Current:Home > MarketsEx-Minneapolis officer faces sentencing on a state charge for his role in George Floyd’s killing -TrueNorth Finance Path
Ex-Minneapolis officer faces sentencing on a state charge for his role in George Floyd’s killing
View
Date:2025-04-14 16:30:59
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The last former Minneapolis police officer to face sentencing in state court for his role in the killing of George Floyd will learn Monday whether he will spend additional time in prison.
Tou Thao has testified he merely served as a “human traffic cone” when he held back concerned bystanders who gathered as former Officer Derek Chauvin, who is white, knelt on Floyd’s neck for 9 1/2 minutes while the Black man pleaded for his life on May 25, 2020.
A bystander video captured Floyd’s fading cries of “I can’t breathe.”
Floyd’s killing touched off protests worldwide and forced a national reckoning of police brutality and racism.
Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill found Thao guilty in May of aiding and abetting second-degree manslaughter. In his 177-page ruling, Cahill said Thao’s actions separated Chauvin and two other former officers from the crowd, including a an emergency medical technician, allowing his colleagues to continue restraining Floyd and preventing bystanders from providing medical aid.
“There is proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Thao’s actions were objectively unreasonable from the perspective of a reasonable police officer, when viewed under the totality of the circumstances,” Cahill wrote.
He concluded: “Thao’s actions were even more unreasonable in light of the fact that he was under a duty to intervene to stop the other officers’ excessive use of force and was trained to render medical aid.”
Thao rejected a plea bargain on the state charge, saying “it would be lying” to plead guilty when he didn’t think he was in the wrong. He instead agreed to let Cahill decide the case based on evidence from Chauvin’s 2021 murder trial and the federal civil rights trial in 2022 of Thao and former Officers Thomas Lane and J. Alexander.
That trial in federal court ended in convictions for all three. Chauvin pleaded guilty to federal civil rights charges instead of going to trial a second time, while Lane and Kueng pleaded guilty to state charges of aiding and abetting manslaughter.
Minnesota guidelines recommend a four-year sentence on the manslaughter count, which Thao would serve at the same time as his 3 1/2-year sentence for his federal civil rights conviction, which an appeals court upheld on Friday. But Cahill has some latitude and could hand down a sentence from 41 to 57 months.
Lane and Kueng received 3 and 3 1/2-year state sentences respectively, which they are serving concurrently with their federal sentences of 2 1/2 years and 3 years. Thao is Hmong American, while Kueng is Black and Lane is white.
Minnesota inmates generally serve two-thirds of their sentences in prison and one-third on parole. There is no parole in the federal system but inmates can shave time off their sentences with good behavior.
veryGood! (45678)
Related
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- What the bonkers bond market means for you
- Photo of Connecticut McDonald's $18 Big Mac meal sparks debate online
- A Commonsense Proposal to Deal With Plastics Pollution: Stop Making So Much Plastic
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Amanda Seyfried Gives a Totally Fetch Tour of Her Dreamy New York City Home
- Inside Clean Energy: Ohio’s EV Truck Savior Is Running Out of Juice
- Inside Clean Energy: Solar Panel Prices Are Rising, but Don’t Panic.
- How to watch new prequel series 'Dexter: Original Sin': Premiere date, cast, streaming
- The NBA and its players have a deal for a new labor agreement
Ranking
- Biden administration makes final diplomatic push for stability across a turbulent Mideast
- Washington Commanders owner Dan Snyder fined $60 million in sexual harassment, financial misconduct probe
- The U.S. condemns Russia's arrest of a Wall Street Journal reporter
- Panera rolls out hand-scanning technology that has raised privacy concerns
- Travis Hunter, the 2
- The EPA Placed a Texas Superfund Site on its National Priorities List in 2018. Why Is the Health Threat Still Unknown?
- The cost of a dollar in Ukraine
- SEC charges Digital World SPAC, formed to buy Truth Social, with misleading investors
Recommendation
The FTC says 'gamified' online job scams by WhatsApp and text on the rise. What to know.
Simone Biles Is Making a Golden Return to Competitive Gymnastics 2 Years After Tokyo Olympics Run
Barack Obama drops summer playlist including Ice Spice, Luke Combs, Tina Turner and Peso Pluma
You won the lottery or inherited a fortune. Now what?
All That You Wanted to Know About She’s All That
A Just Transition? On Brooklyn’s Waterfront, Oil Companies and Community Activists Join Together to Create an Offshore Wind Project—and Jobs
In Deep Adaptation’s Focus on Societal Collapse, a Hopeful Call to Action
Yang Bing-Yi, patriarch of Taiwan's soup dumpling empire, has died