. There was prayer and deep breathing and holding each other. The minutes dragged on and it felt like an eternity.in the murder of George Floyd — there was sweeping relief. Tears. People dropped to their knees. An intense wave of profound disbelief that, for once, a cop was found guilty of killing an unarmed Black man.What, exactly, do I not believe?
On May 25, 2020, Chauvin murdered George Floyd. I saw it with my own eyes in a painful video that popped up on every social media feed. Chauvin pressed his knee into Floyd’s neck, disregarding anguished cries from Floyd and desperate pleas from bystanders, and he stayed there until he extinguished Floyd’s life. He did it while holding an icy glare and appeared to have no flicker of doubt about his actions. I witnessed a murder that day in May.The verdict is a victory.
It should not be shocking that a court of law and a jury of Chauvin’s peers found him guilty of murder. We knew he was guilty going into the trial. It is far more telling that we were hit with disbelief that the court managed to see it, too. It is far more damning thatand hoped against hope that the American justice system would say “yes, what you saw is real” — because such an admission happens so infrequently.
The verdict is a victory. But in order to get there, prosecutors had to tell a lie about America. In front of a jury thatand hated the idea of defunding the police, the prosecution had to rely on an argument that is, on its face, not true. In his closing arguments, prosecutor Steve Schleicher told the jury, “Policing is the most noble profession.” He also wove a story about how policing is, how the institution is good — and that in fact Chauvin’s actions were a betrayal of the badge.
This is an incredible read
🙄 Nope ...the prosecutors do not need to apologize for succeeding
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