'No sympathy' for Chauvin, say those who had run-ins before Floyd
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[April 21, 2021]
By Nathan Layne
MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) - For some of those
who encountered Derek Chauvin's policing or witnessed his use of force
as an officer there is no sympathy for the man convicted of killing
George Floyd.
Chauvin was the subject of at least 17 complaints during his career,
according to police records, but only one led to discipline. Prosecutors
sought permission to introduce eight prior use-of-force incidents, but
the judge would only allow two. In the end the jury heard none.
Eric Nelson, Chauvin's lawyer, has defended his client's use of force as
appropriate in potentially dangerous situations.
"I don't have no sympathy for him. I think he got what he deserved,"
Julian Hernandez, 38, a carpenter now working in Pennsylvania, told
Reuters.
Hernandez said he never heard anything from the Minneapolis police after
submitting a complaint about Chauvin, who he said "choked him out"
during an encounter in a Minneapolis night club in 2015. A spokesman for
the Minneapolis Police Department declined to comment.
According to Chauvin's police report, Hernandez failed to follow orders
and resisted arrest when Chauvin, who was working as an off-duty
security guard, tried to escort him out of a night club. Chauvin's
report said this prompted him to apply "pressure toward his Lingual
Artery" to subdue Hernandez.
Hernandez said Chauvin picked him out of the crowd for no reason and
quickly escalated to violence. He said Chauvin should have been removed
from the police force.
As Monroe Skinaway, 75, took in news of Chauvin's conviction, he flashed
back to the night he witnessed Chauvin pin another man to the pavement
with the same detached look as when he knelt on Floyd's neck.
It was March 2019, 15 months before Floyd's death would spark global
protests against racism and police brutality.
But Skinaway still remembers what he deemed the indifference on
Chauvin's face that night as he pressed Sir Rilee Peet's head into a
puddle deep enough that he, like Floyd, struggled to breathe.
A jury on Tuesday found Chauvin, a 19-year veteran of the Minneapolis
police force, guilty of all three charges of second-degree murder,
third-degree murder and manslaughter, an outcome welcomed by activists
as progress in holding law enforcement accountable for its treatment of
Black Americans. Chauvin is white and Floyd was Black.
"We people of color very seldom get a good verdict," said Skinaway, who
is Native American. "I'm kind of amazed."
'I CAN'T BREATHE, MAN'
Skinaway says he did not know Chauvin at the time he and another officer
arrested Sir Rilee Peet, a young Native American man with a history of
mental illness. But Skinaway later recognized him as the officer charged
in Floyd's death.
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Monroe Skinaway, who lives in Minneapolis and witnessed former
Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin performing an arrest on Sir
Rilee Peet in March 2019 that is similar to the one he did on George
Floyd on May 25, 2020 that resulted in Floyd's death, speaks during
an interview in Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S. April 17, 2021.
REUTERS/Octavio Jones
Skinaway says he was speaking with the officers about
the recovery of a stolen car when Peet approached and did not comply
with requests to back away. A police report about the incident
states that a struggle ensued and Chauvin maced Peet, applied a neck
restraint and pinned him to the ground so he could be handcuffed.
The incident was one of the six prior use-of-force incidents that
Judge Peter Cahill blocked prosecutors from presenting at trial,
ruling they would be prejudicial.
In court filings, prosecutors said Chauvin restrained Peet in a
manner that was beyond what was necessary or reasonable - an
assertion also made by Skinaway in interviews with Reuters.
Skinaway says Chauvin grabbed Peet by the back of his hair and
pressed his face into a rain puddle. That began a cycle where Peet
would gasp for air and say "I can't breathe, man" before Chauvin
would force his head down again.
Skinaway said he saw similarities between Chauvin's treatment of
Peet and Floyd.
"He basically did the same thing to that Native kid," Skinaway said.
"I think the incident would have gone longer possibly if the
ambulance didn't show up."
Peet, who was arrested for disorderly conduct and obstruction of the
legal process, could not be reached for comment. Earlier this year
Peet told the Marshall Project he did not recall the incident. It
was not clear what happened to the charges against him.
Jimmy Bostic, who ended up in the hospital after a scuffle with
Chauvin and other officers in April 2016, said he was "ecstatic"
when he heard the verdict, seeing it as a sign that police officers,
too, could be held accountable.
According to a police report, Bostic was refusing to leave a store
and threatening to spit on its owner. As the situation escalated,
Chauvin wrote in the report that he "closed distance with" Bostic
and "secured his neck/head area with my hands."
Bostic, who is currently in prison on an unrelated burglary
conviction, said he struggled to breathe after the encounter and was
taken to the hospital due to an asthma attack.
"George Floyd could have very well been Jimmy Bostic Jr," the
23-year-old said in an interview after the verdict. "I'm just happy
that there was an example set today."
(Reporting by Nathan Layne in Minneapolis; Editing by Paul Thomasch
and Michael Perry)
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