Crime & Safety

State Trial Against 3 Ex-Cops In Floyd's Death Delayed To 2022

The state trial against Alexander Kueng, Thomas Kiernan Lane, and Tou Thao in the death of George Floyd will be delayed, a judge ruled.

Former Minneapolis Police officers Tou Thao (R) and Thomas Lane (L) arrive for a court hearing at the Hennepin County Government Center on July 21, 2020 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Former Minneapolis Police officers Tou Thao (R) and Thomas Lane (L) arrive for a court hearing at the Hennepin County Government Center on July 21, 2020 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (Photo by Stephen Maturen/Getty Images)

MINNEAPOLIS — The joint manslaughter trial against former Minneapolis police officers J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Kiernan Lane, and Tou Thao in the death of George Floyd will be delayed until March. 7, 2022, Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill ruled Thursday.

Cahill made the decision during a pre-trial hearing. He cited the need for "space" from the media coverage of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin's June 25 sentencing, reports KARE 11.

Pretrial motions and preparations for jury selections will continue in the state case as normal, Minnesota Public Radio reported.

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The federal civil rights case against the four former officers also played a role in the delay. A federal grand jury moved to indict them Friday.

Chauvin Friday was also indicted in a separate Sept. 4, 2017 incident. He is accused of holding a 14-year-old by the throat and hitting the teenager multiple times in the head with a flashlight without legal justification.

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SENTENCING: Judge Rules That Chauvin Treated Floyd With 'Particular Cruelty'

Chauvin was convicted in April of second and third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. Chauvin will be sentenced on June 25.

Judge Cahill ruled Wednesday that four of the five factors that prosecutors argued for will apply during sentencing.

Under Minnesota sentencing guidelines, Chauvin should receive a sentence of 12.5 years, because he has never before been convicted of a crime. However, state prosecutors argue that Chauvin should receive an "upward departure" because of aggravating sentencing factors in the case.

Read more here.

Background On Case

Chauvin was charged in the death of Floyd, a Black man who died after Chauvin kneeled on him for more than nine minutes despite Floyd's protests that he could not breathe. Floyd's death sparked nationwide protests demanding racial justice and police reform.

The racially diverse jury deliberated less than a full day before coming to a decision that concluded the two-week trial, which was closely watched as a bellwether of official responses to police killings of Black people.

"On May 25, 2020, George Floyd died faced down on the pavement," state prosecutor Steve Schleicher told jurors in his closing argument in April. "Nine minutes and 29 seconds. Throughout this time George Floyd struggled to breathe."

"What the defendant did to George Floyd killed him," Schleicher added. "It was ruled a homicide. The defendant is charged with murder."

Schleicher praised the "noble" police profession in his closing statement and noted that "this case is called the state of Minnesota versus Derek Chauvin. This is not called the state of Minnesota versus the police."

"This is not an anti-police prosecution. It's a pro-police prosecution."

Chauvin took "pride over policing," said Schleicher. "George Floyd paid for it with his life."

Meanwhile, Chauvin's defense attorney, Eric Nelson, closed Monday by saying Chauvin's actions on Memorial Day were consistent with what a "reasonable police officer" would do.

The verdict comes less than two weeks after another Black man's fatal interaction with police sparked unrest in the Twin Cities metro.

Former Brooklyn Center police Officer Kim Potter faces charges of second-degree manslaughter in the shooting death of Daunte Wright, 20, in the Minneapolis suburb last week.

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