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Prosecutors Make Closing Arguments In Derek Chauvin Trial, Tell Jurors Believe Your Eyes

Reuters – A prosecutor told jurors to “believe your eyes” as he replayed video of George Floyd‘s death last May beneath the knee of former officer Derek Chauvin in closing arguments on Monday in the former police officer’s murder trial.

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Over and over again, Steve Schleicher, a prosecutor with the Minnesota attorney general‘s office, repeated a phrase: “Nine minutes and 29 seconds,” — the length of time Chauvin was captured on video on May 25, 2020, with his knee pressed into the dying Floyd’s neck.

Although the jury’s verdict will be seen as a reckoning in the way the United States polices Black people, Schleicher emphasized that the jury was weighing the guilt of only one man.

“This is not a prosecution of the police,” Schleicher told jurors. He cited the motto of the Minneapolis Police Department, which fired Chauvin and three other officers involved the day after Floyd’s arrest: “To protect with courage and to serve with compassion.”

“George Floyd was

not a threat to anyone,” Schleicher said. “Facing George Floyd that day that did not require one ounce of courage, and none was shown on that day, no courage was required. All that was required was a little compassion and none was shown on that day.”

Chauvin, who is white, pushed his knee into the neck of Floyd, a 46-year-old handcuffed Black man, for more than nine minutes outside the grocery store that had accused Floyd of using a counterfeit $20 bill to buy cigarettes.

“He was trapped with the unyielding pavement beneath him, as unyielding as the men who held him down,” Schleicher said, before playing some of the extensive video of Floyd’s death. “What the defendant did not was not policing. What the defendant did was assault.”

An image of Floyd’s face has since been elevated to an icon for the largest protest movement in the United States in decades.

Chauvin has pleaded not guilty to second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree “depraved

mind” murder and second-degree manslaughter. He waived his right to testify before the jurors, and his lead lawyer, Eric Nelson, was due to present his own closing argument later on Monday.

The extensive video footage of Floyd’s death from multiple angles has become a central part of the prosecution’s case. Jurors have spent hours watching and rewatching the videos played in the courtroom.

“Use your common sense,” Schleicher said. “Believe your eyes. What you saw, you saw.”

Prosecutors say the videos show Chauvin using unreasonable, and therefore illegal, force in compressing Floyd’s neck and torso against the road in a way that starved him of oxygen.

Chauvin’s lawyers argued that he correctly followed the training he received over 19 years with the Minneapolis Police Department and sought to raise doubts about the cause of Floyd’s death, which a medical examiner ruled a homicide.

Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill defined some important terms for the jurors in the charges before them, such as “great bodily harm” and “cause of death.”

“The fact that other causes contributed to the death does not relieve the defendant of criminal liability,” Cahill said, reading from written jury instructions.

National news networks carried live broadcasts of much of the testimony after the first of more than 40 witnesses took the stand three weeks ago, though the coverage was sometimes interrupted by fresh episodes of police violence caught on camera.

The closest instance occurred just a few miles from the courthouse in downtown Minneapolis when a white police officer fatally shot a Black motorist, Daunte Wright, on April 11 in a traffic stop in Brooklyn Center, a suburb to the north.

As angry protests swelled, Minneapolis and state officials have ramped up security precautions in the city. The tower in which the courtroom sits is ringed by barbed wire, high barriers and armed soldiers from the National Guard, and nearby businesses have boarded up their windows. Giant drab-colored military vehicles have become a common sight in city streets.

For the second-degree murder charge, 12 jurors will have to agree that prosecutors proved beyond a reasonable doubt that Chauvin committed a felony, in this case assault, that was a substantial cause in Floyd’s death. They do not have to find that Chauvin intended to kill Floyd.

That crime carries a punishment of up to 40 years in prison, although Minnesota sentencing guidelines call for a shorter sentence of up to 15 years for someone such as Chauvin with no prior convictions. Prosecutors want the judge to depart from the guidelines and give Chauvin more time if convicted.

The jury, along with two alternates, is comprised of six white women, two white men, three Black men, one Black woman and two multiracial women, according to court records. Once they receive the case, they will be sequestered in a hotel outside of deliberation hours.

(Reporting by Jonathan Allen; Editing by Daniel Wallis and Alistair Bell)

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