Minnesota attorney general asks for a joint trial for the four Minneapolis police officers charged in George Floyd's death to spare witnesses and the family from repeat trauma

Prosecutors have asked a judge to try four fired Minneapolis police officers jointly in George Floyd's death, in a bid to spare the families and witnesses from repeat trauma.
Keith Ellison, the attorney general for Minnesota, filed a memo arguing that evidence against the four is similar, and that a single trial would be more humane for those testifying.
Holding one trial also would allow the community and the nation to absorb the impact of the verdicts for the four officers at once, instead of piecemeal, Ellison argued.
'Forcing the community to endure four separate trials, with four separate verdicts at four different times, is likely to compound and prolong the trauma to the community,' wrote Ellison, whose office is leading the prosecution.
Keith Ellison, the attorney general for Minnesota, has asked for all four to be tried at once
Keith Ellison, the attorney general for Minnesota, has asked for all four to be tried at once
Former officers, from left: Derek Chauvin, J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao
Former officers, from left: Derek Chauvin, J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao
George Floyd is pictured talking to Thomas Lane shortly before he was killed
George Floyd is pictured talking to Thomas Lane shortly before he was killed
Floyd, a black man, was handcuffed and lying face-down when Officer Derek Chauvin, who is white, pressed his knee against Floyd's neck for nearly eight minutes on May 25. 
Floyd repeatedly said he could not breathe and called out for his mother before passing out. 

He was pronounced dead at a hospital that evening, and his death sparked protests around the world.
Chauvin is charged with second-degree murder, third-degree murder and manslaughter. 
The other three officers, Thomas Lane, J. Kueng and Tou Thao, are charged with aiding and abetting both second-degree murder and manslaughter. 
All four officers were fired and are scheduled for trial in March.
Attorneys for Chauvin and Kueng declined comment on the prosecution's motion to hold a joint trial. 
Defense attorneys for Lane and Thao did not immediately reply to requests from The Associated Press for comment Wednesday.
Thomas Lane (L) and Tou Thao pass in Hennepin County Government Center on July 21
Thomas Lane (L) and Tou Thao pass in Hennepin County Government Center on July 21
J. Alexander Keung arrives for a court hearing on July 21 in Minneapolis
J. Alexander Keung arrives for a court hearing on July 21 in Minneapolis
In his memo, Ellison notes the charges against the four officers are similar, and that all of the charges stem from the same incident. 
Evidence also shows the four 'worked together to commit the crime,' Ellison said, with Chauvin pressing his knee into Floyd's neck, Kueng and Lane holding Floyd down and Thao preventing bystanders from intervening.
A single trial also would spare witnesses and Floyd's family members from having to relive his death at multiple trials, Ellison argued.
'Eyewitnesses who take the stand will be asked to recount the harrowing details of Floyd's death,' Ellison wrote.
The attorney general also cited the travel costs and lost wages of witnesses testifying at four separate trials, the risk of testifying in person during the coronavirus pandemic and the fact that several eyewitnesses are minors, including a 17-year-old girl who videotaped Floyd's death.
The next court hearing for the four is scheduled for Sept. 11.
Powered by Blogger.