'Just living his life': Jurors see videos taken before and after Floyd's
deadly arrest
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[April 01, 2021]
By Jonathan Allen
MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) -Minutes before his
death last May, George Floyd looked happy and energetic while waiting to
buy cigarettes at a Minneapolis store.
A little later, he was lying handcuffed in the street with his neck
pinned to the ground by a white policeman's knee, as seen in video
evidence presented on Wednesday in the trial of Derek Chauvin, the
former officer charged with the murder of the 46-year-old Black man.
After it was over, Chauvin could be heard coolly telling a horrified
bystander why he felt the need to kneel on Floyd's neck for more than
nine minutes.
"I had to control this guy because he's a sizeable guy," Chauvin said.
"It looks like he's probably on something."
In the third day of testimony in the Chauvin trial, prosecutors
presented jurors with several pieces of video evidence detailing the
minutes before and after Floyd's death. Chauvin is charged with murder
and manslaughter in a case that triggered a wave of protests against
racial injustice around the world last summer.
The videos shown to the jury addressed some of the central issues in one
of the most closely watched U.S. police misconduct trials in decades.
Did Chauvin use excessive force on Floyd? Was the officer distracted by
an angry crowd of onlookers? Was Floyd's death caused by Chauvin's
actions or was it the result of a drug overdose?
A $20 bill, apparently counterfeit, brought the two men together.
Christopher Martin, a 19-year-old cashier at Cup Foods who testified on
Wednesday, said Floyd used the bill to pay for cigarettes. During his
testimony, Martin said he felt moments of guilt since then, wondering if
he could have changed how that day unfolded.
"I thought if I would not have taken the bill, this would have been
avoided," he said.
Martin was one of several eyewitnesses who have told the jury of their
horror watching Floyd struggle for breath under Chauvin's knee outside
the store. Chauvin's defense argues that the 19-year veteran of the
force was following his training.
Prosecutors from the Minnesota attorney general's office are also
building their case through an array of videos that form a collage of
the events of May 25, 2020.
'JUST LIVING HIS LIFE'
One soundless clip captured by a Cup Foods security camera showed Floyd
dressed in a black tank top approaching a cashier with a banana in hand,
making cheerful conversation and putting his arm around a woman.
Floyd appears to be filled with energy and constantly in motion, at one
point almost dancing in the aisle, shifting his weight from one foot to
the other.
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Cup Foods store employee Christopher Martin speaks as a witness on
the third day of the trial of former Minneapolis police officer
Derek Chauvin for second-degree murder, third-degree murder and
second-degree manslaughter in the death of George Floyd in
Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. March 31, 2021 in a still image from
video. Pool via REUTERS
Martin, the cashier, told the jury that they chatted about sports
but Floyd was slow to find his words, and Martin concluded Floyd was
under the influence of drugs.
"He seemed very friendly, approachable, he was talkative, he seemed
to be having an average Memorial Day, just living his life," Martin
recalled, noting the arrest took place on a holiday. "But he did
seem high."
Prosecutors say Floyd's use of opioid painkillers and the fentanyl
found in his blood at autopsy is irrelevant. Martin was asked if
Floyd seemed upright and alert. Martin said that he did.
Martin said Floyd's $20 note struck him as an obvious forgery, but
he thought that Floyd "didn't really know it was a fake bill." He
considered just letting the store deduct it from his wages, but then
decided to tell his manager, who eventually told another worker to
call the police. Officers soon confronted Floyd at gunpoint in a car
outside.
'YOU CAN'T WIN!'
Charles McMillan, 61, was one of first to notice Floyd's arrest, and
one of the last people to ever speak with him.
Shown video of himself standing near Floyd, who was pinned by
Chauvin's knee and calling out for his recently deceased mother,
McMillan dropped his head into his hands in tears.
The video shows McMillan imploring Floyd to cooperate with the
officers and get in the police car.
"I can't," Floyd replies in an agonized voice.
"You can't win!" McMillan keeps telling Floyd.
After Floyd's limp body was loaded into an ambulance, Chauvin got
into a police car, and McMillan walked over to confront the officer.
"I don't respect what you did," McMillan can be heard on the video
telling Chauvin through the window.
The day ended with the jury watching videos of Floyd's arrest and
death repeatedly for more than an hour, each captured from a
slightly different angle by the body-cameras worn by the responding
officers.
(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Writing and Editing by Frank McGurty
and Paul Thomasch; editing by Alistair Bell and Grant McCool)
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