Defense rests without testimony by Chauvin
MINNE A POLIS» Former Officer Derek Chauvin chose not to take the stand as testimony at his murder trial ended Thursday, passing up the chance to explain to the jury and the public for the first time what he was thinking when he pressed his knee against George Floyd’s neck.
Closing arguments are set to begin Monday, after which a racially diverse jury will begin deliberating at a barbed-wire-ringed courthouse in a city on edge — not just because of the Chauvin case but because of the deadly police shooting of a 20year-old Black man in a Minneapolis suburb last weekend.
Before the jury was brought in Thursday morning, Chauvin ended weeks of speculation by informing the judge he would invoke his Fifth Amendment right not to testify. Shortly afterward, the defense rested its case, after two days of testimony, compared with two weeks for the prosecution.
Chauvin, 45, is charged with murder and manslaughter in Floyd’s death after the 46-year-old Black man was arrested on suspicion of passing a counterfeit $20 at a neighborhood market last May.
Bystander video of Floyd gasping that he couldn’t breathe as bystanders yelled at Chauvin to get off him triggered worldwide protests, violence and a furious examination of racism and policing in the U.S.
The most serious charge facing the now fired white officer, second-degree murder, carries up to 40 years in prison, although state guidelines call for about 12.
Prosecutors say Floyd died because the officer’s knee was pressed against Floyd’s neck for about nine minutes as he lay on the pavement on his stomach, his hands cuffed behind him and his face jammed against the ground.
Chauvin attorney Eric Nelson called a police use-of-force expert and a forensic pathologist to help make the case that Chauvin acted reasonably against a struggling suspect and that Floyd died because of an underlying heart condition and his illegal drug use.