Videos of U.S. police killings spur protest - and sometimes charges
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[May 30, 2020]
By Lawrence Hurley
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The decision of
Minneapolis prosecutors to criminally charge a police officer four days
after the death of George Floyd shows how efforts to hold officers
accountable often hinge on the level of public protest and whether the
incident was caught on video.
Even then, it is rare for officers to be charged criminally in such
incidents, with the swiftness of the Floyd charges something of an
anomaly.
Derek Chauvin, the officer seen on a bystander's cellphone video
kneeling on Floyd's neck on Monday before the 46-year-old man died, was
charged on Friday with third-degree murder and manslaughter.
U.S. Attorney General William Barr on Friday said the FBI would conduct
its own investigation.
The killing, the video of which has been widely viewed on social media
and on television, spurred three nights of protest in Minneapolis that
at times turned violent.
"Thank God a young person had a camera to video it," Minnesota Governor
Tim Walz said of Floyd's death, noting that in many instances no footage
exists.
In contrast, an investigation into the March 13 killing by Louisville,
Kentucky, police of emergency medical technician Breonna Taylor, in
which there was no viral video, remains ongoing.
The FBI said it launched an investigation into her death on May 21, more
than two months later. The city's police chief, Steve Conrad, will
retire at the end of June, Louisville's mayor said the same day. None of
the three officers involved in the raid have been charged as of Friday.
The sporadic nature of criminal charges frustrates civil rights
activists.
"We are not seeing officers held accountable at the rates they should
be. The number of shootings of unarmed African-Americans far exceed the
number of officers being held accountable," said Kristen Clarke,
president of the Lawyers' Committee for Civil Rights Under Law.
In other high-profile cases, criminal charges have been brought after
public protests, but not as quickly as in Minneapolis.
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National Guard members guard the area in the aftermath of a protest
after a white police officer was caught on a bystander's video
pressing his knee into the neck of African-American man George
Floyd, who later died at a hospital, in Minneapolis, Minnesota,
U.S., May 29, 2020. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
In Baltimore, police officers were charged over the death of Freddie
Gray only after the aftermath led to riots. Gray was arrested on
April 12, 2015 in an incident caught on video and subsequently given
a "rough ride" in the back of a police van, injuring his spine. He
died of his injuries a week later and hundreds of people attended
his funeral on April 27. Later that night, riots erupted in the
neighborhood where he was arrested.
Four days later, on May 1, the city charged six officers for their
role in his death. All six were eventually cleared, and the federal
Justice Department declined to charge anyone involved in the case.
In other cases there are no criminal charges, such as in the death
of Eric Garner in New York in 2014, which was captured on video and
led to protests. He died in a chokehold after repeatedly crying "I
can't breathe" -- a plea that became a rallying cry for the Black
Lives Matter movement and was heard again in videos of Floyd's
death.
In one illustration of the power of bystander video, groups
representing law enforcement officers say they do not object to the
additional scrutiny of either bystander video or cameras that
officers are increasingly required to wear.
"We favor the use of body cameras, and we don't have a position on
the constitutional right of an individual in a public place to use a
camera," said Jim Pasco, executive director of the National
Fraternal Order of Police.
He also said he didn't see any particular problems with the speed
with which charges were brought against Chauvin.
(Reporting by Lawrence Hurley; Additional reporting by Andy
Sullivan; Editing by Scott Malone and Daniel Wallis)
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