Two former Minneapolis police officers were sentenced on Wednesday on federal charges stemming from the murder of George Floyd, the black man who was killed when their colleague Derek Chauvin knelt on his neck during an arrest.
At a hearing in St Paul, Minnesota, US district judge Paul Magnuson sentenced Tou Thao (36) to 3½ years, Minnesota Public Radio reported. Earlier on Wednesday, he sentenced J Alexander Kueng (28) to three years. A third officer, Thomas Lane (39), was sentenced last Thursday to 2½ years in prison.
In February, the three were convicted by a federal jury of depriving Mr Floyd of his civil rights and failing to come to Mr Floyd’s aid while Chauvin was choking him with his knee for nine minutes. Chauvin was sentenced in February to 20 years and 5 months for federal charges related to Mr Floyd’s murder in May 2020.
A mobile phone video of the dying, handcuffed Mr Floyd pleading with Chauvin for his life before falling motionless prompted outrage, spurring huge daily protests against racism and police brutality in cities around the world.
The four officers were called to a Minneapolis grocery store on May 25th, 2020, and tried to take Mr Floyd into custody on suspicion he used a fake $20 bill to buy cigarettes.
While Chauvin was kneeling on Mr Floyd’s neck, Kueng placed his knee on Mr Floyd’s lower body and left it there for more than eight minutes, prosecutors said.
Federal prosecutors argued that the three men knew from their training and from “basic human decency” that they had a duty to help Mr Floyd as he begged for his life before falling limp beneath Chauvin’s knee.
Chauvin was also convicted of intentional second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in a state trial in 2021. He is serving a concurrent sentence of 22½ years on that conviction.
Lane in May pleaded guilty to state aiding and abetting manslaughter charges and agreed to a sentence of three years in prison. A state trial is scheduled to be begin in January for Thao and Kueng. — Reuters