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BREAKING NEWS: Derek Chauvin Found Guilty Of All Charges In George Floyd Killing

 A jury on Tuesday afternoon found former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin guilty of all three charges he faced in the death of black man George Floyd. 


Chauvin was convicted on charges of second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. The white ex-cop faces up to 40 years in prison when he is sentence in the coming weeks. 

He will likely receive less time, as the presumptive sentence in Minnesota for second-degree murder, the most serious charge against him, is 12.5 years. The unanimous verdict was read in Hennepin County Court and live streamed for the world to watch.    

In court, Chauvin wore a mask and looked on as Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill read the verdict. Chauvin’s eyes paced back and forth as he heard the jury found him ‘guilty’ on each of the three charges. 

Judge Cahill then ordered sheriff’s deputies to take Chauvin, who was out on bail since the fall, into custody. Chauvin showed no resistance as he was handcuffed in the courtroom and escorted out. 

Chauvin will be sentenced in eight weeks. The judge will decide if aggravating factors were at play to justify a higher than normal sentence for him. 

The state asked for a higher sentence. Prosecutors in court filings argued that aggravating factors included that Chauvin treated Floyd with ‘particular cruelty’, that Chauvin as a cop ‘abused his position of authority’, and that children watched as Floyd was killed. Chauvin, 45, pleaded not guilty to all three charges. 

He was recorded kneeling on Floyd’s neck and back on May 25 as Floyd called for his mother and cried, ‘I can’t breathe’. Floyd, 46, died that day.

Twelve jurors deliberated for about 10 hours from Monday afternoon after closing arguments until Tuesday afternoon. The jury included six white and six black or multiracial people.

Seven of them were women and five were men and they ranged in age from their 20s to their 60s. They listened to 45 witnesses – 38 from the prosecution and seven from the defense. 

Jurors deliberated in a government building in downtown Minneapolis and were sequestered in a hotel every night. As jurors deliberated, the nation and particularly Minneapolis braced for the decision, boarding up businesses and preparing for protests and unrest. But late afternoon on Tuesday, the tune on the streets was of celebration. 

In a press conference shortly after the verdict, prosecutor Jerry Blackwell said that ‘no verdict can bring George Perry Floyd back to us, but this verdict does give a message to his family that he was somebody, that his life mattered, that all of our lives mattered, and that’s important’.

Blackwell concluded that he also hopes the verdict ‘will help us further down the road to a better humanity’. 

In closing arguments on Monday, prosecutor Steve Schleicher focused on the nine minutes and 29 seconds that Chauvin knelt on Floyd on the street in Minneapolis and told jurors to use their common sense. 

‘This case is exactly what you thought when you saw it first, when you saw that video’, Schleicher said. ‘It’s what you felt in your gut. It’s what you now know in your heart’. 



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