For the individuals who think it's no big deal that over 60% of fatal fentanyl overdoses occur at levels lower Floyd's (comparable to a 0.40+ BAC), at what point did Floyd begin to have trouble breathing?
People won't read it anyways.aginlakeway said:
Should be banned for making a post that long. Especially from that source.
it's not quite so open and shut. this assumes he would have died no matter what. at issue is whether Chauvin's actions significantly contributed to his death even if not the only cause, and that can be enough to support a murder or manslaughter conviction.Good Poster said:
Magic City Wings said:
How many people go from passing fake 20s to dead in 30 minutes without doing additional drugs?
And here is the crux of the divide in this country. I don't know what "society" you're speaking of, I really do, but I believe, as does my society, in the presumption of innocence until proven guilty. With all the known evidence, there is nothing that shows Chauvin committed murder much less had any racial motivation. None, zero, zilch! Cities burned and people's livelihoods were destroyed by your society, one that can't reason with logic or a clear mind, can only react with emotion and cultism. Your a racist and can't even see it. You are only viewing this on the emotion you've been told to by your overlords, skin color. This wouldn't even be a topic of discussion had this been a white man with a black cop and you know it. And the same people on this thread that are questioning the evidence or lack there of, would be doing the exact same thing if the roles were reversed, but not you, you'd be dead silent. Just more proof the left is morally corrupt and incapable of critical think. Sheep, the lot of you!larry culpepper said:It's true. Casey Anthony and OJ are prime examples of this. When the evidence is so strong against them but for whatever reason the prosecution fails to prove their case. But of course it's a good thing that the burden is so high in the courtroom.BourbonAg said:pdc093 said:aggiehawg said:Geez! Get off of my thread and start your own.larry culpepper said:of course. I've said that from the get go.aginlakeway said:larry culpepper said:the way I see it, in a courtroom, it's innocent until proven guilty. in the court of public opinion, it's preponderance of the evidence.aggiehawg said:If one is serving as a juror in a criminal trial that is the law. You are completely wrong and misguided.BourbonAg said:
I am not ready to opine either way yet but this concept of "innocent until proven guilty" only applies to the government (the prosecutor in this case). I think it is a a great concept to use in your daily life but people act like everyone in the country is supposed to use this standard.
Correct. So you then assume the cop is innocent until proven guilty then? Right?
Get 'em, 'Hawg!
I really messed up what I was trying to say there. I meant innocent until proven guilty only applies in criminal proceedings. It does not apply to the media, public opinion, etc. Sorry about that.
It sounds like society's mind is made up about Chauvin. But I'll wait and see what happens.
As do i, buddy. See previous pages.Quote:
And here is the crux of the divide in this country. I don't know what "society" you're speaking of, I really do, but I believe, as does my society, in the presumption of innocence until proven guilty.
I have refrained from making any conclusory statements on his guilt and will continue to do so here.Quote:
With all the known evidence, there is nothing that shows Chauvin committed murder much less had any racial motivation. None, zero, zilch!
Hey now, leave me out of this. I took no part in the riots and condemned them over and over again. Don't lump me in with them.Quote:
Cities burned and people's livelihoods were destroyed by your society, one that can't reason with logic or a clear mind, can only react with emotion and cultism. Your a racist and can't even see it.
My "overlords"? I'm starting to think you are assuming a hell of a lot about me when you know nothing about me. Don't lump me in with all the crazies who rioted last summer. I've been pretty levelheaded about this trial and have called it as I see it. And as of now I think there's a >50% chance Chauvin walks.Quote:
You are only viewing this on the emotion you've been told to by your overlords, skin color. This wouldn't even be a topic of discussion had this been a white man with a black cop and you know it. And the same people on this thread that are questioning the evidence or lack there of, would be doing the exact same thing if the roles were reversed, but not you, you'd be dead silent. Just more proof the left is morally corrupt and incapable of critical think. Sheep, the lot of you!
How many people go from drinking coffee with their wife and being dead in 30 minutes when they go out and shovel snow? Were you in the back seat making sure he didn't pop another pill after trying to pass the fake 20?Magic City Wings said:
How many people go from passing fake 20s to dead in 30 minutes without doing additional drugs?
third coast.. said:
Isn't he the "entrepreneur"?
third coast.. said:Dumb_Loggy said:
I wonder if he was subpoenaed by the state or defense.
Does it matter? Isn't a subpoena a subpoena? Genuinely asking.
third coast.. said:
Id take what some hoodrat entrepreneur calls himself with a grain of salt
I have a feeling like either way he'll end up helping the defense.Dumb_Loggy said:third coast.. said:Dumb_Loggy said:
I wonder if he was subpoenaed by the state or defense.
Does it matter? Isn't a subpoena a subpoena? Genuinely asking.
I'm asking since he described himself as a "key witness". Was he a key witness for the state or defense?
You might be disappointed. There will be dueling experts who tell you diametrically opposed conclusions.larry culpepper said:it's not quite so open and shut. this assumes he would have died no matter what. at issue is whether Chauvin's actions significantly contributed to his death even if not the only cause, and that can be enough to support a murder or manslaughter conviction.Good Poster said:
which is why i can't wait to hear the expert testimony on this.
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Several key facets of Martin's testimony could really only be characterized as favorable to the defense, including:Certainly, it's hard to imagine how any of that testimony could be characterized as favorable for the prosecution.
- Floyd had indeed passed a rather obviously fake counterfeit bill (after his friend had failed to pull this off in the very same store)
- Floyd appeared substantively impaired while in the store ("He did look high," as Martin put it)
- Floyd was an unusually large man (it was what made Martin take exceptional notice of Floyd in the first place)
- Floyd had refused repeated offers to simply make good on the bad bill, pay for his cigarettes with actual money, and the whole incident would be forgotten
That said, the testimony was going to happen, so the state did its best to underplay it. While Floyd may have high, for example, he wasn't so high that he couldn't communicate verbally with enough dexterity to order cigarettes. On the other, Martin had told police investigators that Floyd's speech was noticeably delayed, and that Floyd struggled saying words like "baseball" while in conversation with Martin.
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Naturally, to the extent that Floyd was intoxicated, that state is favorable to the officers, as it would be consistent with privileging them to use a higher degree of force in the face of non-compliance than would otherwise be the case.
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On cross-examination by defense counsel Eric Nelson, Martin was obliged to re-affirm statements he'd made to police investigators that Floyd appeared to him to be intoxicated during their interaction in Cup Foods.
Nelson also had Martin affirm that the store manager carried a pistol in his back pocketthis pistol is quite clear and obvious in the surveillance video reviewed during Martin's testimonywhich undercuts the insinuation the state has made with previous witnesses that the neighborhood of Floyd's arrest was reasonably safe, and in no way high crime in nature.
Naturally, to the extent that the neighborhood could be characterized as unusually dangerous, that again would contribute to the officers' reasonable perception of the need to use perhaps more force and be more focused on the gathering angry crowd and thus distracted from care of Floyd, than would otherwise have been the caseso, again, good for the defense, rather than the prosecution.
Further, Nelson had Martin recount to investigators how he described the neighborhood around Cup Food as a "hot block," to indicate that "a lot of situations" occurred in the neighborhood. It's perhaps worth noting here that Martin not only worked at Cup Foods, he and his mother lived in an apartment immediately above the store, so he would be intimately familiar with criminal events in the immediate neighborhood.
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Nelson also managed to get Martin to describe how he physically restrained another bystander witness who was apparently sufficiently heated and angry to require physical restraint. This undercuts the state's claimsand the claims of the same sort by the state's witnessesthat the crowd was in no way conducting itself in a manner the officers might reasonably perceive as threatening.
Now he fleshes out what the defense offer of proof was about after the jury had been excused for the day. And he raises an interesting and quite damning question.Quote:
First, at one point, for example, the prosecution is rolling body camera footage showing the officers moving towards Floyd laying on the ground, as they position themselves to do a full-body restraint, and Floyd deliberately kicks out at the officers with both legs. It was this conduct that led to the officers sending Thau to look for ankle hobbles, and why they were so determined to restrain Floyd's legs from that point forward.
Second, while being questioned by Prosecutor Eldridge, McMillian was asked how Floyd appeared to him while being restrained, with Chauvin's knee on Floyd's neck. I expect Eldridge was hoping for a reply along the lines of "he looked like he was being killed."
Instead, what Eldridge got was McMillian stating that Floyd had foam running out of his mouth. A perhaps stunned Eldridge responded with, "Foam in his mouth?" and McMillian immediately affirmed, "Yes, foam in and out of his mouth."
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In particular, the defense wanted to admit into evidence fuller-length versions of the body camera and city surveillance camera footage than the state had offered into evidence.
Further, the defense wanted that video introduced in such a manner that it could be manipulated by the MPDs own software systems, which allowed for a zoom and pan ability not equaled in the versions the state had offered.
Nelson offered his version of the videos to Cahill for review. The state had no objection to the video on foundational groundshow could they, they just conducted a very lengthy direct questioning of Rugel precisely to establish foundationbut did say there would likely be admissibility objections later.
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Why would the prosecution want to object to the admissibility of the video gathered by the body and surveillance cameras owned and controlled by the Minneapolis Police Department itself? Good question. Things that make you go, hmmmmm.
Our laws are not set up to allow for police brutality depending if he was a former felon. He wasn't fleeing the scene - he had a panic attack at getting in the back of the police car. He didn't pull a deadly weapon or try to strike any officer. His hands were cuffed behind his back. If they had better control of the situation - they could have sat him down to calm him down instead of needing all of that back up in order to fight to get him in the car. Apparently he would have been dead in that same 9 minutes anyway.aginlakeway said:dude95 said:In Minnesota - passing counterfeit bills less than $1000 is a misdemeanor. This happened over a misdemeanor.78_Pacecar said:Can you imagine the riots that could have been prevented if Floyd had not tried to use a fake $20 bill. One so fake that a 18-19yr old kid with no training spotted.2PacShakur said:
I mean, imagine the riots that could had been prevented if maybe Chauvin used the recovery position.
Can you imagine the riots that could have been prevented if Floyd had not been high on drugs
Can you imagine the riots that could have been prevented if Floyd had when confronted with police placed his hands in full view of the responding officer and complied with their requests not causing the responding officer to pull his weapon
Can you imagine the riots that could have been prevented if Floyd had complied with the officers, not resisted, and had followed the axiom that the place to fight the law is in the court room.
Can you imagine the riots that could have been prevented?
Imagine if your son walked out of the Chicken on his 21st birthday, barely able to walk. When cops interact with him, he doesn't immediately comply because he's too drunk. Same thing - freaks out getting in police car cause he's so drunk he doesn't know which way is up. Then you have a video of a cop on top of your son for 9 minutes - two of those minutes when he's unconscious and not responsive. When your son dies while the cop is on top of him, he says it's because he had too much alcohol.
My expectation is that cops should know how to handle the situation better. Safer. I would be enraged if it was my white son - I would hope the rest of the country would be too.
A year ago - there wasn't even anyone on f16 defending what they saw. Then the riots happened and this whole place is ok with it. I'm not happy Chauvin didn't have the skills or temperament to deal with the situation. I don't care if he was frustrated Floyd didn't comply - it's his job. Even this thread talks about how Floyd would have been dead from an overdose at the same time regardless if there was a cop on top of him or not. Chauvin couldn't deal with a guy seconds away from a fent overdose?
Your example is not a comparable analogy. There was much more going on with Floyd than with your son in your example.
Regardless, there is one way to avoid this. Don't break the law and resist arrest.
Amazing how many people defend criminals' actions.