Jurors in Chauvin trial are shown disturbing autopsy pictures of Floyd's face with cuts over his eyebrow, cheek, nose and upper lip as forensic pathologist testifies the officer's compression caused his death

 A third prosecution witness has told the jury at Derek Chauvin's murder trial that George Floyd died as as result of 'low oxygen' or 'asphyxia.'

Forensic pathologist Dr. Lindsey Thomas took the stand Friday morning at the close of the second week of the high-profile trial.

Dr. Thomas, who works as a medical examiner in Reno and Salt Lake City, said that in this case the autopsy itself did not tell her the cause of death in her investigation but the 'unique' amount of documentation in terms of videos and records was vital in establishing 'mechanism' of death.


Asked if she agreed with Hennepin County Medical Examiner Dr. Andrew Baker's finding that cause of death was, 'Cardiopulmonary arrest, complicating law enforcement subdual restraint and neck compression.' She said, 'Yes.'

In an extraordinary move Judge Cahill decided that autopsy images of Floyd would not be displayed in court but handed in packets to the individual jurors and people in court. Jurors were shown a picture of Floyd's face with abrasions over his left eyebrow and cheek and small cuts on his nose and upper lip; a picture of his left and right shoulders bearing the echo of injuries sustained as he tried to push himself up to breathe.

They were shown a picture of his hands and directed to look at the base of the left hand just above his wrist where there was discoloration consistent with the handcuffs that ratcheted tighter around his wrists as he struggled.

On both hands there were areas where his skin had been rubbed up by the cuffs. On the knuckles of his right hand there was skin scraped off where he had pushed against the rim of the car tire.

For the first time in proceedings the seat in court set aside for Chauvin's family - which had been removed as it languished empty so long – was occupied.

An Asian woman who wore a wedding ring and her dark hair cut into a bob sat silently in Chauvin's camp watching proceedings.

Forensic pathologist Dr. Lindsey Thomas testified as a prosecution witness Friday in the trial of Derek Chauvin. 'This is a death where both the heart and lungs stopped working and the point is that it is due to subdual restraint and compression,' she said

Forensic pathologist Dr. Lindsey Thomas testified as a prosecution witness Friday in the trial of Derek Chauvin. 'This is a death where both the heart and lungs stopped working and the point is that it is due to subdual restraint and compression,' she said

Forensic Pathologist: Interaction with police led to Floyd's death
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Former officer Derek Chavin (right) is seen in court  Friday morning at the close of the second week of the high-profile trial. In an extraordinary move Judge Cahill decided that autopsy images of Floyd would not be displayed in court but handed in packets to the individual jurors and people in court

Former officer Derek Chavin (right) is seen in court  Friday morning at the close of the second week of the high-profile trial. In an extraordinary move Judge Cahill decided that autopsy images of Floyd would not be displayed in court but handed in packets to the individual jurors and people in court

George Floyd's death certificate ruled his cause of death as 'Cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement subdual, restraint, and neck compressions'

George Floyd's death certificate ruled his cause of death as 'Cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement subdual, restraint, and neck compressions'

At the start of the proceedings Judge Cahill had pulled one of the female jurors aside and expressed concern that she had been exposed to outside influences.

She explained to him that her mother-in-law had texted her that it 'looked like a bad day for the defense,' an answer which seemed to satisfy the judge that there had been no misconduct.

Dr. Thomas had told the court that there are no physical findings in autopsy that show low oxygen but there are sometimes findings consistent with a cause of death that may result in low oxygen. She gave as an example a partial hanging in which a person may have petechiae, tiny burst blood vessels in the eye.

She said that she had found such supporting signs in Floyd's autopsy. According to Dr. Thomas, 'Mr. Floyd had superficial injuries on his face, shoulders and wrists. What that does is it supports what I saw in the videos which is that he's being forcibly restrained and subdued and trying to move into a position by rubbing his face against the ground, pulling against his handcuffs and by pushing with his shoulder.

'And he also had some scrapes on his knuckles on his right hand and again that was from him pushing trying to get into a position where he could breathe.' 

Chauvin, 45, is accused of killing Floyd by pinning his knee on the 46-year-old black man's neck for 9 minutes, 29 seconds, as he lay face-down in handcuffs after being detained for using an alleged counterfeit $20 bill to buy cigarettes

Chauvin, 45, is accused of killing Floyd by pinning his knee on the 46-year-old black man's neck for 9 minutes, 29 seconds, as he lay face-down in handcuffs after being detained for using an alleged counterfeit $20 bill to buy cigarettes 

She explained, 'There are really two parts; cardiopulmonary arrest which doesn't really provide much additional information because essentially we all die when our heart and lungs stop, but as a forensic pathologist I would use it to differentiate from cardiac arrest. This is not a sudden cardiac arrest.

'This is a death where both the heart and lungs stopped working and the point is that it is due to subdual restraint and compression.'

She explained, 'The activities of the law enforcement officers led to Mr. Floyd's death.'

And by that she meant placing him in the prone position, handcuffing him and kneeling on his back and, specifically, neck. 

Dr. Thomas, a pathologist of 37 years experience who has conducted more than 5,000 autopsies, was on the stand the day after the court heard compelling medical testimony from expert pulmonologist Martin Tobin and forensic toxicologist and police surgeon, William Smock.

Both were unequivocal in their views that Floyd died not from an overdose of fentanyl or its interplay with excited delirium and his pre-existing cardiac disease, but due to 'low levels of oxygen,' 'positional asphyxiation.'

Put simply both told the court that Floyd had the life squeezed out of him, crushed between the street at 38th and Chicago and the weight of Chauvin and his fellow officers on his neck and back.

As with the previous experts Dr. Thomas told the court that her findings as to cause and mechanism of death were not based primarily on the autopsy but on the video and her wider investigation.

She explained that the autopsy was great for 'ruling things out.'

Dr. Thomas told the jury that the autopsy ruled out pre-existing lung disease or injuries to his neck that suggested the bones in his neck had been fractures and it ruled out a stroke, he didn't have an aneurism or an embolism, he didn't rupture his heart, he didn't have an old or recent heart attack. 

Dr. Martin Tobin, a specialist at the Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital and Loyola University's medical school in Chicago, testified on Thursday that these images of George Floyd lifting himself off the ground with his hands (above) show he was trying to 'literally breath with his fingers and knuckles' because the force used to push him down was crushing his lungs

Dr. Martin Tobin, a specialist at the Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital and Loyola University's medical school in Chicago, testified on Thursday that these images of George Floyd lifting himself off the ground with his hands (above) show he was trying to 'literally breath with his fingers and knuckles' because the force used to push him down was crushing his lungs  

Dr. Tobin pointed to an image taken from a body cam video of Floyd pushing his knuckles against the tire of the police car next to him. Of that moment, Dr. Tobin said Floyd was trying to use his hands to push his chest up to get air

Dr. Tobin pointed to an image taken from a body cam video of Floyd pushing his knuckles against the tire of the police car next to him. Of that moment, Dr. Tobin said Floyd was trying to use his hands to push his chest up to get air


Questioned by Jerry Blackwell, Dr. Thomas told the court that Floyd's was not a fentanyl death – as forwarded by the defense – because his death was not a slow, peaceful slip into coma without struggle.

Similarly she ruled out Methamphetamine as behind Floyd's death because, she said that caused a much more sudden death possibly with a full blown seizure. 

Yesterday Dr Tobin told the court that at points Floyd was so desperate that he had tried 'to breathe through his fingers and knuckles.'

The main thing this shows, she said, was that his face was in contact with some sort of rough surface.

None of this evidence was, Dr Thomas said, conclusive. It was only useful in the context of what could be seen in the videos.

Dr. Thomas told jurors that there was nothing in Floyd's medical history to suggest he would have died that night under any other circumstances.

But she told them that the physiologic stress under which Floyd was put that night was a contributory factor.

By that, she said, she meant the fear of life that caused the heart to raise, blood pressure to rise, stress hormones and adrenalin to be released, lactic acid generated in the muscles in an agonizing stress that goes on minute after minute with, in this instance, no recovery.

It was, in her view, 'a contributing mechanism' that put additional demands on his heart, his muscles and his breathing in a kind of 'double whammy' to his whole system.

But she was clear that the direct, primary, mechanism of death was asphyxia while the cause of death was the officers' subdual, restraint and compression of Floyd's neck.

She told jurors that she agreed with Hennepin County Medical Examiner Dr. Baker's conclusion that the manner of Floyd's death was homicide – death at the hand of another.  

During his testimony, Dr. Tobin relied on graphics and images that depicted the officers' positions on Floyd to analyze the impact the forces had on his death

During his testimony, Dr. Tobin relied on graphics and images that depicted the officers' positions on Floyd to analyze the impact the forces had on his death 

During his testimony, Dr. Tobin analyzed the mechanics of how Floyd would have been unable to breathe due to the officers pinning him down and relied on graphics to show jurors how the level of force would have contributed. He said Chauvin was exerting 91.5lbs of pressure directly down on his neck

During his testimony, Dr. Tobin analyzed the mechanics of how Floyd would have been unable to breathe due to the officers pinning him down and relied on graphics to show jurors how the level of force would have contributed. He said Chauvin was exerting 91.5lbs of pressure directly down on his neck

In direct questioning, Dr. Thomas had dismissed Floyd's general health or health issues as having any part of his ultimate death.

But in cross, Chauvin's attorney Eric Nelson circled back to those underlying issues starting with Floyd's heart which was enlarged – 'somewhat enlarged' according to Dr. Thomas, 'profoundly enlarged' Nelson suggested giving the average normal weight of a healthy heart as 383g while Floyd's was 540g.

Focusing in on the narrowing of Floyd's arteries Nelson asked Dr. Thomas what level Dr. Thomas as a forensic pathologist would view as a potentially fatal. She said that she would consider it a possible cause of death if the narrowing was between 70 and 75 per cent.

Floyd, Nelson pointed out, had a 75 percent narrowing of his left coronary artery and a 90 percent narrowing of his right.

Chauvin's attorney Eric Nelson circled back to those underlying issues starting with Floyd's heart which was enlarged ¿ 'somewhat enlarged' according to Dr. Thomas, 'profoundly enlarged' Nelson suggested giving the average normal weight of a healthy heart as 383g while Floyd's was 540g

Chauvin's attorney Eric Nelson circled back to those underlying issues starting with Floyd's heart which was enlarged – 'somewhat enlarged' according to Dr. Thomas, 'profoundly enlarged' Nelson suggested giving the average normal weight of a healthy heart as 383g while Floyd's was 540g 

Under the physiologic stress described by Dr. Thomas earlier Nelson established that Mr. Floyd's already potentially compromised heart would have to work 'very hard'

Turning to Dr. Thomas's finding of positional asphyxia Nelson sought to neutralize the notion of the prone position as 'inherently dangerous.'

Patients being treated for covid are placed in the prone position, he said, chiropractors place people in it and massage therapists.

'So, you would agree,' he asked Dr. Thomas, 'that the prone position is not in and of itself inherently dangerous?' She agreed.

Nelson asked, 'Is the prone position on concrete inherently dangerous?'

Not, Dr. Thomas replied, with no other factors.

Nelson also had Dr. Thomas confirm the absence of damage or bruising to Floyd's neck and back.

In fact, Nelson said, 'There is really no objective evidence showing any pressure to the back of Mr. Floyd.'

Dr. Thomas replied, 'There is nothing in the autopsy that is correct.'

Nelson leaned heavily on Floyd's apparent coherence while he was able to speak to dismiss the notion that low oxygen was his cause of death noting that the brain is the first organ to show signs of its impact.

And he worked hard to reintroduce the causes of death that Dr. Thomas had eliminated he asked, 'Let's assume you found Mr. Floyd dead in his residence, no police involvement, no drugs, the only facts are these. What would you find as cause of death?'

Dr. Thomas replied, 'In that very narrow set of circumstances I'd probably concluded that the cause of death was his heart disease.'

Turning to the drugs in Floyd's system he asked, 'You find a person at home, no struggle with the police and the person doesn't have a heart problem but you find fentanyl and methamphetamine at the levels that they're at. Would you certify this as an overdose?'

She replied, 'In the absence of any of these other realities, yes I would consider that to be an overdose.'

When he stood to redirect, Blackwell was clearly irritated by the cross examination he had just witnessed and was cautioned twice by Judge Cahill for framing his questions in a way that was argumentative.

Blackwell asked, 'Would you ever approach an assessment, taking out of it the facts that you found pertinent and highly relevant to the case?'

Dr. Thomas replied she would not.

Blackwell asked Dr. Thomas to reiterate her findings as to cause and manner of death.

She said, 'Cause of death was law enforcement subdual, restraint and compression. And the manner of death was homicide.'

Prosecutor Blackwell was clearly irritated by the cross examination he had just witnessed and was cautioned twice by Judge Cahill for framing his questions in a way that was argumentative

Prosecutor Blackwell was clearly irritated by the cross examination he had just witnessed and was cautioned twice by Judge Cahill for framing his questions in a way that was argumentative

Blackwell asked Dr. Thomas to reiterate her findings as to cause and manner of death. She said, 'Cause of death was law enforcement subdual, restraint and compression. And the manner of death was homicide'

Blackwell asked Dr. Thomas to reiterate her findings as to cause and manner of death. She said, 'Cause of death was law enforcement subdual, restraint and compression. And the manner of death was homicide'

The manner of death in the case of George Floyd is listed as 'homicide'. Dr. Thomas told jurors that she agreed with Hennepin County Medical Examiner Dr. Baker's conclusion that the manner of Floyd's death was homicide ¿ death at the hand of another

The manner of death in the case of George Floyd is listed as 'homicide'. Dr. Thomas told jurors that she agreed with Hennepin County Medical Examiner Dr. Baker's conclusion that the manner of Floyd's death was homicide – death at the hand of another

On Thursday, Dr. Tobin, a specialist at the Edward Hines, Jr. VA Hospital and Loyola University's medical school in Chicago, testified as a prosecution witness.

During his hours-long testimony, Dr. Tobin said he believed Floyd's cause of death was due to a lack of oxygen that damaged his brain and caused his heart to stop when he was pinned to the street by Minneapolis police officers.

He said there were several factors that he said made it difficult for Floyd to breathe, beyond Chauvin's knee on his neck: Officers lifting up on his handcuffs, the hard street, lying face down, his turned head and a knee on his back.

Dr. Tobin relied on graphics and bodycam video that depicted the officers' positions on Floyd to analyze and explain to jurors the impact those forces had on the 46-year-old black man's death last May.

'He was being squashed between the two sides,' Dr. Tobin said as he described the position Floyd was in lying face down on the ground with the officers pinning him down.

Dr. Martin Tobin was the first to testify for the prosecution on Thursday on what has become the most contested issue of Chauvin's trial so far: Floyd's cause of death

Dr. Martin Tobin was the first to testify for the prosecution on Thursday on what has become the most contested issue of Chauvin's trial so far: Floyd's cause of death

Dr. Tobin told the court that the impact of the pressure of the officers and handcuffs rendered movement so impossible that Floyd's left lung was greatly affected.

'Basically on the left side of his lung, it was almost to the effect of if a surgeon had gone in and removed his lung,' he said, adding that Floyd needed to be 'totally dependent' on his right side.

At one point, Dr. Tobin noted that Floyd had rammed his face into the ground to 'try to crank up his chest' so he could breathe.

'He's actually using his nose and chin and forehead as a way of trying to help him get air into the right side of his chest,' he said. 

He pointed to an image taken from a body cam video of Floyd pushing his knuckles against the tire of the police car next to him. Of that moment, Dr. Tobin said Floyd was trying to use his hands to push his chest up to get air.

'This tells you he's used up his resources and he's literally trying to breathe through his fingers and knuckles,' Dr. Tobin said.

'When you breathe you use your diaphragm, next thing you recruit is the big muscles in the neck, when those are wasted up then you're relying on these kinds of muscles to get air into the right side.'

Dr. Tobin pointed to images showing Floyd's right shoulder, prominent and strained, as evidence that he was also trying to recruit his shoulders to facilitate breathing as he was being crushed between the officers and the street.

These were the tell-tale sides of a person trying to breathe 'in extremis,' Dr. Tobin said.

He went on to further analyze the mechanics of how Floyd would have been unable to breathe and offered specific calculations of what his lung capacity would have been at various points before he lost consciousness.

Floyd's cause of death has become the most contested issue of Chauvin's trial so far with the defense claiming he died as a result of a drug overdose. Dr. Tobin took the stand as part of an effort by prosecutors to establish that it was Chauvin's actions that killed him.

Tobin took direct aim at the defense's theory, declaring in his testimony: 'A healthy person subjected to what Mr. Floyd was subjected to would have died as a result.'

When asked if Dr. Tobin, based on his medical expertise, had determined a cause of death for Floyd after viewing videos from the scene, he said: 'Mr. Floyd died from a low level of oxygen... The cause of low level of oxygen was shallow breathing. Small breaths that weren't able to carry the air through his lungs.' 

Chauvin, 45, is charged with murder and manslaughter after being accused of pinning his knee on Floyd's neck for nine minutes and 29 seconds in May last year
Chauvin, 45, is accused of killing Floyd by pinning his knee on the 46-year-old black man's neck for 9 minutes

Chauvin, 45, is charged with murder and manslaughter after being accused of pinning his knee on Floyd's neck for nine minutes and 29 seconds in May last year 


Dr. Tobin delivered another blow to the defense's contention that Floyd died of a fentanyl overdose and not asphyxia.

According to Dr. Tobin, Floyd's breathing rate and the high levels of carbon dioxide found in his arterial blood post mortem both spoke to fentanyl having no part in his death. Fentanyl, he explained, depresses respiratory rate, while heart disease another factor pointed to as an alternative to asphyxia, increases it.

Having observed Floyd's final moments, Dr. Tobin said that his respiratory rate was right in the middle of normal, at 22, where a normal range is between 12 and 27 breaths per minute.

Dr. Tobin also said that the high levels of carbon dioxide, attributed by the defense to the presence of opioids, were 'completely explained' by the fact that he took his last spontaneous breath at 20.25.16 and was not delivered his next by paramedics' intervention until 9mins 50 seconds later.

He explained that the level of the gas in Floyd's blood – 89 – was exactly what one would expect taking into consideration the rate the gas rises in the bloodstream from normal levels of around 35 to 45 once a person has stopped breathing.

Dr. Tobin explained elsewhere in his testimony the impact of Floyd being placed in the prone position stating that his lung volume would have diminished in size by 24 percent - even without any pressure having been applied.

With smaller lung volume, his oxygen reserves were drastically reduced, his hypopharynx was constricted and, with his lung and chest walls having stiffened, the effort to breathe would have increased, the witness said.

With Chauvin's knee on his back the reduction of his lung volume jumped to 43 percent, his hypopharynx became more constricted and his breathing increasingly shallow. 

'With each breathe [Floyd] has to fight against the street, he has to fight against the small volume, he has to try to lift up the against the effect of the officer's knee on his back and the other officer pumping his arm into his chest [with the handcuffs].' 

By the time Floyd lost consciousness – a moment that Dr. Tobin placed at 4.53 minutes in – his blood oxygen levels, Dr. Tobin said with absolute certainty, would have dropped from a normal of 89mm Hg to 36mm Hg.   

This image that Dr. Tobin referred to during his testimony shows the different ways Floyd's neck - or hypopharynx - was restricted at various stages when he was being detained

This image that Dr. Tobin referred to during his testimony shows the different ways Floyd's neck - or hypopharynx - was restricted at various stages when he was being detained 

By the time Floyd lost consciousness ¿ a moment that Dr. Tobin placed at 4.53 minutes in ¿ his blood oxygen levels, Dr. Tobin said with absolute certainty, would have dropped from a normal of 89mm Hg to 36mm Hg

By the time Floyd lost consciousness – a moment that Dr. Tobin placed at 4.53 minutes in – his blood oxygen levels, Dr. Tobin said with absolute certainty, would have dropped from a normal of 89mm Hg to 36mm Hg

As a physician of more than three decades experience of working in critical care and Intensive Care Units Dr. Tobin said he has monitored 'millions' of patients for signs of unconsciousness and does so by observing their facial muscles and flickers

'It's a very important sign to be able to monitor,' he said when caring for patients.

Floyd stopped breathing, according to Dr. Tobin, at 20.24.16seconds. From then it would take, he said, only 25 seconds for every ounce of oxygen to be gone from his body. 

'The knee remained on the neck for another three minutes two seconds after every ounce of oxygen had left the body,' Dr. Tobin said, adding the knee stayed on Floyd's neck for an additional 2.44 minutes after officers found he had no pulse. 

Tobin also explained that just because Floyd was talking and shown moving on video, it doesn't mean he was breathing adequately. He said a person can continue to speak until the airway narrows to 15% - but once it gets below that, it´s dangerous. 'At the point where you can't speak... you are in deep trouble,' he said.

Officers are heard on video telling Floyd that if he can talk, he can breathe.

He said it appeared that Floyd was getting enough oxygen for about the first five minutes to keep his brain alive because he was still speaking. But Tobin said that where Chauvin had his knee after the five-minute mark would not make much of a difference, because at that point Floyd had already experienced brain damage. 

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