Opening statements made, witness testimonies started in Derek Chauvin trial
4:30 p.m.
Cahill addressed some technical glitches that happened. One of the issues is that the stream cut out for family members in another room, and due to that, the judge said the court is in recess until Tuesday morning.
The judge says a "technical glitch" has ended the video feed that goes to the room where families are watching the trial—so now court has recessed for the day #DerekChauvinTrial. It’s the first time an entire criminal trial has been broadcast in Minnesota.
— Eric Chaloux (@EricChalouxKSTP) March 29, 2021
3:35 p.m.
The next witness, Donald Williams, takes the stand. He is one of the bystanders who can be heard on the cellphone video. He is an entrepreneur and professional fighter.
He stated he has worked alongside police in Minneapolis as a security guard for the past 12 years at various businesses around the city. Williams used to be a wrestler in high school before he turned to martial arts.
Williams says he’s an entrepreneur and a professional fighter. pic.twitter.com/6DSsJQv3cZ
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
He also has coached a youth wrestling program and continues to do so, while also working with his kids. He has been involved in martial arts since 2009. He has participated in 10 amateur fights. He states he is in the gym training Monday through Friday when he is actively fighting.
Williams was also a wrestler, now teaches the sport.
— Callan Gray (@CallanGrayNews) March 29, 2021
Judge Cahill previously ruled Williams can talk about his training & experience in martial arts, what he saw on May 25 but cannot give opinion about whether maneuvers he saw May 25 were cause of death.
Williams discussed chokeholds in detail from his martial arts background. He also described "tapping out" and other methods that he is knowledgeable about. He noted that he has been rendered unconscious from a chokehold.
He said earlier during the day of May 25, 2020, he was out fishing with a friend. He went into detail about showing his son how to properly cut and store fish after being caught. He came back from cutting fish at his place to stop at Cup Foods "for some air." He said he was going to get something to drink from the store.
Surveillance video showed Williams walking near Cup Foods after he parked his vehicle.
Donald Williams identifies himself in this surveillance clip alongside Cup Foods. #ChauvinTrial pic.twitter.com/Z9cyZHCQ3c
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
Williams said he noted that he saw police in the area. He said he did not make it into Cup Foods because he sensed the energy was "off." He explained there was a lot of commotion going on when he turned the corner.
He heard someone crying for their mother and people saying "you should let him up, he’s not resisting arrest."
Williams marks the area where he stood for sometime observing Floyd’s arrest. Said he heard people talking and Floyd "pleading for his life." #ChauvinTrial pic.twitter.com/GlhIvWFdcx
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
Williams says once he started to walk closer, he noticed the situation involving the officers and Floyd. He called Thao "a dictator" of the situation. He states, "he’s the guy who let it go on."
He said Floyd was speaking in a "distressed" way.
"He was saying ‘I can’t breathe,’ ‘I’m hurt’… he said he was sorry for what he did," Williams said.
Williams said he called the chokehold Chauvin had on Floyd "a blood choke"— and that is when Chauvin looked up towards the camera of the bystander video that went viral. He says he could have gotten closer to the incident, but said a "fear factor" played into that as well."
Williams also said that Tou told Williams, "this is what drugs do to you." He said that aggravated him, as he disagreed, due to his personal experience with martial arts. He added that none of the officers checked Floyd’s pulse.
He adds he was able to settle down a younger bystander at the scene. The crowd was concerned but not unruly, according to Williams.
He identified the knee pressure Chauvin used in the bystander video as he mentioned earlier.
TW: This is another graphic video of Floyd on the ground.
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
Williams is describing what he sees is a "shimmy" that Chauvin is using to close a gap.
Williams demonstrates with his arms how a shimmy can be used to close the gap in a choke, based on his MMA experience. pic.twitter.com/Cb6oKvMy3J
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
Judge Cahill is addressing Williams about his testimony. There were a lot of discussions between the attorneys about what Williams can testify to regarding the incident. Cahill wants Williams to explain his observations, not his opinions on what he saw.
Judge Cahill is asking Matthew Frank to be more focused in his questions so that Williams can respond on his observations. They’re now having a sidebar. #ChauvinTrial pic.twitter.com/ULfIKjGWIH
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
3:20 p.m.
Questioning will resume with witness Alisha Oyler. The defense is next to take over the cross-examination questioning.
Eric Nelson is now cross-examining Alisha Oyler. Asking again where she was during the incident. #ChauvinTrial pic.twitter.com/ssHIDdHrs4
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
Nelson is asking Oyler for a better picture of what the inside of the Speedway she worked at looked like.
She agrees in saying that her recordings were only one perspective, but stated that multiple was provided for this case.
Nelson asked Oyler if the growing crowd that gathered to witness the incident were yelling and becoming hostile, to which she agreed, but she added that "people were going to be mad either way."
Both the state and defense have concluded their questioning with the witness.
3:05 p.m.
The court has gone into a short recess. They will resume at 3:20 p.m., with questioning to resume.
2:15 p.m.
The state resumes questioning with the dispatcher.
After a few questions of clarification, she steps down from the witness stand.
Scurry says the cameras that they see in dispatch can be controlled by police officers. She has said it’s rare to see an she’s dispatched officers to on the camera feed.
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
New witness is up now.#ChauvinTrial
Questioning resumes with the next witness, Alisha Oyler. She worked as a shift lead at the Speedway gas station on the corner of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue. She notes she is originally from Arizona but moved to Minnesota.
This is the second witness called by @AGEllison‘s team of prosecutors.
— Callan Gray (@CallanGrayNews) March 29, 2021
Oyler describes being a shift lead at the Speedway at 38th and Chicago. https://t.co/NHz7NhqyIc
She says she is 23 years old. She adds she worked at that business for "about a year" before it was shut down. Regarding the incident that happened on May 25, 2020, she confirmed to the court that she was able to see outside to the street from the cash register. She told state prosecutor Steve Schleicher she first noticed police when they were near the vehicle.
She said she doesn’t know Floyd and didn’t know who he was at the time of the incident. She noted that she saw the police "messing with someone."
Oyler tells the court that she started recording the incident with her cellphone. She started to record when Floyd was being placed in handcuffs in the squad car. She ended up making seven different recordings regarding the incident. Those videos are now being used as evidence.
Schleicher plays Exhibit 9, which is surveillance video from across the street from Cup Foods, where Oyler worked.
Oyler took several cell phone videos of the incident.
— Callan Gray (@CallanGrayNews) March 29, 2021
Those videos are now being played alongside surveillance footage. pic.twitter.com/bqUKsdgcB4
Oyler was asked why she kept recording the incident as it unfolded.
"Because I always see the police and they’re always messing with people and it’s wrong," she replied.
Oyler said she could hear people across the street yelling at police. She couldn’t make out words used, however.
The state is playing video from the dispatch feed and the cellphone video recorded by Oyler. Schleicher is taking her through both videos and asking questions about what she remembers. #ChauvinTrial pic.twitter.com/8qrmsJdirB
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
"I saw a bunch of people fighting and yelling and didn’t really know why, but now we obviously know why," Oyler said.
1:30 p.m.
Questioning resumes with the 911 dispatcher. Chauvin’s attorney Eric Nelson will question her now.
Back from lunch break, Chauvin’s attorney Eric Nelson takes over questioning Minneapolis 911 dispatcher Jena Scurry.
— Callan Gray (@CallanGrayNews) March 29, 2021
Nelson asked Scurry, "fair to say you’re not a police officer, and have not been through the police academy?" She replied, "correct."
Scurry said it’s rare to see an incident she dispatches first responders to show up on the televisions in the room she works in, saying it has happened "three or four" times in her career.
The 911 dispatcher said squad 320 was former officers J Alexander Kueng and Thomas Lane, while squad 330 included Chauvin and Tou Thao. Squad 830 were responding as park police. Squad 830 was the first to respond to the area.
Nelson makes the court aware that Scurry asked for paramedics at the scene because she believed Floyd was under the influence, not because officers asked for emergency medical services at the site. The responding EMS group initially arrived at the site but then left to another area nearby, according to Nelson, who is seen reading from the incident report.
Nelson notes to the court that Scurry, due to her job tasks, wasn’t fully focused on what was happening on TV screens outside of Cup Foods.
The defense asked Scurry if she could hear anything from the video or what kind of discussions were happening between the officers. She replied no. She also acknowledged that she is not an MPD officer with use of force training.
Nelson replayed the video, asking the dispatcher if she can note where she sees the squad car rocking back and forth during the struggle seen between Floyd and the former officers. The defense ended their questioning, with the state prosecutor taking over.
A point made by the defense was how busy the area was during the incident. They argue that police had to restain Floyd due to the fear he could run into a busy intersection.
12:25 p.m.
The court is in recess for lunch. The defense will question the current witness on the stand when the court resumes at 1:30 p.m.
11:15 a.m.
The first witness takes the stand. Assistant Attorney General Matthew Frank is questioning Minneapolis 911 dispatcher Jena Scurry.
The state is starting with Jenna Scurry who is a Minneapolis 911 dispatcher. #ChauvinTrial pic.twitter.com/vBqpUGDG6S
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
Scurry described how the Minneapolis Police Department divides the city into five precinct sectors and respective officers and units are assigned to calls within a sector. The state prosecutor is asking the witness how the dispatch job works closely with police.
"Sometimes we do have cameras available to us… to keep us up to date," Scurry said. She adds there are about six TVs on the wall showing those angles. She also said there is typically at least one sergeant on duty in each precinct.
She told the state she is aware of the Minneapolis area, including the area of 38th Street and Chicago Avenue, as she stated she has walked through the area before.
Exhibit 151 was presented by the state prosecution team, showing the call records from May 25, 2020, relating to the Floyd incident.
They are now presenting Exhibit #151 on screen for everyone to see. Frank asks Scurry to explain what this shows. #ChauvinTrial pic.twitter.com/qRKLXHvpmU
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
The dispatcher tells the court that all of the information regarding the call logs are sent to the officers and is available for reference in their squad car.
The court played the dispatcher call for the jurors.
Frank showing exhibit 10, which is dispatch audio. Scurry confirms it’s her voice.
— Callan Gray (@CallanGrayNews) March 29, 2021
You can hear dispatcher sending officers to the Cup Foods, saying “they are reporting there is a person using a counterfeit bill at the business”.
She confirmed that some of the officers sent to the scene in south Minneapolis included officers from the Minneapolis Park Police, who are able to respond to calls in the city beyond parks alone. She dispatched park police as backup because she heard "a loud noise" in the background.
When asked if she could see any of the surveillance video of the incident, she said "we were able to see what was going on. At first I just saw the squad car, I didn’t see the officers… I did not watch the whole video or as it was happening I did not watch the whole time. I still had other calls to take care of."
Frank is showing exhibit 11, which is the video of what Scurry could see from dispatch center.
— Callan Gray (@CallanGrayNews) March 29, 2021
Video shows former MPD officers Thomas Lane and J. Alexander Kueng walking #GeorgeFloyd to the squad, parked outside of Cup Foods.
As video plays, when Kueng and Lane pat Floyd down next to squad, Scurry says that’s the part where she started watching.
— Callan Gray (@CallanGrayNews) March 29, 2021
“The next time I looked, they were opening the door… drivers’s side back seat”
Scurry said at first she thought the screen had frozen because the situation hadn’t changed when she looked up again.
"My instincts were telling me something was wrong — it was a gut instinct — in the incident, something is not going right," she said. She adds at that point, she called the sergeant on duty.
"I can call them regarding calls if something doesn’t look right, in a call if there’s a caution note, if there’s something that they can do beyond the scope of the call, I can call them," Scurry said.
She is heard on the call saying, "I don’t know if they have used force or not they got something out of the back of the squad and all of them sat on this man." She also used the term "snitch" when referring to reporting to the sergeant about the situation. She was voicing her concerns in regards to seeing a possible use of force issue.
She noted before that call, she had never done anything like that.
11 a.m.
The court is now in recess, with opening statements concluding.
The court will be back in session starting at 11:15 a.m.
10:35 a.m.
Chauvin’s attorney, Eric Nelson, begins his opening statement.
"But for purposes of my remarks this morning, I want to talk about reason and common sense, and how that applies to the evidence that you’re about to see during the course of this trial," he said.
He told the jury that "there is no political or social cause in this courtroom," further stating that telling the jury the evidence is what matters.
Nelson said the BCA had at least 50 agents on the case and the FBI had at least 28. Together, they interviewed at least 50 MPD officers and nearly 200 civilian witnesses.
Nelson is breaking down the amount of evidence and witness testimony that will be presented in court.
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
"So this case, is clearly more than about nine minutes and 29 seconds." #ChauvinTrial
Nelson says jurors will see surveillance video from inside Cup Foods, where Floyd and a friend had run into a former girlfriend of his. He said the video will show Floyd passing the counterfeit $20 bill, prompting the store clerk to follow him out of the store. He said after confronting Floyd, the clerk called 911, telling them that he believed Floyd was intoxicated. Nelson says that’s when Floyd went back to his car, took two Percocets and "nodded off." A short time later, two officers arrived on the scene.
Nelson suggests to the jury that the evidence will show that when confronted by police, Floyd put drugs in his mouth in an effort to conceal them from the police. The defense explained what was captured in the body cam and surveillance video before the bystander video.
Nelson said there was a struggle at the MPD squad car when officers arrived.
"So much so that it catches the attention of the 911 dispatcher Jenna Scurry. This was not an easy struggle," he said.
Nelson says there’s more to scene than what was in front of the officers and tells jurors “there is a growing crowd in what officers perceive to be a threat”.
— Callan Gray (@CallanGrayNews) March 29, 2021
Nelson called the use of force "not attractive," but stated, "it is a necessary component of policing."
The defense brings up Floyd’s cause of death and breaks down what was found in the autopsy. He stated that the cause of death will be the biggest battle in this case.
Nelson is now talking about George Floyd’s cause of death and breaking down what was found in the autopsy.
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
-CO
-Fentanyl
-Coronary disease
-edema of the lungs
Says cause of death will be the biggest battle in this case.
9:40 a.m.
Blackwell began his opening statement, touching on what police are sworn in to do.
"And as you will learn as applies to this case… never employing a necessary force or violence," he stated. "You will learn what happened in that nine minutes and 29 seconds, the most important numbers you will hear in this trial are nine two nine."
He described to the jury what they will see in the bystander video, punctuating key moments with the statement.
The jury will hear from the California use of force expert and a Minneapolis Police Department sergeant. Police Chief Medaria Arradondo is also expected to testify. The prosecution team states that Arradondo will testify that Chauvin’s actions were not consistent with the department’s use of force training.
The jury will also hear from a forensic pathologist, pulmonologist, cardiologist and Hennepin County Medical Examiner Dr. Andrew Baker.
"You will learn amongst the bystanders was a first responder, a member of the Minneapolis Fire Department… she wanted to check his pulse.. she wanted [Chauvin] to let up and get up," Blackwell said, adding that that member of the fire department will also testify.
Blackwell says a lot of the prosecution’s tactics will rely heavily on witness statements.
The video will be shown to the jury, to which Blackwell warned of its graphic nature.
Blackwell says he’s going to show jurors video shortly.
— Callan Gray (@CallanGrayNews) March 29, 2021
“The video is graphic, it can be difficult to watch. It is simply the nature of what we’re dealing with in this trial”
Blackwell then played the video for the jury. Bystanders are heard in the video asking police to help Floyd and get off his neck.
Blackwell: He’s heaving up the right shoulder so he can get room for his ribcage to expand to breathe. Because at this point you will learn he’s pancaked. #ChauvinTrial
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
*deleted previous to correct
A 911 dispatcher will also testify in this case. Blackwell said she called the police on the police to report what she saw, because "she found it that disturbing." He added she will describe what she felt when she saw a man lose his life.
The jury will also hear from MPD members who will address Chauvin’s training. Blackwell said. "above all the police are trained in the side-recovery position… you turn them over on their side as soon as possible so you don’t obstruct their airway."
Blackwell: You will be able to see, ladies and gentlemen, the road rash on the shoulders from being pressed into the payment from the weight on top that stripped off layers of the skin.
— Ana Lastra (@AnaViLastra) March 29, 2021
Blackwell also said that jurors will learn that Floyd’s death was not related to a heart attack and drugs did not kill Floyd.
"After he had died, saw no injuries, no evidence or a heart injury and it was so remarkable he didn’t even photograph the hear," Blackwell said, speaking on the medical examiner’s comments on Floyd’s heart. He added that Floyd’s behavior was "not consistent" with someone dying of an overdose. Floyd is noted to die from a lack of oxygen, according to the state prosecution team.
Blackwell points out that the manner of death was stated as a "homicide," or "at the hands of another person."
Blackwell reminded the jury that all of this happened ov