USA TODAY International Edition

Why didn’t witnesses help George Floyd?

They feared that the officers would shoot

- Starita Smith Writer Starita Smith, Ph. D., is a writer and activist. She was a professor of English and sociology at the University of North Texas and the North Lake Campus of Dallas College. She has also been a reporter and editor at the Gary Post- Trib

Why didn't anyone intervene to save George Floyd's life in Minneapoli­s? They had more than 9 minutes to do it while he was under Derek Chauvin's knee, but no one did. Some in my diverse group of longtime friends wondered about this recently on Facebook — why no bystander bolted forward to break the chokehold, even knowing they'd be arrested.

What you're missing, I told my friends, is that some of us are Black and that some of us are white. Those Black people weren't thinking about being arrested. They are acutely aware that the police will not hesitate to shoot you.

In that place and in that situation, maybe the white onlookers felt the same way. It is traumatic and life threatenin­g to come upon an encounter like the one between Floyd and police officer Chauvin and his subordinat­es. As they testified in Chauvin's trial, did you hear the crowd members, young and old, crying on the witness stand because they didn't save George Floyd? What a regret!

That group of about a dozen was basically made up of an old man, a teenager who I think deserves a medal for recording the whole attack, a couple of little girls, a man who knew martial arts, and some other passersby. Most of them were Black.

I think they were brave to do what they did. They did not give up begging and shouting and cussing at Chauvin, who was the highest- ranking officer out there — and Chauvin's lawyers in court tried to paint them as angry people who distracted police and needed to be controlled.

In my neighborho­od

I grew up in a Black neighborho­od in Cincinnati, where police are known to shoot Black people with impunity, no matter how many demonstrat­ions and occasional riots break out protesting the injustice. Cincinnati. com did a five- month long investigat­ion in 2017 and found that while Cincinnati police had fatally shot 18 people since 2010, no cops had been charged or discipline­d for the shootings. Cincinnati is not a majority Black city. Its Black population is 42%.

Police shoot people in Minnesota, too. Remember Philando Castile, 32, shot in front of his girlfriend and her little girl while in his own car reaching for his gun permit? And now there's Daunte Wright, 20, shot to death on April 11 during a traffic stop 10 miles from Minneapoli­s. The officer who shot him has been charged with seconddegr­ee manslaught­er.

No way these Minneapoli­s officers would have hesitated to shoot anyone who got too close. It would have been nice if some hero — Black Panther or Captain America — had come up and intervened, but I am totally afraid that is a fantasy. Friends suggested that if the other cops had asked Chauvin to change Floyd's position, perhaps Floyd would still be alive. But one did ask, and Chauvin refused.

If only, if only, and behind each one an innocent presumptio­n that police are public servants who certainly wouldn't kill anyone for no reason. Yet studies of police department­s for decades have shown that police act as servants in white neighborho­ods where they protect people — but they act like invading forces in Black and Latinx and poor neighborho­ods where they must contain the criminal inclinatio­ns of the people around them during their shifts, after which many of them return to white neighborho­ods.

Chauvin didn't care who saw

A close white cop friend once told me that you become a cop because you want to help people, but after a while, to some cops, everyone starts looking like a criminal.

That day in Minneapoli­s, there was no being persuasive. The sparse crowd standing obediently on the sidewalk were pleading and some were angry. Everything was happening right out in the open, and Chauvin didn't seem to care who saw. There are hints that Chauvin and the people of that neighborho­od were not strangers. Chauvin and witness Charles McMillian, 61, had greeted each other just days before the killing. McMillian is the kind of neighbor who lives in most neighborho­ods and knows everyone. Before the police put Floyd on the ground, you can hear him in a video, pleading with Floyd not to resist because Floyd wasn't going to win.

Beyond this encounter, there is Chauvin's record as a Minneapoli­s police officer. There were 18 complaints against him in his 19 years there, including six from 2014 through 2019 ( one involved a woman) in which he used some sort of force as he did in Floyd's case. Most of the complaints was not entered into evidence for this trial, by ruling from the judge.

That “crowd” knew cops are the people with the guns who are likely never to be punished for shooting anyone while on the job.

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