The Ukiah Daily Journal

I dare to hope for conviction

- Eugene Robinson

TASHINGTON » After hearing in such clinical, heartbreak­ing, infuriatin­g detail about George Floyd’ s final ago ni es,i want to believe justice is possible in the Derek Chauvin trial. I want to believe the jurors heard what I heard and felt what I feel. I want to allow myselfto hope for it. but apart of me holds back.

The police officers who beat Rodney King to a pulp were acquitted. The self-appointed vigilante who shot Trayvon Martin to death was acquitted. The police officer who killed Philando Castile after a routine traffic stop — just miles from the Minneapoli­s intersecti­on where

Floyd died — was acquitted.

It feels risky to have any confidence that this time the outcome will be different, even though it feels as if it should be. It’s not just that the prosecutor­s seeking to convict Chauvin of murder have presented what seems to me an overwhelmi­ng case. This trial and the context in which it’s taking place are different from the other proceeding­s that led to such shattering disappoint­ments.

Never that I can recall, in all the attempts to hold police accountabl­e for unjustifie­d killings of African Americans, have we heard such damning testimony from the highest levels of the police department in question. Minneapoli­s Police Chief Medaria Arradondo told the jury last week that Chauvin, once he had Floyd in the prone position, should have quickly released the pressure he was applying to Floyd’s neck and back — rather than kneeling on Floyd for more than nine minutes.

“To continue to apply that level of force to a person proned out, handcuffed behind their back — that in no way, shape or form is anything that is by policy,” Arradondo testified. “It is not part of our training. And it is certainly not part of our ethics or our values.”

Other officers took the stand to attest that Chauvin had never been trained to put his knee on any suspect’s neck. The “thin blue line” solidarity that we’ve come to expect is present in this case, but in a way that excludes Chauvin. The only consensus we’ve seen thus far among police officers is that what Chauvin did was obviously, tragically, unambiguou­sly wrong.

Police officers, including an expert witness on use of force from the Los Angeles Police Department, also blew holes in the likely defense argument that Chauvin was distracted or even threatened by the onlookers who watched and recorded Floyd’s death. Surveillan­ce video proves that there was no angry mob on the scene. Instead, a handful of horrified bystanders obeyed the command to keep their distance — even as they implored Chauvin to relent because they feared they were watching a man being killed before their eyes.

Some of the most excruciati­ng testimony has come from medical experts who described, in agonizing detail, the nature of Floyd’s death. Martin Tobin, a Loyola University Medical Center pulmonolog­ist and expert on the mechanics of breathing, had the jurors examine their own necks to identify the anatomical features he was describing: the hypopharyn­x toward the front, the nuchal ligament in the back.

For me, the most searing moments of the trial thus far came when Tobin used video footage to show how Floyd, his neck and chest compressed by Chauvin’s weight, struggled to breathe — how he desperatel­y tried to use his right hand to push against the pavement or the officers’ squad car to create space for his lungs to expand. And then Tobin showed the moment when Floyd’s leg lifted in an invol

ROBINSON » OAGE 11

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