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Derek Chauvin conviction upheld for killing George Floyd

Author
AP,
Publish Date
Tue, 18 Apr 2023, 9:17am
Former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin. Photo / AP
Former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin. Photo / AP

Derek Chauvin conviction upheld for killing George Floyd

Author
AP,
Publish Date
Tue, 18 Apr 2023, 9:17am

The Minnesota Court of Appeals has upheld former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin’s second-degree murder conviction in the killing of George Floyd, and his 22-and-a-half-year sentence remains.

Chauvin’s attorney had asked the appeals court to throw out the ex-officer’s convictions for a long list of reasons, including the massive pretrial publicity. He also argued that legal and procedural errors deprived Chauvin of a fair trial. But the three-judge panel sided with prosecutors who said Chauvin got a fair trial and just sentence.

Derek Chauvin. Photo / AP

Derek Chauvin. Photo / AP

Floyd died on May 25, 2020, after Chauvin used his knee to pin the black man’s neck to the ground for 9 1/2 minutes. A bystander video captured Floyd’s fading cries of “I can’t breathe.” Floyd’s death touched off protests around the world, some of which turned violent, and forced a national reckoning with police brutality and racism.

“Police officers undoubtedly have a challenging, difficult, and sometimes dangerous job. However, no one is above the law,” Appeals Judge Peter Reyes wrote for the panel. “When they commit a crime, they must be held accountable just as those individuals that they lawfully apprehend. The law only permits police officers to use reasonable force when effecting a lawful arrest. Chauvin crossed that line here when he used unreasonable force on Floyd.”

Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, who assembled the prosecution team, said in a statement that he was “grateful we have a system where everyone, no matter how egregious their offence, is entitled to due process and fair treatment”.

“The Court’s decision today shows once again no one is above the law — and no one is beneath it,” Ellison said.

A voicemail and emails were sent to Chauvin’s attorney, William Mohrman. He argued on appeal that the trial judge should have moved the case out of Minneapolis because of extensive pretrial publicity and unprecedented security precautions due to fears of violence.

“The primary issue on this appeal is whether a criminal defendant can get a fair trial consistent with constitutional requirements in a courthouse surrounded by concrete block, barbed wire, two armoured personnel carriers, and a squad of National Guard troops, all of which or whom are there for one purpose: in the event that the jury acquits the defendant,” Mohrman said in oral arguments in January.

Minneapolis police officers attempt to remove George Floyd from a vehicle. Photo / AP

Minneapolis police officers attempt to remove George Floyd from a vehicle. Photo / AP

But Neal Katyal, a special attorney for the state, argued that Chauvin got “one of the most transparent and thorough trials in our nation’s history”.

Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill sentenced Chauvin to 22 1/2 years after jurors found him guilty of second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. Chauvin later pleaded guilty to a separate federal civil rights charge and was sentenced to 21 years in federal prison, which he is now serving in Arizona concurrent with his state sentence.

“Judge Cahill managed this trial with enormous care, and even if Chauvin could identify some minor fault, any error is harmless,” Katyal said. “The evidence of Chauvin’s guilt was captured on video for the world to see.”

Mohrman argued that the pretrial publicity was the most extensive of any trial in Minnesota history, and that the judge should have moved the trial and sequestered the jury. He said the publicity and the riots, the city’s $27 million settlement with Floyd’s family announced during jury selection, the unrest over a police killing of a Black man in a Minneapolis suburb during jury selection, and the sealing off of the courthouse, were just some of the factors prejudicing Chauvin’s chance of a fair trial.

Minneapolis police officers, including Derick Chauvin (second from left), restrain George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25, 2020. Photo / AP

Minneapolis police officers, including Derick Chauvin (second from left), restrain George Floyd in Minneapolis on May 25, 2020. Photo / AP

His appeal also focused on one juror who participated in a civil rights event commemorating the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr.’s March on Washington, a few months after Floyd’s death. Only after the trial did the juror reveal that he had been there.

But the appeals court ruled that Cahill did not abuse his discretion in deciding those issues.

The appeals court declined to address whether it was legally permissible to convict Chauvin of third-degree murder. The defence said a 2021 Minnesota Supreme Court decision in a different police killing case that clarified the definition of that crime meant the law no longer fit the facts of Floyd’s killing.

The appeals court noted that the trial judge never formally adjudicated that conviction nor did he sentence Chauvin on that count.

- Steve Karnowski, AP

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