Now that former Minneapolis police officer
Derek Chauvin has
been found guilty in the murder of
George Floyd, attention is turning to the
coming trial of the other three officers who were involved in the arrest. All
three were fired the day after Floyd’s death, and they are expected to be tried
jointly beginning in August.
اضافة اعلان
On June 3, Hennepin County prosecutors charged Thomas Lane,
J. Alexander Kueng and Tou Thao with aiding and abetting second-degree murder
and aiding and abetting second-degree manslaughter.
Kueng and Lane, both newly trained officers, arrived at the
scene first and approached Floyd’s car. Lane drew his handgun and pointed it at
Floyd through an open window, putting the gun back in his holster after Floyd
put his hands on the steering wheel.
Thao and Chauvin arrived later, when the first two officers
were trying to get Floyd into the squad car. Once Floyd was on the ground, Lane
held his legs, and Kueng held his back. Thao stood nearby and interacted with
bystanders.
Lane and Kueng were both in their first week on the job as
full officers. Kueng, who was 26 at the time, was the youngest and least
experienced officer at the scene. It was his third shift as a full officer. He
was trained largely by Chauvin. Neither Kueng nor Lane had prior misconduct
complaints filed against them, according to the Minneapolis Police Department.
Thao, who was 34 at the time of Floyd’s arrest, had been
with the Minneapolis Police Department for nine years. He faced six misconduct
complaints in his career with the department. He also was the subject of a
lawsuit that claimed that he and another officer punched, kicked and kneed a
Black man, leaving him with broken teeth and bruises. A lawyer involved in the
case said the city settled the lawsuit by agreeing to pay $25,000.
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