American justice sentenced two police officers to prison on Wednesday for remaining passive during the murder of George Floyd, a tragedy which had sparked monster demonstrations once morest racism in 2020.
• Read also: Two and a half years in prison for a police officer who remained passive during the murder of George Floyd
Federal Judge Paul Magnuson handed down sentences of three years in custody for Alexander Kueng, 28, and three and a half years for Tou Thao, 36, during a short hearing in a St. Paul court.
The two men were found guilty in February of “violating the civil rights” of the African American along with a third agent, Thomas Lane, who last week sentenced him to two and a half years. from prison.
Supporting roles in this drama with global repercussions, the three men were accused by federal justice of not having provided the necessary assistance to George Floyd during his agony under the knee of their colleague Derek Chauvin.
The latter, who had maintained the pressure on the neck of the black forties for nearly ten minutes, was sentenced to 21 years in prison by the federal justice.
The differences between the sentences imposed on his three colleagues are partly due to their experience — Thomas Lane and Alexander Kueng were new recruits with very few patrols under their belt — and their attitude on the day of the tragedy.
Unlike the other two who did not intervene at all, Thomas Lane suggested placing George Floyd on his side and tried to resuscitate him when help arrived.
On May 25, 2020, a Minneapolis merchant called the police to accuse George Floyd of selling a counterfeit $20 bill in his store.
After struggling to get this man of imposing stature and erratic driving into their vehicle, they had him pinned to the ground, handcuffed. Derek Chauvin had settled on his neck, the two new ones at his side, while Tou Thao kept the panicked passers-by at a distance.
They hadn’t moved, despite the gasps of the forty-year-old and his loss of consciousness.
The scene, filmed and posted online, sparked huge protests once morest racism and police brutality across the United States and beyond, and continues to fuel reflection on America’s racist past.
In parallel with the prosecution by federal justice, Minnesota state justice sentenced Derek Chauvin for murder to 22 and a half years in prison, and charged his three colleagues with “complicity in murder”.
Thomas Lane has pleaded guilty and is awaiting sentencing, which he might serve concurrently with the federal sentence. The trial of the other two is to be held in the fall.