Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin on April 20 was convicted of all three charges in the death of George Floyd.
Jurors convicted Chauvin of second-degree murder, second-degree manslaughter, and third-degree murder.
The most serious charge, second-degree murder, has a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison.
Jurors spent approximately eight hours and 20 minutes deliberating across two days.
Traffic camera footage showed numerous vehicles exiting downtown Minneapolis just before the verdict was read, amid fears of fresh riots, though a sizable crowd gathered around the Hennepin County Courthouse, where the verdict was read.
Floyd, 46, died on May 25, 2020, after being restrained by Chauvin and two other officers. Floyd was taken into custody on suspicion of using a counterfeit bill at nearby Cup Foods but refused to be placed into a patrol car.
Floyd was restrained on the ground by Chauvin and the other officers next to the car and steps away from the store in which he allegedly committed a crime.
Chauvin knelt on Floyd’s neck and back for nine minutes and 29 seconds. Floyd complained that he couldn’t breathe and eventually stopped breathing. He was rushed by ambulance to a hospital where he was soon pronounced dead.
Chauvin, 45, joined the Minneapolis Police Department in 2001. He was fired along with three other officers involved in the arrest of Floyd the day after the incident.
Former officers Tou Thao, Thomas Lane, and Alexander Kueng are scheduled to go on trial for aiding and abetting murder charges later this year.
During the trial, jurors heard from a series of experts who testified that Floyd died from asphyxia, or lack of oxygen.
Dr. Andrew Baker, Hennepin County’s chief medical examiner, concluded that Floyd’s death was a homicide as a result of cardiopulmonary arrest in the context of law enforcement. The fentanyl and methamphetamines detected in Floyd’s body in the autopsy, in addition to his health history, contributed to the death, the medical examiner’s office found.
Use-of-force experts and law enforcement officers called by the prosecution asserted that Chauvin’s actions went against his training and department policy.
Defense experts cast doubt on the case against Chauvin.
Dr. David Fowler, who previously headed a medical examiner’s office in Maryland, told the court that the manner of death should have been “undetermined,” instead of being deemed a homicide.
“I felt that Derek Chauvin was justified, was acting with objective reasonableness, following Minneapolis Police Department policy and current standards of law enforcement in his interactions with Mr. Floyd,” Brodd said in the courtroom.