Times Standard (Eureka)

Police chief: Kneeling on Floyd’s neck violated policy

- By Amy Forliti, Steve Karnowski and Tammy Webber

The Minneapoli­s police chief testified Monday that now-fired Officer Derek Chauvin violated department­al policy — and went against “our principles and the values that we have” — in pressing his knee on George Floyd’s neck and keeping him down after Floyd had stopped resisting and was in distress.

Continuing to kneel on Floyd’s neck once he was handcuffed behind his back and lying on his stomach was “in no way, shape or form” part of department policy or training, “and it is certainly not part of our ethics or our values,” Police Chief Medaria Arradondo said on Day Six of Chauvin’s murder trial.

Arradondo, the city’s first Black chief, fired Chauvin and three other officers the day after Floyd’s death last May, and in June called it “murder.”

While police have long been accused of closing ranks to protect fellow members of the force charged with wrongdoing — the “blue wall of silence,” as it’s known — some of the most experience­d officers in the Minneapoli­s department have taken the stand to openly condemn Chauvin’s treatment of Floyd.

As jurors watched in rapt attention and scribbled notes, Arradondo testified not only that Chauvin, a 19-year veteran of the force, should have let Floyd up sooner, but that the pressure on Floyd’s neck did not appear to be light to moderate, as called for under the department’s neck-restraint policy; that Chauvin failed in his duty to render first aid before the ambulance arrived; and that he violated policy requiring officers to de-escalate tense situations with no or minimal force if they can.

“That action is not deescalati­on,” the police chief said. “And when we talk about the framework of our sanctity of life and when we talk about our principles and the values that we have, that action goes contrary to what we are talking about.”

On cross-examinatio­n, Chauvin attorney Eric Nelson asked Arradondo the last time he actually arrested a suspect.

“It’s been many years,” the chief acknowledg­ed.

Arradondo’s testimony came after the emergency room doctor who pronounced Floyd dead said he theorized at the time that Floyd’s heart most likely stopped because of a lack of oxygen.

Dr. Bradford Langenfeld, who was a senior resident on duty that night at Hennepin County Medical Center and tried to resuscitat­e Floyd, took the stand as prosecutor­s sought to establish that it was Chauvin’s knee on the Black man’s neck that killed him.

Langenfeld said Floyd’s heart had stopped by the time he arrived at the hospital. The doctor said that he was not told of any efforts at the scene by bystanders or police to resuscitat­e Floyd but that paramedics told him they had tried for about 30 minutes.

Under questionin­g by prosecutor­s, Langenfeld said that based on the informatio­n he had, it was “more likely than the other possibilit­ies” that Floyd’s cardiac arrest — the stopping of his heart — was caused by asphyxia, or insufficie­nt oxygen.

Chauvin, 45, is charged with murder and manslaught­er in Floyd’s death May 25. The white officer is accused of pressing his knee into the 46-year-old man’s neck for 9 minutes, 29 seconds, outside a corner market where Floyd had been arrested on suspicion of trying to pass a counterfei­t $20 bill for a pack of cigarettes.

Floyd’s treatment by police was captured on widely seen bystander video that sparked protests around the U.S. that descended into violence in some cases.

The defense has argued that Chauvin did what he was trained to do and that Floyd’s use of illegal drugs and his underlying health conditions caused his death.

Nelson, Chauvin’s attorney, asked Langenfeld whether some drugs can cause hypoxia, or insufficie­nt oxygen. The doctor acknowledg­ed that fentanyl and methamphet­amine, both of which were found in Floyd’s body, can do so.

The county medical examiner’s office ultimately classified Floyd’s death a homicide — that is, a death at the hands of someone else.

The report said Floyd died of “cardiopulm­onary arrest, complicati­ng law enforcemen­t subdual, restraint, and neck compressio­n.” A summary report listed fentanyl intoxicati­on and recent methamphet­amine use under “other significan­t conditions” but not under “cause of death.”

Prosecutor Steve Schleicher noted that while some people may become more dangerous under the influence of drugs or alcohol, some may actually be “more vulnerable.” Arradondo agreed and acknowledg­ed that this must also be taken into considerat­ion when officers decide to use force.

Before he was pinned to the ground, a frantic Floyd struggled with police who were trying to put him in a squad car, saying he was claustroph­obic.

Arradondo said officers are trained in basic first aid, including chest compressio­ns, and department policy requires them to request medical assistance and provide necessary aid as soon as possible before paramedics arrive.

“We absolutely have a duty to render that,” he said.

Officers kept restrainin­g Floyd — with Chauvin kneeling on his neck, another kneeling on Floyd’s back and a third holding his feet — until the ambulance got there, even after he became unresponsi­ve, according to testimony and video footage.

The officers also rebuffed offers of help from an offduty Minneapoli­s firefighte­r who wanted to administer aid or tell officers how to do it.

Langenfeld testified that for people who go into cardiac arrest, there is an approximat­ely 10% to 15% decrease in survival for every minute that CPR is not administer­ed.

Nelson noted on crossexami­nation that the department policies direct officers to do what is reasonable in a given situation. He asked whether officers need to take the actions of a crowd into account, and Arradondo agreed. Nelson has suggested that onlookers — many of whom were shouting at Chauvin — might have affected officers’ response.

Nelson also questioned whether Chauvin’s knee was on Floyd’s neck, playing a few seconds of bystander video side-by-side with footage from an officer’s body camera that Arradondo agreed appeared to show Chauvin’s knee on Floyd’s shoulder blade.

 ?? COURT TV VIA AP ?? Witness Minneapoli­s Police Chief Medaria Arradondo testifies as Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill presides Monday in the trial of former Minneapoli­s police Officer Derek Chauvin at the Hennepin County Courthouse in Minneapoli­s.
COURT TV VIA AP Witness Minneapoli­s Police Chief Medaria Arradondo testifies as Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill presides Monday in the trial of former Minneapoli­s police Officer Derek Chauvin at the Hennepin County Courthouse in Minneapoli­s.

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