The Minneapolis police officer seen
kneeling on the neck of an unarmed black man
heard saying "I can't breathe" multiple times before he died was a
19-year department veteran who was the subject of a dozen police conduct
complaints that resulted in no disciplinary action. The officer, who
was praised for valor during his career, also once fired his weapon
during an encounter with a suspect, records show.
The officer,
Derek Chauvin, and three fellow officers were fired Tuesday from the
Minneapolis Police Department, one day after the incident involving
George Floyd, whose cries of physical pain were recorded on a cellphone
video and whose death led to
a wave of violent protests Wednesday night in Minnesota's largest city. Minneapolis police identified the other officers as Thomas Lane, Tou Thao and J. Alexander Kueng.
Related:
To
be the subject of a dozen complaints over a two-decade career would
appear "a little bit higher than normal," said Mylan Masson, a retired
Minneapolis Park police officer and longtime police training expert for
the state of Minnesota at Hennepin Technical College.
But, she
added, anyone can file a complaint against an officer, whether or not
it's valid, and officers might be subject to more complaints if they
deal with the public often. Either way, an officer's disciplinary record
will be up for scrutiny in any legal proceedings, Masson said.
An
investigation including state authorities is being led by the FBI.
Chauvin, 44, who is white, is being represented by lawyer Tom Kelly, who declined to comment when contacted by NBC News. Efforts to reach the other officers for comment were unsuccessful Wednesday.
Bridgett Floyd, Floyd's sister,
said on NBC's "TODAY" show
Wednesday morning that she wants all of the officers at the scene to be
charged with murder. Officers were responding to a report of a forgery
at a grocery store when they encountered Floyd outside.
"They murdered my brother. He was crying for help," Bridgett Floyd said.
The
Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis, which represents the
department's 800-plus rank-and file officers, asked the public not to
rush to judgment before all video can be reviewed and a medical
examiner's report is released.
"Officers' actions and training
protocol will be carefully examined after the officers have provided
their statements," the union said Tuesday. It did not immediately return
a request for comment about Chauvin's and the other officers' options
if they choose to contest their firings.
Chauvin, who joined the
Minneapolis Police Academy in October 2001, has had a career that
included use-of-force incidents and at least one lawsuit related to an
allegation of violations of a prisoner's federal constitutional rights.
In
2006, Chauvin was one of six officers from the Third Precinct who
responded to a stabbing at a Minneapolis home. Police said Wayne Reyes
stabbed his friend and his girlfriend and then threatened to kill all of
them with a shotgun.
Police pursued Reyes, who fled in his truck.
He got out of the vehicle with a shotgun, and "several officers fired
multiple shots," killing Reyes, police said in a report.
It was unclear during the initial investigation which officers fired
their weapons and whether Reyes had made any verbal or physical threats.
All
of the officers, including Chauvin, were put on paid leave during an
investigation, which is standard protocol. It is unclear what happened
with the investigation, and Minneapolis police did not immediately
respond to a request for Chauvin's service record.
The same year,
Chauvin and seven others were named in an unrelated federal lawsuit
filed by an inmate at the Minnesota Correctional Facility at Lino Lakes.
Further information was not immediately available; records show that
the case was dismissed without prejudice in 2007.
In 2008, Chauvin
and a second officer were called to a residence for a domestic
disturbance. According to police, Ira Latrell Toles, 21, was holed up in
a bathroom and tried to escape when Chauvin got inside. When Toles
refused to obey Chauvin's order to get down, police said, a struggle
began and Toles grabbed for Chauvin's weapon.
Chauvin fired twice, hitting Toles in the abdomen,
the Pioneer Press newspaper of St. Paul reported. Toles was taken to the hospital and survived.
Download the NBC News app for breaking news and alerts
Chauvin
and the other officer, who was not named, were placed on paid leave
during an investigation, which is standard protocol. Police did not
respond to a request for information about the outcome of the
investigation.
The newspaper said that earlier in 2008, Chauvin
was awarded a department medal of valor for "his response in an incident
involving a man armed with a gun." Chauvin was recognized again in 2009
by the police department.
In 2011, Chauvin was again placed on temporary leave after he responded to the scene of a shooting.
Police
said that Leroy Martinez, 23, drew his gun near a playground at the
Little Earth of United Tribes public housing complex and that an officer
shot him after he refused to drop the gun and listen to commands.
Chauvin and other officers arrived at the scene, and while none of them
fired their weapons, they were all placed on a standard three-day
administrative leave as part of the investigation.
Tim Dolan, then the police chief, later said the officers, including Chauvin, "acted appropriately and courageously."
Chauvin has also been the subject of complaints listed in the city's
Office of Police Conduct database. Details of those cases were
unavailable after they were closed and listed as "non-public." They
resulted in no discipline.
Minneapolis police did not respond to a request Wednesday for comment or more information about Chauvin's disciplinary record.
Kelly,
Chauvin's attorney, has had politicians as clients and also defended
Jeronimo Yanez, a police officer in the Minneapolis suburb of St.
Anthony. Yanez was charged with manslaughter in the
death in 2016 of Philando Castile, a black driver whom Yanez fatally shot during a traffic stop -- another case that
prompted Black Lives Matter protests and a national conversation about race and gun rights. Yanez was acquitted the following year.
Chauvin's personal life was the subject of a profile two years ago in the Pioneer Press, which
interviewed his wife, Kellie Chauvin, a Hmong woman who was born in Laos and was vying to become Mrs. Minnesota America 2018.
She
told the newspaper that she married Chauvin eight years previously and
that they met when he brought someone he was arresting to the hospital
where she was working. He later came back and asked her out.
"Under all that uniform, he's just a softie," Kellie Chauvin said.
Protesters
demonstrated Tuesday night and again on Wednesday outside Chauvin's
home in Oakdale, a Twin Cities suburb. Oakdale's police chief said the
protest was "very peaceful.
Comments
Post a Comment