident in Minneapoli­s chills me and goes against all that I teach and have been taught in my career as a Trooper,” Nevada Highway Patrol Col. Daniel Solow tweeted on Thursday morning.

On Monday night, an employee at a Minneapoli­s grocery store called police after a man, later identified as 46-year-old George Floyd, allegedly tried to pass a counterfei­t $20 bill.

In widely circulated cellphone video of his subsequent arrest, Floyd can be seen on the ground with his hands cuffed behind his back while police officer Derek Chauvin presses him to the pavement, his knee on Floyd’s neck. Three other officers were at the scene.

The video shows Chauvin, ‘The

officers’ actions and inaction are inconsiste­nt with the training and protocols of our profession.

who is white, holding Floyd down for minutes as the man complains that he can’t breathe. The video ends with paramedics lifting a limp Floyd onto a stretcher and placing him in an ambulance.

Within 24 hours of Floyd’s death, Minneapoli­s Police Chief Medaria Arradondo fired Chauvin and the three other officers, identified as Thomas Lane, Tou Thao and J. Alexander Kueng.

Floyd’s death has sparked unrest in Minneapoli­s, where conflict between protesters and police officers has erupted two days in a row. On Tuesday, officers in riot gear fired tear gas at protesters, some damaging propertyas­theymarche­dmorethan2 miles. During Wednesday’s protests, some protesters threw rocks and bottles at police.

‘Deeply disturbing’

Solow’s tweet on Thursday included photos of troopers interactin­g with members of the community.

“This is the face of policing: part of the community, never against it,” the tweet continued. “This career is about service & making everyone’s lives better and secure.”

Meanwhile, Sheriff Joe Lombardo, Clark County’s top police officer, wrote on Twitter: “The death of

Mr. Floyd is deeply disturbing. The officers’ actions and inaction are inconsiste­nt with the training and protocols of our profession and the LVMPD. I can assure you the LVMPD will strive each day to continue to build your trust.”

Lombardo’s statement comes three years after then-metropolit­an Police Department officer Kenneth Lopera stunned an unarmed black man with a Taser seven times and punched him at least a dozen times before placing him in an unauthoriz­ed, martial arts-type chokehold for more than a minute. The encounter was captured on video, and the man, Tashii Brown, was pronounced dead at a local hospital less than an hour later. He was 40.

The sheriff ’s sentiments on Thursday are vastly different from his comments in the days following Brown’s death. At the time, Lombardo asked the public for patience while the agency investigat­ed the death.

“It’s too early in the process,” he said during a news conference on May 17, 2017. “We do not even know the cause of death right now.”

Las Vegas rally planned

In addition to the unauthoriz­ed chokehold, according to Lopera’s arrest report, the officer, who is white, also violated department policies when he stunned Brown seven times. Metro’s policy is to deploy a Taser only three times before moving on to another tactic. The report also stated that Lopera gave Brown contradict­ory demands, telling him to get on his stomach while also instructin­g him not to move.

The Clark County coroner’s office eventually ruled Brown’s May 14, 2017, death a homicide. He died from asphyxia due to police restraint procedures, with contributi­ng factors that included methamphet­amine use and an enlarged heart. Had he survived, Metro has said, Brown would not have faced any criminal charges.

Lopera was charged about a month after the death with involuntar­y manslaught­er and oppression under the color of office. It marked the first time in nearly three decades that a Metro officer faced charges in connection with a police shooting or an in-custody death, though a grand jury in July 2018 declined to indict Lopera. Clark County District Attorney Steve Wolfson stopped pursuing charges after the grand jury’s decision, and the charges against Lopera were dismissed.

Lombardo did not respond on Thursday to a request for further comment.

A Black Lives Matter march is scheduled for 2 p.m. Friday at the Miracle Mile Shops on the Strip, according to a flyer on social media.

Contact Rio Lacanlale at rlacanlale@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0381. Follow @riolacanla­le on Twitter. The Associated Press contribute­d to this report.

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