[Salon] Inspector: 3 of 4 officers didn't follow policy at Floyd arrest - StarTribune.com



I saw how committed libertarians and conservatives were in upholding the Constitution’s role in protecting citizens against state violence by its agents in the summer of 2020 when many came out in defense and support of the “paramilitary police officer” Derek Chauvin. 

I knew Thomas Plunkett, the defense attorney who described the police “paramilitary culture,”  from the Army Reserve, and he’s not the proverbial “liberal," conservatives heap scorn on, nor was the main prosecutor in Chauvin’s trial. That same paramilitary culture Plunkett cited was taken to an even greater extreme with Iraq War veterans coming back to, or entering, the nation’s police forces, supplemented by the popularity amongst police for Israeli military training and/or our own home-grown “Warrior Training.” 

Two of these officers, Keung and Lane, are two of Chauvin’s other victims, in my opinion, as they had little they could say as Chauvin snuffed the life out of a human being as the murder was openly being video-recorded, so filled was he with a sense of impunity. Which I wouldn’t doubt came from a sense of entitlement which Trump gave to the police for their crimes.

The moral bankruptcy of people on the Right, like libertarians who complain when the house of a white person gets invaded, but justify police killings when the victim looks like Chauvin’s murder victim, even when killed in “plain view" (a new version of the “plain view doctrine?) was there for all to see with Floyd’s murder. We were lucky that this murder only resulted in rioting, and not the armed type of insurgency that have so often turned into outright revolutions in other times and places, like Algeria in the 1950s, and Boston in 1775. The 2021 Insurgency was simply incited by words, and not the incitement of state violence, as Chauvin committed. 

My first job out of law school was as a judicial law clerk and it wasn’t long before I witnessed police officers come into court and outright lie, which if you’re wearing “big-boy pants,” you know is not an aberration. And it was only exceptional circumstances that exposed their lies in a situation where it wouldn’t have come out at all had they taken place with members of a minority population as the victims of the lies. But stating that truth gets one charged as “Woke” by my conservative "friends."

Inspector: 3 of 4 Minneapolis police officers didn't follow use-of-force policy during George Floyd arrest

Inspector Katie Blackwell resumed her testimony Friday

A defense attorney for a former Minneapolis police officer questioned on Friday whether poor training and a paramilitary culture instilled from the academy is to blame for his client not stopping Derek Chauvin from killing George Floyd.

Thomas Plunkett, attorney for J. Alexander Kueng, expounded on his opening argument that "duty to intervene" is merely a "line in a PowerPoint" said the department teaches an "us vs. them mentality" to new officers from early in their training.

failed to adequately train his rookie client, especially when it came to intervention, which he likened to a word on a PowerPoint presentation.

Plunkett followed that theme in his line of questioning Friday, eliciting from Blackwell that recruits are trained to follow the lead of their field training officers or FTOs, who can essentially make or break their careers. Chauvin was Kueng and Lane's FTO.

"People get terminated from the department because their FTO is not satisfied with them, correct?" Plunkett asked.

When Blackwell replied that was not solely the case, Plunkett asked if it would surprise her to learn recruits see their FTOs as "terminators."

"That would surprise me," Blackwell said.

Asked whether Minneapolis police recruits are expected to give "Instant and unquestioned obedience," Blackwell said yes.

Three of the four officers who arrested and restrained George Floyd on May 25, 2020, did not act in accordance to use of force policy, a Minneapolis police inspector and longtime academy instructor testified Friday in the federal trial of three ex-Minneapolis officers in Floyd's death.

Inspector Katie Blackwell resumed the witness stand In the fifth day of testimony in the trial of Tou Thao, J. Alexander Kueng and Thomas Lane, who stand accused of ignoring their duty to provide aid while fellow officer Derek Chauvin knelt on Floyd's neck for more than nine minutes as he pleaded for his life before falling unconscious and dying in May 2020.

Blackwell walked jurors through the department's training protocol before telling them that the actions of Lane, Kueng and Derek Chauvin were all "inconsistent" with the department's use of force policy — particularly when Chauvin planted his knee in Floyd's neck.

Blackwell testified that if a neck restraint were used, the policy would be to roll him to the side recovery position, particularly since Floyd, who was handcuffed, had stopped resisting. Additionally, Chauvin's use of "pain compliance" by twisting Floyd's hand was not necessary.

She said that as the first officers on scene, Lane and Kueng would have been in control of the scene rather than deferring to Chauvin, who was convicted in state court of Floyd's murder last year and pleaded guilty to federal civil rights charges.

It was a continuation of Blackwell's testimony from Thursday, in which she said police are obligated to intervene if a colleague uses unnecessary force or puts someone in danger.

"If you're taking somebody into custody, whether for life-saving purposes or for violating the law," it's up to the officers to do "everything we can to protect that person," said Blackwell, who is the former training commander for the entire department.

Police training is at the heart of the case on both sides. In his opening statement, Kueng's defense attorney,

This is a breaking news update. Check back for updates.



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