mintpressnews | The latest example of America’s racist
police brutality problem was caught on camera in Minneapolis Monday, as
Officer Derek Chauvin knelt on 46-year-old African-American George
Floyd’s neck for over seven minutes until he passed out and died. In its
headline on its website, Minneapolis police described the
event as “man dies after medical incident during police interaction,”
laundering themselves of any responsibility. Chauvin continued his
assault even as Floyd desperately pleaded that he could not breathe,
while bystanders protested his brutality. “You’re fucking stopping his
breathing there, bro,” warned one concerned passer-by. Even after
passing out, Chauvin did not release pressure on his neck. Chauvin has
killed multiple times before while in uniform, has shot and wounded others and is well-known to local activist groups.
Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar, who Joe Biden recently asked to
undergo vetting to be his running mate for November, issued a very tepid
statement about the incident, describing the police killing of an unarmed black man over an alleged forged check as merely an “officer involved death,” – a copaganda word often used by police as a euphemism for “murder.”
Klobuchar
also called for a “complete and thorough outside investigation into
what occurred, and those involved in this incident must be held
accountable.” However, this is unlikely to occur, in no small part
because of Klobuchar herself and the precedent she set while serving as
the state’s chief prosecutor between 1999 and 2007. In that time, she did not bring charges against more than two dozen officers who had killed citizens while on duty – including against Chauvin himself.
Chauvin was involved
in a fatal accident in 2005, killed Wayne Reyes in 2006, shot another
man while in uniform in 2008, and had a litany of complaints against
him. To be fair to Klobuchar, the Reyes shooting happened in October
2006, as her time as state prosecutor was coming to an end and she was
campaigning for the senate. By the time Chauvin’s case finally made it
to a grand jury, she had relinquished her role.
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