Police could have ended George Floyd's restraint after he was handcuffed, former sergeant testifies - Action News
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Police could have ended George Floyd's restraint after he was handcuffed, former sergeant testifies

A former Minneapolis police supervisor, on duty the night George Floyd died, testifies that officers could have stopped restraining him after hewas handcuffedand no longer resisting.

Jurors alsohear testimony from Floyd's former girlfriend and 2 paramedics

David Pleoger, a retired Minneapolis police sergeant, testifies at the trial of former officer Derek Chauvin on Thursday. (Court TV/The Associated Press)

A former Minneapolis police supervisor, on duty the night George Floyd died, saysofficers could have stopped restraining him after hewas handcuffedand no longer resisting.

That testimony from David Pleoger, now retired, was a key part of the prosecution's case on the fourth day of the murder trial of former officer Derek Chauvin. It includeda snippet of a call between Pleoger and Chauvin in which Chauvin sayshe was going to call Pleogerand request that he come to the scene where Chauvin and three other officers had had their encounter with Floyd.

Jurors alsoheard the emotional testimony of Floyd's former girlfriend along with evidencefromtwo paramedics who attended to Floyd that day,one of whomsaid that when he arrived, he thought Floyd was dead.

Chauvin, 45, who is white,faces two murder charges second-degree unintentional murder and third-degree murder in the death of Floyd on May 25, 2020.The 46-year-old Black mandied after Chauvin pressed a knee on the back of Floyd's neck for around nine minutes as two other officers held him down. Video captured by a bystander showed the handcuffed Floyd repeatedly say he couldn't breathe.

Floyd had been detained outside a convenience store after being suspected of paying with a counterfeit bill. All four officers were later fired.The footage of the arrest prompted widespread outrage, setting off protests across the U.S. and around the world.

For the prosecution, Pleoger, who had worked with Chauvin for eight years, and whose duties as a sergeant included reviewing police use-of-force incidents, may have offered the most important evidence.

Courteney Ross, the former girlfriend of George Floyd, offers emotional testimony at the trial into his death. (Court TV/The Associated Press)

Indeed, his opinion on the officers' use of force against Floyd became a point of contention between the prosecution and Eric Nelson, defence counsel for Chauvin.

Prosecutor Steve Schleicher asked Pleoger, based upon his review of this incident, if he believedthe restraint on Floyd should have ended at some point.

That prompted Nelson to object, who argued that Pleoger, because of the "criticality" of the incident, had hiked the reviewof it up the chain ofcommand, and that hehad onlyreviewed the police officers' body camera video.

But Judge Peter Cahill allowed Schleicher to ask one question about Pleoger'sview of the incident.

"Do you have an opinion as to when the restraint of Mr. Floyd should have ended in this encounter?"Schleicher asked.

Pleoger answered:"When Mr. Floyd was no longer offering up any resistance to the officers, they could have ended the restraint."

Paramedic Derek Smith testified that he couldn't find Floyd's pulse upon arriving on the scene. 'In layman's terms? I thought he was dead,' he told court. (Court TV/The Associated Press)

Schleicher followed up: "And that was when he was handcuffed and on the ground and no longer resistant?"

Yes, Pleoger replied.

Pleogerhad gone to the scene after he was contacted by a dispatcher, who was concerned about what shehad seen of the arrest on a city surveillance camera.

He testified that, after hearing from the dispatcher,the first person he calledwasChauvin.

Chauvin told Pleoger: "I was just going to call you and have you come out to ourscene here," according to a clip of their conversation played in the Hennepin County District Court in downtown Minneapolis on Thursday.

"We just had to hold a guy down. He was going crazy. Hewouldn't go in the back of the squad," Chauvin said, as the recording cut off.

WATCH | George Floyd's former girlfriend testifies at Derek Chauvin murder trial:

Parademics, George Floyds girlfriend testify at Derek Chauvins murder trial

4 years ago
Duration 1:58
Paramedics testified at Derek Chauvins murder trial about George Floyd's condition when they arrived, while his girlfriend described their relationship and their mutual opioid addiction.

Pleogerdescribed the rest of the conversation, saying that he believed Chauvin told him they had tried to put Floydin the back of the squad car but that he became combative and injured his nose or mouth. He said Chauvin told him that, after struggling with Floyd, Floyd had suffered a medical emergency and the ambulance was called.

Nelson then questioned Pleoger, asking if in his 27 years as a police officerhe'd ever encountered a crowd that had started to film him or become volatile toward him. Pleoger said he had and admitted it had caused him concern.

Court also heard from Seth Bravinder, a paramedic, whosaid when he arrived, he saw no signs that Floyd was breathing or moving, and it appeared he was in cardiac arrest. A second paramedic, Derek Smith, testified that he couldn't find a pulse: "In layman's terms? I thought he was dead."

But the most emotional testimony came fromFloyd's former girlfriendCourteney Ross who chronicled some of their struggles with opioid addiction.

Ross wept through much of her testimony as she told the court about how she met Floyd, their relationship, and their battle withaddiction to painkillers.

Floyd's drug use is a central argument in Chauvin's defence. The prosecutionbelieves Chauvin'sknee pressing intoFloyd's neck as he layhandcuffed on to the pavement was the cause of his death. But the defence argues it was acombination of Floyd's underlying medical conditions, drug useand adrenaline flowing throughhis system that ultimatelykilledhim.

Under cross-examination, Nelsonasked Ross about someincidents of Floyd's drug use, including an overdose he suffered in March2020.

"You did not know that he had taken heroin at that time?" Nelson asked.

She said she didn't.

Nelson also focused on pills they had purchased that same month thatwere different than other painkillers purchasedin the past.

Ross testifiedthat instead of relaxing her, they made her jittery, and she couldn't sleep at night.

Ross alsotestified that in May, she used similar pills and that she experienced the same effects. Nelson reminded her that she hadpreviously told FBI agents that the pill made her feel like she was goingto die, although she said she didn't recall saying that to the agents.

She said she noticed a change in Floyd's behaviour about two weeks before his death. Court also heard that she had told FBI agents that the pills made Floyd bounce around and be unintelligible at times.

However, prosecutorMatthew Franktried to downplay the potential toxicity of those pills, getting Ross to agree that, obviously, neither she or Floyd had died from ingesting them in March or May.

She said Floyd "had a lot of energy" after using them.

Court also heard that Floyd's pet name for Ross in his phone was "Mama" testimony that called into question the widely reported account that Floyd was crying out for his mother as he lay pinned to the pavement.

In some of the video, Floyd can be heard calling out, "Mama!" repeatedly and saying, "Mama, I love you! Tell my kids I love them."

With files from The Associated Press