'Last Straw': Americans confront racism, violence in Chauvin trial
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[April 21, 2021]
By Brad Brooks
(Reuters) - The trial and conviction of
former Minneapolis policeman Derek Chauvin for murdering George Floyd
came with America at a crossroads, a moment of anguish, but also of
possibility, which historians and activists compared to the Civil Rights
era.
From policing and race relations to the criminal justice system, the
three-week trial of Derek Chauvin became "a symbol and stand in for our
emotions, our fears and our hopes surrounding this whole set of issues,"
said David Greenberg, a professor of history and media studies at
Rutgers University.
The audience for the trial was hard to measure, but likely vast because
of the many streaming services that carried it live.
Even the president was paying close attention. Joe Biden called Floyd's
family after Tuesday's verdict, which he said could be a step "forward
in the march toward justice in America."
That the case was about more than one Black man's death at the hands of
a white police officer was underlined during the trial - just miles away
another Black man was fatally shot by a white police officer who had
pulled him over for a traffic violation.
The trial resonated all the more for many because Floyd's death was
captured in a painfully intimate video that showed Chauvin kneeling on
Floyd's neck for almost 10 minutes, with two other officers on his back.
Civil rights historian Clayborne Carson, director of the Martin Luther
King Jr. Institute at Stanford University, was beaten by baton-wielding
police during 1960s civil rights protests.
Then as now, Carson said, periods of agitation and activity were marked
by atrocities that moved the public: The 1955 lynching of Emmett Till, a
14-year-old boy murdered in Mississippi after a white woman lied about
being insulted; kids firehosed while marching for civil rights in
Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963; and the assassination of Martin Luther
King, Jr. in 1968.
VIDEO WITNESS
Carson points to the video of Floyd's killing - made by teen passerby
Darnella Frazier with her cell phone, shared around the world via social
media and shown repeatedly during the trial in which she testified - as
being the chief reason his death and the trial of his killer drew such
attention.
Floyd is seen in the video prone on the street, telling police he can't
breathe and crying out for his dead mother. Lawyers for Chauvin had
argued he followed his police training.
Mary Moriarty was chief public defender in Hennepin County, where Floyd
died, until last year. She said she had long tried to draw attention to
episodes of police brutality reported to her office, often recorded by
officers' body-worn cameras.
Moriarty recalled the horror of seeing the video of Floyd.
"Poor George Floyd is begging for his life, and here you have a cop just
nonchalantly killing him in broad daylight in front of bystanders who
are begging him to stop, and he knows he's being videoed, and he just
continues to do it," she said. "So I think this was the last straw
here."
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Police departments in many American cities are
engaged with community leaders on dozens of reform efforts brought
forth since Floyd's murder. Most of the reforms focus on banning
controversial tactics - like choke holds - and making police who do
wrong more accountable.
Still, the changes are mostly in the proposal stage
and do not go nearly far enough for many activists.
Issues of racism and police brutality "didn't just arise when George
Floyd took his last breath," said Councilwoman Andrea Jenkins who
represents Minneapolis's Ward 8, which includes the intersection
where Floyd was killed.
But pandemic shutdowns, she said, allowed Americans to see problems
in a more intimate way. With lives slowed down, people had time to
view and reflect on the video of Floyd's killing.
His death and the trial also came during a period of anxiety and
vulnerability in America, with over half a million dead from the
virus, and with economic instability and political divisions
rattling the country.
YEARS OF UPHEAVAL
For Mark Bray, a human rights historian and author, the current era
of social and political upheaval started years before the pandemic
and Floyd's death.
The most recent era of activism was awoken in 2011 during the month
long occupation of the Wisconsin statehouse, when protesters opposed
a proposed anti-union bill, Bray said.
It continued in the early Black Lives Matter protests following the
2014 killing of Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and to repeated
demonstrations that followed more police killings of African
Americans.
"The template for radical resistance over the past decade is that
something happens in one city - and then it spreads as others ask
'what are we going to do in our city to show solidarity?'" Bray
said.
But the protests over Floyd's death stretched beyond people who
might embrace the term radical; people who may not normally
demonstrate turned out in massive protests around the world.
Such protests are what must be built upon to draw attention to the
root causes of police violence and racism, said Patrick Ngwolo, a
Houston criminal defense attorney and pastor who met Floyd over a
decade ago.
He said guilty verdicts were essential - but also that the country
has to confront the larger issues at play.
"What does it look like for us as a country to try to make this
whole, to try to address the centuries of systemic racism that this
country has gone through?" he said. "What does it look like for us
to think about sitting down and coming up with constructive ways to
unite these yet-to-be-United States of America?"
(Reporting by Brad Brooks in Lubbock, Texas; Additional reporting by
Jonathan Allen and Nathan Layne in Minneapolis; Editing by Donna
Bryson and Lincoln Feast.)
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