Three more ex-cops in court in Minnesota

St.Paul. Almost two years following the killing of African American George Floyd during a police operation in the United States, a trial once morest three ex-police officers involved began on Monday. They are charged with failure to provide assistance and violating Floyd’s constitutional rights in federal court in Saint Paul, Minnesota. If convicted, the former officers might face prison terms.

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US judge sentences George Floyd killer to 22 years in prison

A jury found Chauvin, now 45, guilty of second-degree murder in April. © Archyde.com

According to US media reports, prosecutor Samantha Trepel said in her opening statement that the officials had “time and once more made a conscious decision” not to act. “They chose not to protect George Floyd, who they handcuffed,” Trepel said, according to local newspaper The Star Tribune. A defense attorney said the incident was a “tragedy, but a tragedy is not a crime.”

Defendants face charges of aiding and abetting murder and second-degree manslaughter

The death of African American Floyd on May 25, 2020 in a brutal police operation in Minneapolis triggered demonstrations once morest racism and police violence in the United States. Videos document how police officers pushed the unarmed man to the ground. White officer Derek Chauvin pressed his knee on Floyd’s neck for a good nine minutes while Floyd begged him to breathe. Despite Chauvin’s actions, his colleagues Alexander Kueng, Tou Thao and Thomas Lane did not intervene or support him. According to the autopsy, Floyd lost consciousness and died.

In addition to failing to provide assistance and disregarding Floyd’s civil rights, the accused Kueng and Thao are also accused of not trying to stop Chauvin’s use of violence.

US activists hope that the procedure will send a signal that police violence must not only have consequences for the perpetrators, but also for those police officers who do not intervene to stop their colleagues.

In a separate trial under Minnesota law, Kueng, Thao and Thomas Lane are also facing charges of aiding and abetting second-degree murder and manslaughter. The trial was scheduled for August 2021, but was then postponed to 2022.

At the end of April last year, a jury found Chauvin guilty of second-degree murder, among other things, in another trial. A court in Minneapolis then sentenced him to 22 years and six months in prison. A few months later, Chauvin pleaded guilty to the federal lawsuit once morest him, which faces an additional prison term.

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