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George Floyd 'faded' during police arrest

    • 127 posts
    30 de março de 2021 02:57:30 ART

     

    A witness recounts the heartbreaking last minute of สมัครสมาชิกสล็อต George Floyd's life on the opening day of the trial of white American cop Derek Chowwin accused of killing him.Donald Williams III, a witness in the prosecution, said Mr Floyd. During the nine minutes Mr. Chao Win knelt on his back and neck.Chao Win's lawyers argued that his use of force was "uninteresting but necessary".Many view the trial as a pivotal moment in US racial ties.The May 2020 incident, in which Chauvin was captured in a video kneeling on the neck of Mr Floyd, a black man in Minneapolis, sparked protests in the United States and around the world against police brutality and racism.Mr Chaowin, 45, who was released from police, denied manslaughter and manslaughter charges, with a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison.Three other current officials - Toutao, vs. Alexander Killon and Thomas Lane - will be sentenced by the end of the year.

     

    What was heard on the first day of the trial?


    Entrepreneur Donald Williams, 33, said he planned to enter a Cup Foods store in Minneapolis, Minnesota, when he saw Mr Floyd's arrest on May 25, 2020.He said he decided not to enter the store because of a "blackout" and instead started talking to the police, and asked Floyd to check his pulse.He told the court that he could see Mr Floyd's life take off. "He slowly faded like a fish in a bag," he said, "his eyes rolled behind his head" until "he had no more life in him." Next At the start of the trial, prosecutors kicked off with a nine-minute videotape shot by an innocent bystander, showing Mr Chaowin on his knees at Mr Floyd, 46. year Prosecutor Jerry Blackwell told the jury that Mr Floyd had said 27 times he was suffocated.The tape proves that Mr Chauvin "engages in imminent harm regardless of George Floyd's physical effects,

    Mr Blackwell said.Eric Nelson, a defense attorney, opened up about the evidence. "More than 9 minutes 29 seconds" of the video image.He said such evidence would show Mr Floyd. "Died from arrhythmia caused by high blood pressure, coronary heart disease, consumption of methamphetamine and fentanyl and adrenaline flowing through his body.The court also heard testimony from 911 dispatcher Jena Scurry, who brought police to Cup Foods after George Floyd was reportedly accused of using a $ 20 counterfeit note.A camera installed on the side of the building allowed her to view the seizure. She admitted that her viewing intermittently as she called others, but told the jury that she thought "the screen freezes" due to the amount of time Mr Floyd was on the ground and "I am concerned that there may be something wrong.The court also heard from one of the people filming the incident, Alisha Oyler, who works in a nearby shop.Before the trial even began, Floyd's family, a civil rights attorney and activist, were kneeling outside the court for a time when Mr Chaowin knelt on Mr Floyd's neck.

     

    What more do we know about this experiment?


    Fifteen jurors - nine women and six men - were originally recruited. Nine of them are white and six are black or multi-races One jury - a backup option in the event the jurors dropped out before the trial began - was dismissed on Monday and the trial began with 12 jurors and two alternatives.They will remain anonymous and invisible throughout the television trial, which is expected to last about four weeks.The courthouse in central Minneapolis is reinforced with concrete fences, fences, and barbed and razor wire.

     

    Why is this such a high-profile case?


    Video footage of Derek Chauvin kneeling on George Floyd's neck this past May has been reruned around the world.For many, Floyd's death while in police custody became a vivid symbol of police brutality, especially against blacks, and sparked protests around the world for racial justice.But despite the outcry all over the world But this is not the case with opening and closing. In the United States, police are rarely convicted of any deaths that occur while on duty if they are charged at all.The verdict in this case will be widely viewed as an indication of how the U.S. legal system treats deaths that occurred while in police custody.