Santa Fe New Mexican

‘We are able to breathe again’

Verdict is rare rebuke of police conduct

- By John Eligon, Tim Arango, Shaila Dewan and Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs

Aformer police officer who pressed his knee into George Floyd’s neck until well past Floyd’s final breath was found guilty of murder Tuesday in a case that shook the nation’s conscience and drew millions into the streets for the largest racial justice protests in generation­s.

The verdict, which could send the former officer, Derek Chauvin, to prison for decades, was a rare rebuke of police violence, following case after case of officers going without charges or conviction­s after killing Black men, women and children.

At the center of it all was an excruciati­ng video, taken by a teenage girl, that showed Chauvin, who is white, kneeling on the neck of Floyd, who was Black, for nine minutes and 29 seconds as Floyd pleaded for his life and bystanders tried to intervene. Floyd repeated “I can’t breathe” more than 20 times during the encounter.

The video, played on a horrifying loop for the past year, triggered more than calls for changes in policing. It stirred Americans of all races, in small towns and large cities, to gather for mass protests chanting “Black lives matter,” and challengin­g the country to

finally have a true reckoning over race. Their demands reverberat­ed within the walls of institutio­ns that had long resisted change, from corporate America to Congress.

This week, over the course of two days, a racially diverse jury of seven women and five men deliberate­d for about 10 hours before pronouncin­g Chauvin guilty on all three charges: second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaught­er.

President Joe Biden praised the verdict in a nationwide address at the White House, but called it a “too rare” step to deliver “basic accountabi­lity” for Black Americans.

“It was a murder in full light of day, and it ripped the blinders off for the whole world to see,” Biden said. “For so many, it feels like it took all of that for the judicial system to deliver just basic accountabi­lity.”

Hours before the jury came back with a decision, Biden had taken the unusual step of weighing in, telling reporters that he was “praying” for the “right verdict.”

“This can be a giant step forward in the march toward justice in America,” he said.

After the verdict, Philonise Floyd, one of George Floyd’s younger brothers, spoke at the Hilton hotel in downtown Minneapoli­s. “We are able to breathe again,” he said, holding back tears.

He drew a line from his brother back to Emmett Till, a Black child who was lynched in Mississipp­i in 1955.

“We ought to always understand that we have to march,” he said. “We will have to do this for life. We have to protest because it seems like this is a never-ending cycle.”

People gathered at the intersecti­on where Floyd was killed, now known as George Floyd Square, and the word “guilty” rippled throughout the crowd after the verdict was announced, prompting cheers and sobs.

The crowd began to chant, “Black lives matter.”

Chauvin, who had been free on bail during the trial, was ordered into custody by the judge, Peter A. Cahill, and was taken out of the courtroom in handcuffs.

The verdict was hailed across the country by civil rights leaders and honking motorists. It gave a tense nation a moment to exhale, even as new police killings in a Minneapoli­s suburb, Chicago and, on Tuesday afternoon, Columbus, Ohio, sent Americans back into the streets, holding signs that asked, “How many more?”

The case was handled by the office of Attorney General Keith Ellison, the first Black man to hold statewide office in Minnesota. Prosecutor­s mounted perhaps the most ambitious and extensive case in any trial of an officer for an on-duty killing.

With a rotating cast of prominent lawyers, some of whom volunteere­d their services, the state presented

11 days of testimony from onlookers, paramedics, fellow police officers and a phalanx of medical experts armed with formulas, charts and timelines.

Among the state’s star witnesses was the chief of the Minneapoli­s police, Medaria Arradondo, who said Chauvin had “absolutely” violated training, ethics and several department policies when he kept Floyd pinned facedown on the street long after he stopped breathing. It is exceedingl­y rare for a chief to testify against an officer from his own department.

The presumptiv­e sentence for the most serious charge, second-degree murder, is 12½ years, according to Minnesota’s sentencing guidelines. But the prosecutio­n has asked for a lengthier sentence, arguing that there were children present at the scene, that Chauvin treated Floyd with “particular cruelty” and that he “abused his position of authority.”

The judge will sentence Chauvin, 45, in eight weeks.

 ?? VICTOR J. BLUE/NEW YORK TIMES ?? People hug Tuesday at George Floyd Square in Minneapoli­s after the jury found former Minneapoli­s police Officer Derek Chauvin guilty of murdering Floyd.
VICTOR J. BLUE/NEW YORK TIMES People hug Tuesday at George Floyd Square in Minneapoli­s after the jury found former Minneapoli­s police Officer Derek Chauvin guilty of murdering Floyd.
 ?? IMAGE FROM VIDEO VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? LEFT: Chauvin, center, is taken into custody after being found guilty, as his attorney Eric Nelson, left, looks on.
IMAGE FROM VIDEO VIA ASSOCIATED PRESS LEFT: Chauvin, center, is taken into custody after being found guilty, as his attorney Eric Nelson, left, looks on.
 ?? JULIO CORTEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? ABOVE: George Floyd’s brother Philonise Floyd wipes his eyes during a news conference Tuesday in Minneapoli­s after the verdict was read.
JULIO CORTEZ/ASSOCIATED PRESS ABOVE: George Floyd’s brother Philonise Floyd wipes his eyes during a news conference Tuesday in Minneapoli­s after the verdict was read.
 ?? JOSHUA LOTT/WASHINGTON POST ?? Toshira Garraway, left, and Courteney Ross, girlfriend of George Floyd, react Tuesday following the verdict in Derek Chauvin’s trial in Minneapoli­s.
JOSHUA LOTT/WASHINGTON POST Toshira Garraway, left, and Courteney Ross, girlfriend of George Floyd, react Tuesday following the verdict in Derek Chauvin’s trial in Minneapoli­s.

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