By Spy Uganda CorrespondentĀ
A former police officer in the US city of Minneapolis has been found guilty of aiding and abetting in the 2020 killing of George Floyd, whose death at the hands of police set off mass racial justice protests across the United States.
Tou Thao, who already had been convicted in federal court of violating Floydās civil rights, was the last of the four former officers facing judgement in state court over the killing.
He rejected a plea agreement and, instead of going to trial, let Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill decide the verdict based on written filings by each side and evidence presented in previous cases. Cahillās Monday ruling was released on Tuesday.
Derek Chauvin, a former Minneapolis officer captured on video kneeling on Floydās neck for more than nine minutes while he gasped for air and repeated, āI canāt breatheā, was found guilty of murdering Floyd in 2021.
Two other former officers, Thomas Lane and J Alexander Kueng, pleaded guilty last year to aiding and abetting second-degree manslaughter, the same charge that Thao faced.
With Chauvin kneeling on Floydās neck during the fatal arrest on May 25, 2020, Lane and Kueng restrained his knees and buttocks.
US judge finds former Minneapolis police officer Tou Thao guilty of aiding and abetting in Floydās May 2020 killing.
Tou Thao, who already had been convicted in federal court of violating Floydās civil rights, was the last of the four former officers facing judgement in state court over the killing.
He rejected a plea agreement and, instead of going to trial, let Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill decide the verdict based on written filings by each side and evidence presented in previous cases. Cahillās Monday ruling was released on Tuesday.
Derek Chauvin, a former Minneapolis officer captured on video kneeling on Floydās neck for more than nine minutes while he gasped for air and repeated, āI canāt breatheā, was found guilty of murdering Floyd in 2021.
Two other former officers, Thomas Lane and J Alexander Kueng, pleaded guilty last year to aiding and abetting second-degree manslaughter, the same charge that Thao faced.
With Chauvin kneeling on Floydās neck during the fatal arrest on May 25, 2020, Lane and Kueng restrained his knees and buttocks.
While Floyd was pinned, Thao stood to one side and kept back a small crowd of people, including an off-duty firefighter, who repeatedly yelled at the police to get off the 46-year-old and check his pulse.
Unlike the other three former officers, Thao maintained that he did nothing wrong. When he rejected a plea deal in state court last August, he said āit would be lyingā to plead guilty.
However, prosecutor Matthew Frank wrote that Thao knew that his fellow officers were restraining Floyd in a way that was āextremely dangerousā because it could stop his breathing ā āthe exact condition from which Floyd repeatedly complained he was sufferingā.
āYet Thao made the conscious decision to aid that dangerous restraint: He actively encouraged the other three officers, and assisted their crime by holding back concerned bystanders,ā Frank added.
Defence lawyer Robert Paule argued that the state had failed to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Thao, a nine-year veteran of the force, knew that Chauvin was committing a crime or that Thao intended to help in a crime.
āEvery one of Thaoās actions was done based upon the training he received from the Minneapolis Police Department,ā Paule wrote.
Thaoās lawyers also wrote that the officerās police training had told him that knee restraints on a neck were appropriate in some instances, and he believed the other three officers were mindful of Floydās medical needs.
āHe did not perform the checks himself because he was dealing with crowd control,ā they wrote. āThao rightfully assumed that the other officers were monitoring Floyd as this was their role per training and policy.ā
Chauvin was sentenced to 22.5 years in prison for the unintentional second-degree murder of Floyd, and last year received a concurrent sentence of 21 years in prison on federal charges of violating Floydās civil rights.
At a federal trial last year, Keung, Lane and Thao were found guilty of violating Floydās civil rights. Lane was sentenced to 2.5 years in prison, Kueng to three, and Thao to 3.5 years.
The judge in Hennepin County was expected to order a pre-sentence investigation and set August 7 as the sentencing date for Thao.
Minnesota sentencing guidelines recommend four years on the manslaughter count. Thao will serve his state term concurrent with his federal sentence.