The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Trial puts courtroom tactics on display

The murder trial of a former Minneapoli­s police officer charged in George Floyd’s death has introduced viewers from around the world to a vast array of defense and prosecutio­n tactics aimed at swaying the jury. Some strategies and terms that have become

- DEREK CHAUVIN TRIAL

Video shows Chauvin pressing his knee on Floyd’s neck for 9 minutes, 29 seconds last May 25. But defense attorneys are tasked with casting doubt on whether the former officer was directly responsibl­e for the Black man’s death. They’ve sought to argue that other factors, such as drug use, may have killed him.

A medical examiner concluded last year that Floyd’s heart stopped, complicate­d by how police restrained him and compressed his neck. However, narrowed arteries, high blood pressure, fentanyl intoxicati­on and recent methamphet­amine use also were listed on the death certificat­e as “other contributi­ng conditions.”

Hennepin County Chief Medical Examiner Dr. Andrew Baker testified at trial that those conditions “didn’t cause the death.”

Chauvin is charged with secondand third-degree murder and manslaught­er.

His lawyer, Eric Nelson, has argued that the officer followed his training and suggested that Floyd died due to use of illegal drugs and existing health conditions.

‘I ate too many drugs’

Nelson has tried to play up Floyd’s drug use and sought to show Wednesday that Floyd yelled “I ate too many drugs” as officers pinned him down.

Playing a short clip from a police body camera video, Nelson asked prosecutio­n witness Jody Stiger, a Los Angeles Police Department sergeant who served as a prosecutio­n use-of-force expert, if he heard Floyd say: “I ate too many drugs.”

“I can’t make that out,” Stiger replied. Nelson later replayed it for senior special agent James Reyerson with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehensi­on, who agreed that’s what Floyd appeared to say.

But prosecutor Matthew Frank replayed a longer clip from the same body cam video that put Floyd’s statement into broader context.

Reyerson replied: “I believe Mr. Floyd was saying, ‘I ain’t do no drugs.’”

Excited delirium

Experts and other Minneapoli­s officers have testified that the force used to subdue and detain Floyd on the pavement was excessive. This past week, jurors were told about the concept of “excited delirium,” a term

one of the officers at the scene is heard on police body camera asking as a panicked Floyd writhed and claimed to be claustroph­obic as officers tried to put him in the squad car.

One Minneapoli­s officer who trains others in medical care described the term on the stand as a combinatio­n of “psychomoto­r agitation, psychosis, hypothermi­a, a wide variety of other things you might see in a person or rather bizarre behavior.”

An expert in forensic medicine who works as a police surgeon for the Louisville Metro Police Department in Kentucky and as a professor of emergency medicine at the University of Louisville testified Thursday that Floyd met none of the 10 criteria developed by the American College of Emergency Physicians.

Courtroom technology

Extensive video evidence from surveillan­ce cameras, cellphones and police body cameras of Floyd’s death may be the most critical part of the case for the defense and prosecutio­n.

Modern courtrooms, like the one where Chauvin is being tried, use such technology as large video screens, projectors and up-to-date software.

Dr. Martin Tobin, a lung and critical care specialist at the Edward Hines Jr. VA Hospital and Loyola University’s medical school in Illinois, used a computer animation to show how Floyd was held down on the pavement. It gave jurors a 360-degree view of where the officers were and what they were doing.

He used a composite of pictures from a bystander video to show Chauvin pressing his knee to Floyd’s neck. Floyd’s respirator­y distress was growing at that point as officers held him down on his stomach, with his hands handcuffed behind his back. The images showed how Floyd tried to use his shoulder muscles to draw breath, the doctor said.

 ?? JOSHUA RASHAAD MCFADDEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? A makeshift memorial to George Floyd has grown outside Cup Foods where he died in Minneapoli­s. Derek Chauvin, a former Minneapoli­s police officer, is on trial for the death of the Black man after he held him down with a knee pressed into his neck last year.
JOSHUA RASHAAD MCFADDEN/THE NEW YORK TIMES A makeshift memorial to George Floyd has grown outside Cup Foods where he died in Minneapoli­s. Derek Chauvin, a former Minneapoli­s police officer, is on trial for the death of the Black man after he held him down with a knee pressed into his neck last year.

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