Derek Chauvin abused his authority as a police officer when he pressed his knee into George Floyd’s neck until he went limp and treated him with “particular cruelty,” qualifying him for a longer prison sentence, a judge said.
In a ruling
made public Wednesday, Hennepin County District Judge Peter A. Cahill found
state prosecutors had proved beyond a reasonable doubt four of five aggravating
factors in Floyd’s killing that they argued should result in a tougher prison
sentence for the former Minneapolis police officer.
Chauvin was
convicted April 20 of second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder
and second-degree manslaughter in Floyd’s May 25 killing. Floyd died when
Chauvin placed his knees on Floyd’s neck and back for more than nine minutes
while he was handcuffed, facedown, on a Minneapolis street. Chauvin, who is
being held in solitary confinement at a Minnesota prison, is scheduled to be
sentenced June 25.
Although a
jury found Chauvin guilty on all three charges he was facing, Minnesota law
dictates he will face sentencing only on the most serious charge: second-degree
murder. State sentencing guidelines on that charge recommend 11 to 12 years in
prison for someone with no criminal history.
But
prosecutors last fall and again last month asked Cahill for what is known as an
“upward sentencing departure,” citing several factors they argued should open
Chauvin up to a maximum of 40 years in prison.
In his
ruling, Cahill agreed with prosecutors that Chauvin had “abused a position of
trust and authority” as a police officer and that Chauvin “knew from his
training and experience” that his restraint was putting Floyd in “danger of
positional asphyxia.”
“The
prolonged use of this technique was particularly egregious in that George Floyd
made it clear he was unable to breathe and expressed his view that he was dying
as a result of the officers’ restraint,” Cahill wrote, referring to Chauvin and
the other two officers who restrained him.
The judge
pointed to Chauvin’s decision to stay on top of Floyd — even after another
officer at the scene, Thomas K. Lane, asked whether they should roll Floyd onto
his side and another, J. Alexander Kueng, told him he could no longer detect a
pulse. “Not only was the danger of asphyxia theoretical, it was communicated to
the defendant as actually occurring,” Cahill wrote. “But [Chauvin] continued
his restraint.”
Cahill also
agreed with prosecutors that Chauvin had been “particularly cruel” to Floyd,
ignoring his cries for breath during his lengthy restraint. “Mr. Floyd was
begging for his life and obviously terrified by the knowledge he was likely to
die,” Cahill wrote, adding that Chauvin “remained indifferent to Mr. Floyd’s
pleas.”
The judge
also sided with prosecutors on two other aggravating factors — that Chauvin committed
the crime with the “active participation” of the three officers at the scene
and that Floyd was killed in front of children, including a 9-year-old girl.
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