Lodi News-Sentinel

Ex-officers guilty on all civil rights charges related to Floyd’s death

- Rochelle Olson and Andy Mannix MINNEAPOLI­S STAR TRIBUNE

MINNEAPOLI­S — Three former Minneapoli­s police were convicted by a federal jury Thursday of depriving George Floyd of his constituti­onal rights during the fatal restraint outside Cup Foods on May 25, 2020.

The three officers were found guilty on all counts.

J. Alexander Kueng and Tou Thao were accused of failing to intervene on Floyd’s behalf as he pleaded for his life and repeatedly said he couldn’t breathe while pinned under the knee of former Officer Derek Chauvin’s knee for more than nine minutes.

Along with Thomas Lane, Kueng and Thao were also charged with a second count of violating Floyd’s rights by failing to render aid during the restraint captured on a bystander video that fueled global unrest and a racial reckoning.

Having found the officers guilty, the jury was asked whether Floyd’s restraint led to his death. The jury answered yes, allowing the judge to give the former cops longer sentences if he chooses.

The three former officers now face a second trial in Floyd’s death on June 13 in Hennepin County District Court where they are accused of aiding and abetting murder and manslaught­er.

Chauvin has already been convicted in both state and federal court. He pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court in December to violating Floyd’s constititi­onal rights, but has yet to be sentenced on that crime. He was convicted of Floyd’s murder last April and sentenced to more than 22 years in prison. Chauvin is being held in the Minnesota Correction­al Facility in Oak Park Heights.

Jury selection in the trial of Kueng, Lane and Thao began in late January. Lawyers made their opening statements Jan. 24 and closing arguments Tuesday. The prosecutio­n put 21 witnesses on the stand. The defense attorneys called 11 witnesses, including all three defendants.

Jurors began deliberati­ons in the case just before 10 a.m. Wednesday and worked about 13 hours before reaching their verdict just before 4 p.m. Thursday.

Floyd died on Memorial Day in the custody of the officers. The following day, police Chief Medaria Arradondo fired all four officers as the video shot by teenage bystander Darnella Frazier ricocheted around the world on social media.

Kueng and Lane were first on the scene at the convenienc­e store on a report from a clerk that Floyd has used a counterfei­t $20 to buy a pack of cigarettes. They first approached him in his Mercedes SUV on the street and cuffed his hands behind his back before walking him across the street and trying to get him into the back of a squad vehicle.

As Kueng and Lane struggled to get an upset Floyd into the backseat, Chauvin and Thao arrived to help. With Thao standing watch, the other three officers placed a handcuffed Floyd prone on the street.

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