Chauvin Gets 22.5 Years

lowell

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cop knew he was killing him.


the other cops stood by afraid to interfere. pussyss

That is almost as dumb as your buying 6-7 points on a money line bet. Only 1 person ?knew ? what he was thinking and it isn?t you.
 

THE KOD

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I hope to see odds on his getting beaten or killed in prison.
I like under 12 months .



He will be in solitary dumb ass lowelll . Of course Epstien was in solitary with guards and cameras and that didnt end well for him. He got his just reward .


Did I mention that lowell sounds like when a fat cow moos............. LLLoowwwellllll
 

bleedingpurple

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Where it is real F ing COLD
I would not call Flloyd a hero and had he not committed a crime he would have lived that day IMO but Chauvin is an asshole and he deserves what he got.

Let's look at the counterfeit $20, the attendant who called the police testified that he thought Flloyd wasn't knowingly trying to pass a counterfeit $20, Flloyd thought the $20 was legit. I mean if I was passing counterfeit money I would not still be sticking around the area I passed it.

Why do cops come to the scene with guns drawn over a counterfeit $20? That maybe their procedure? I don't know but seems odd to me.

Let's talk about Flloyd's resistance? Many people say, "if he didn't resist he would still be alive." I don't know the level of training the cops get but I have seen just as much resistance in a hospital especially when someone says, "I can't breathe."

So they have him on the ground and cuffed and Flloyd goes from Conscience and complaining/begging to lifeless an not breathing, fellow officers say something to Chauvin two separate times but he refuses to change his position on Flloyd. Bystanders who are recording REALIZE there is a problem and even telling the officers, "he's dead." "You are killing him." Now Chauvin has been on the force a long time and has had to take CPR and first AID and a refresher every 2 years to remain current. Why did he not provide life saving measures? Why did he not check for pulse and breathing?
 

ClevelandSteamers

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Why do cops come to the scene with guns drawn over a counterfeit $20? That maybe their procedure? I don't know but seems odd to me.

Let's say...someone is coming to your home and you have no idea why they are coming to your home. But you know their prior history and violence. Are you picking up a gun for protection er Nah? That's my guess here.

But in the grand scheme of life, I don't really care about what happened. People are still going to be worthless, some cops are going to be trash bags, good cops are going to get disrespected, and the media is going to do everything they can to play with eneducated people. People are going to worry more about clicks and likes on the internet than they are about their jobs, education, and families.

All you can do is wake up every, work hard and be good to people and good things happen. I truly think it's that simple.
 

bleedingpurple

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Let's say...someone is coming to your home and you have no idea why they are coming to your home. But you know their prior history and violence. Are you picking up a gun for protection er Nah? That's my guess here.

But in the grand scheme of life, I don't really care about what happened. People are still going to be worthless, some cops are going to be trash bags, good cops are going to get disrespected, and the media is going to do everything they can to play with eneducated people. People are going to worry more about clicks and likes on the internet than they are about their jobs, education, and families.

All you can do is wake up every, work hard and be good to people and good things happen. I truly think it's that simple.

I guess I don?t know what this has to do with Chauvin getting 22.5 years? Is this media driven his sentence? Probably a little bit, I think the autopsy?s could not disprove that the knee he used was not responsible for his death was the biggest issue.

As far as being good to people, yeah I believe that to be true almost always, but unfortunately it?s not 100%, shitty things happen to good people


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 

ClevelandSteamers

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I guess I don?t know what this has to do with Chauvin getting 22.5 years? Is this media driven his sentence? Probably a little bit, I think the autopsy?s could not disprove that the knee he used was not responsible for his death was the biggest issue.

As far as being good to people, yeah I believe that to be true almost always, but unfortunately it?s not 100%, shitty things happen to good people


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

My first part was in response to you wondering why they had their guns were drawn/ready. I suspect from what's out there is because of his profile/record.

The rest was just a general statement.
 

ChrryBlstr

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One of my current research projects investigates police malfeasance and police reform, among other things. Here are a few excerpts directly from individuals in law enforcement re: George Floyd's killing.

"George Floyd, where you have one police officer sitting on somebody's neck and you have these other cops standing around. Man, well, you know they're rookies, you know, they're new guys. But that is not an excuse. Absolutely not. We're all human beings, and to sit there and watch somebody be abused, whether they're being beaten unnecessarily, or where they're being choked to death, as with George Floyd, and to just stand there. And you know, to look and say, 'Okay, well, we'll wait till this is over. This is what I'm supposed to do. And he's the the old guy. So I just want to stand here and let this happen.' Absolutely not...I'm not saying that we always need to be confrontational. There are ways to handle things without being so confrontational. But, you know right from wrong. It would have been very simple for one of those cops to walk over and say, 'Hey man, get off his neck. We got this, just get off his neck.' Very simple to do. That wasn't done. So they're all culpable."

"George Floyd, that's one of the first cases where there's kind of a consensus and almost like, license within the field to reject that type of force. We saw that as unnecessary, excessive, wrong. So that's kind of new."

"I said that he's going to face manslaughter charges from the start. When I saw that, there was no doubt in my mind, you know. And I knew that for a fact that's not going to stand he's going to get that. And any cop that had had has had enough experience, knew when looking at George Floyd, that it was a repeat of Eric Garner in New York when he was peddling the cigarettes. The excited delirium, the adrenaline pumping, the inability to breathe and how the body almost fails itself after coming off that adrenaline rush."

"I couldn't even bring myself to watch that whole video. I watched like the first like 30 seconds of the guy kneeling on on his neck. Yeah, I had to turn it off. Like I already know that this is the reality, and and it absolutely disgusts me to see them then turn around and release the initial report or autopsy or however they tried to justify it."

"I mean, that wasn't a two second decision. That was a deliberate, lingering, torturous event. And then officer Tao, I have a lot of sympathy for him. Although I will say he did the wrong thing. But I could see the ambivalence in him
and I know the pressure, especially what minority officers face. Because they have a lot more pressure to conform even moreso than white officers. I don't know if you're familiar with the term, but it's double marginality.
And they know they have to toe the line."

So although they may not admit it, particularly on the record and to the public due to the blue wall of silence and police brotherhood, many police officers believe that Chauvin's actions were deliberate and murderous. Just sayin'....

Facts.

Peace! :)
 

Cie

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One of my current research projects investigates police malfeasance and police reform, among other things. Here are a few excerpts directly from individuals in law enforcement re: George Floyd's killing.

"George Floyd, where you have one police officer sitting on somebody's neck and you have these other cops standing around. Man, well, you know they're rookies, you know, they're new guys. But that is not an excuse. Absolutely not. We're all human beings, and to sit there and watch somebody be abused, whether they're being beaten unnecessarily, or where they're being choked to death, as with George Floyd, and to just stand there. And you know, to look and say, 'Okay, well, we'll wait till this is over. This is what I'm supposed to do. And he's the the old guy. So I just want to stand here and let this happen.' Absolutely not...I'm not saying that we always need to be confrontational. There are ways to handle things without being so confrontational. But, you know right from wrong. It would have been very simple for one of those cops to walk over and say, 'Hey man, get off his neck. We got this, just get off his neck.' Very simple to do. That wasn't done. So they're all culpable."

"George Floyd, that's one of the first cases where there's kind of a consensus and almost like, license within the field to reject that type of force. We saw that as unnecessary, excessive, wrong. So that's kind of new."

"I said that he's going to face manslaughter charges from the start. When I saw that, there was no doubt in my mind, you know. And I knew that for a fact that's not going to stand he's going to get that. And any cop that had had has had enough experience, knew when looking at George Floyd, that it was a repeat of Eric Garner in New York when he was peddling the cigarettes. The excited delirium, the adrenaline pumping, the inability to breathe and how the body almost fails itself after coming off that adrenaline rush."

"I couldn't even bring myself to watch that whole video. I watched like the first like 30 seconds of the guy kneeling on on his neck. Yeah, I had to turn it off. Like I already know that this is the reality, and and it absolutely disgusts me to see them then turn around and release the initial report or autopsy or however they tried to justify it."

"I mean, that wasn't a two second decision. That was a deliberate, lingering, torturous event. And then officer Tao, I have a lot of sympathy for him. Although I will say he did the wrong thing. But I could see the ambivalence in him
and I know the pressure, especially what minority officers face. Because they have a lot more pressure to conform even moreso than white officers. I don't know if you're familiar with the term, but it's double marginality.
And they know they have to toe the line."

So although they may not admit it, particularly on the record and to the public due to the blue wall of silence and police brotherhood, many police officers believe that Chauvin's actions were deliberate and murderous. Just sayin'....

Facts.

Peace! :)

All 5 current and retired Cops I know personally felt Chauvin acted criminally. In fact, I haven?t spoken to a single person who didn?t support criminal prosecution of Chauvin. Unlike most of the other cases I have read about the past 2-3 years, this one was open and shut in the court of public opinion.
 

Cie

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I haven't read many comments in this thread - so I don't know if anyone has said this or not but..........I bet Chauvin is free within 12 to 18 months.

Presidential pardon? Appeal?? Scrappie sneaks him a jigsaw blade in a bundt cake???
 

JOSHNAUDI

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