Law Judge gives ex-police officer Derek Chauvin 22-1/2 years for George Floyd murder

  • 🏰 The Fediverse is up. If you know, you know.
  • Want to keep track of this thread?
    Accounts can bookmark posts, watch threads for updates, and jump back to where you stopped reading.
    Create account
A Minnesota judge sentenced former police officer Derek Chauvin to 22-1/2 years in prison on Friday for the murder of George Floyd during an arrest in May 2020 on a Minneapolis sidewalk, video of which sparked global protests.

A jury found Chauvin, 45, guilty on April 20 of unintentional second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter after a trial that was widely seen as a landmark in the history of U.S. policing.

His sentence was one of the longest ever received by a former police officer for using unlawful deadly force in the United States, Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, whose office prosecuted the case, told reporters.

"Today's sentencing is not justice but it is another moment of real accountability on the road to justice," Ellison said.


Before the sentence was handed down, Floyd's brothers told the court of their anguish, Chauvin's mother insisted on her son's innocence, and Chauvin himself briefly offered condolences to the Floyd family.

Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill said it was important to recognize the pain of the Floyd family and acknowledged the global notoriety of the case only to say it would not sway him.

"I'm not basing my sentence on public opinion," Cahill said, explaining his reasoning would be laid out in a 22-page memorandum. "I'm not basing it on the attempt to send any messages. The job of a trial court judge is to apply the law to specific facts and to deal with individual cases."


The hearing began with prosecutors asking several members of Floyd's family to address the court. Floyd's 7-year-old daughter Gianna was first, appearing in a video recording.

"I ask about him all the time," she said in the video as Chauvin sat before the judge dressed in a gray suit and tie, a blue mask covering his nose and mouth. "My daddy always used to help me brush my teeth." Asked what she would say to him if she could see him again, she said: "It would be I miss you and I love you."

Prosecutors had asked for a 30-year prison sentence, double the upper limit indicated in sentencing guidelines for a first-time offender.

Cahill ruled earlier this month that prosecutors had established grounds for giving Chauvin a harsher sentence, and said in his sentencing memorandum on Friday that Chauvin's treatment of Floyd was "without respect and denied him the dignity owed to all human beings."

The defense had asked for probation and had unsuccessfully sought a retrial ahead of an expected appeal.

Video of Chauvin, who is white, kneeling on the neck of Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man in handcuffs, for more than nine minutes on May 25, 2020 caused outrage around the world and the largest protest movement seen in the United States in decades.

Floyd's brother Terrence Floyd addressed Chauvin directly during his victim impact statement on Friday.

"What was going through your head as you had your knee on my brother's neck?" he asked. He told the judge he wanted the maximum sentence. "We don't want to see no more slaps on the wrist. We've been through that already."

HAUNTED BY VIDEO

Philonise Floyd, another brother, said he was haunted by the videos of Floyd's death, which were replayed countless times at Chauvin's trial.

Chauvin addressed the judge, saying he could not give a full statement due to "additional legal matters."


"But very briefly though, I do want to give my condolences to the Floyd family," he said. "There's going to be some other information in the future that would be of interest and I hope things will give you some peace of mind. Thank you."

He did not elaborate.

Chauvin's mother, Carolyn Pawlenty, told the judge she would always believe her son was innocent and that her life's two happiest moments were giving birth to Chauvin and pinning his police badge on him.

"Derek has played over and over again in his head the events of that day," she said, her voice quavering at times. "I have seen the toll it has taken on him. I believe a lengthy sentence will not serve Derek well. When you sentence my son, you will also be sentencing me."


AGGRAVATING FACTORS

In a sentencing memorandum, prosecutors from the Minnesota attorney general's office wrote that Chauvin's crime "shocked the conscience of the Nation."

In a six-page ruling last month, Cahill found that prosecutors had shown there were four aggravating factors that would allow him to hand down a longer prison term than sentencing guidelines would dictate.

The judge agreed that Chauvin abused his position of trust and authority; that he treated Floyd with particular cruelty; that he committed the crime as part of a group with three other officers; and that he committed the murder in front of children.


Through his attorney Eric Nelson, Chauvin had asked in court filings that the judge to sentence him to probation, writing that the murder of Floyd was "best described as an error made in good faith."

Chauvin was helping arrest Floyd on suspicion of using a fake $20 bill.

He has been held at the state's maximum security prison in Oak Park Heights since his conviction.

Chauvin could leave prison after about 15 years. In Minnesota, convicted people with good behavior spend two-thirds of their sentence in prison and the final third on supervised release.


The three other police officers involved in Floyd's arrest were, like Chauvin, fired the day after. The three are due to face trial next year on charges of aiding and abetting Floyd's murder.

Article
 
His lawyer seemed competent, imo. He was just played a losing hand. I suspect letting the media furor die down would give him a better chance on appeals, although I admittedly don't know jack or shit about appeals process in Minnesota. I remember the judge saying the defense lawyer had grounds to throw the whole trial out on appeal though.
His lawyer might've made one mistake or another--some say advising Chauvin to not testify was a mistake, others that it was good practice--but he did a good job in absolutely eviscerating almost every single one of the state's witnesses on cross. The evidence favored Chauvin, but the jury voted to convict, probably at least in part due to extensive jury intimidation in media. Hopefully the whole thing will be tossed on appeal, maybe a new trial ordered, but who knows these days. He has several grounds on which to appeal, like the judge's refusal to grant a change of venue, repeated refusals to grant a mistrial, refusal to sequester the jury from the start, and witness misconduct. There are probably others but those are the ones I remember off the top of my head.
 
The usual suspects on TV are now ooking about muh federal trial.
Can't wait for the kangaroo court that will be a weaponized DoJ calling him a white nationalist.
Because for some reason everyone believed the testimony of Dr Martin "smoking and cholesterol are good for you and the only unsafe amount of fentanyl is none" Tobin.

I think you're forgetting exactly how much of a fucking clown show that trial was.
Have any more jurors come out to show how retarded they are and state they wanted him guilty from the start?

On a more serious note I'm wondering how this will affect his wife and kids. Will he even get prison visitations? Will his kids grow up thinking daddy was an evil Nazi who murdered a saint? Will his wife divorce to save face? Will they be the target of thugs who want to start a blood feud with them based on relation alone?
 
His lawyer might've made one mistake or another--some say advising Chauvin to not testify was a mistake, others that it was good practice--but he did a good job in absolutely eviscerating almost every single one of the state's witnesses on cross. The evidence favored Chauvin, but the jury voted to convict, probably at least in part due to extensive jury intimidation in media. Hopefully the whole thing will be tossed on appeal, maybe a new trial ordered, but who knows these days. He has several grounds on which to appeal, like the judge's refusal to grant a change of venue, repeated refusals to grant a mistrial, refusal to sequester the jury from the start, and witness misconduct. There are probably others but those are the ones I remember off the top of my head.
Even if it gets tossed out on appeal the feds will arrest him again immediately and hit him with civil rights violations or any other bullshit that they can.
 
Can't wait for the kangaroo court that will be a weaponized DoJ calling him a white nationalist.

Have any more jurors come out to show how retarded they are and state they wanted him guilty from the start?

On a more serious note I'm wondering how this will affect his wife and kids. Will he even get prison visitations? Will his kids grow up thinking daddy was an evil Nazi who murdered a saint? Will his wife divorce to save face? Will they be the target of thugs who want to start a blood feud with them based on relation alone?
The disgusting thing is I wouldn’t be surprised if they wind up Epsteined, too.
 
The evidence favored Chauvin, but the jury voted to convict
There's a picture of one of the niggers on the jury wearing a "get your knee off our neck" t-shirt months before the trial. Some dumbasses are going to keep pretending justice has been done though. Keep those fingers in your ears.
 
George Floyd didn't overdose, he didn't go into a coma from the drugs he took, he was asphixiated. It's like none of you watched the trial.
They did. They're just living in their own fantasy land and bootlicking because joggers bad.
 
Considering that maximum penalty for him is 40 years, that's kinda surprising. Do not be surprised that people demand for more, though. Some of these retards think it was a premeditated murder when at worst it's just an angry retard accidentally killing another angry retard.

Also, how is my boy Eric Nelson doing these days?
Judge knows that the feds want their pound of flesh.
The usual suspects on TV are now ooking about muh federal trial.
And the feds know that the effect of that trial is that police departments nationwide will be so shortly staffed that Federal Police will be the only solution.
I'm surprised he got off that lightly considering he was charged with three contradictory charges. Riots will ensue until he is given the electric chair however.
Charges from the federal trial are likely to start running after Chauvin fulfills the charges from this trial. If Chauvin knows what's good for him he'd be trying to find ways to kill himself because nobody in power wants him to see the light of day again.
 
There’s really no “winner” or “justice” being served here. One cop getting 22 1/2 years in prison and one criminal who overdosed on drugs and now being used as both a tool and a pawn for politicians and “civil rights leaders” is not something we should be proud of.

Are we supposed to remain optimistic still, while crime and gun violence is dramatically increasing in the places where they want to “defund the police”?
 
If you want to know how faulty the jury was you only need to look at the fact they decided he was guilty of 3 crimes all with different mens rea at the same time. That plus all the other shit wrong with this trial.

The other officers charged in this shit are hosed too and that's before all the federal charges hit.

Nothing will convince me this was anything other than a show trial, it was a complete cucking of the system to the mob.
 
Last edited:
Whatever. Cities burn, food deserts expand, let all the niggers suffer for their ignorance.

ANNNNND remember kiddies, don't step a foot out of your little concrete cages; ain't nobody going to protect your ghetto trash asses out here when you start making trouble. :story:
The faster we accelerate to walling off those shitpits of human misery from real America, the better. Now lie in your beds OOOOR better yet, learn to vote for people who won't sell you down the river for being inconveniently white and wanting to actually live your fucking life apart from a completely astroterfed "movement" hailed by every company, every media outlet, and every whore in Washington! It's THAT simple really.
I already live some distance away from nearest cities. Sometimes I feel like I should finally just take the initiative and move out into the sticks.
 
They did. They're just living in their own fantasy land and bootlicking because joggers bad.
As was said earlier in this thread, you don't have to like someone to think they are innocent of a crime. I'm pretty sure half this board hates the fucking pigs, and no one here has any personal opinions on Chauvin as a person. None of that makes this show trail any more legitimate.

But tell me again who is coming at this trail with a bias.
 
im sure this will be a contriversal opinion, but it's not the cops job to kill people.

should Floyd have died? iunno.

should a pedophile or serial killer die? yeah.

but it's not the cops job to be the executioner. let the state do that.

just don't think we should make individual people in high stress situations executioners. doesn't sound like a good idea to me.
 
im sure this will be a contriversal opinion, but it's not the cops job to kill people.

should Floyd have died? iunno.

should a pedophile or serial killer die? yeah.

but it's not the cops job to be the executioner. let the state do that.

just don't think we should make individual people in high stress situations executioners. doesn't sound like a good idea to me.
I don't disagree, but I don't think anyone is arguing for that in regards to this case.
 
Back
Top Bottom