Derek Chauvin pleaded guilty Wednesday to federal charges that he violated George Floyd’s civil rights, allowing the former Minneapolis police officer to avoid another high-profile trial after he was convicted this year by a state jury of murder and manslaughter in Floyd’s death.
Chauvin, 45, wearing an orange prison jumpsuit, entered the new plea during a hearing in St. Paul, Minnesota, three months after first pleading not guilty to depriving Floyd, who was Black, of his rights when Chauvin knelt on his neck for 9 1/2 minutes while detaining him in May 2020.
Federal prosecutors told U.S. District Judge Paul Magnuson that Chauvin agreed to plead guilty to using excessive force on Floyd. Chauvin also admitted guilt in a separate federal indictment in connection with him allegedly depriving a 14-year-old boy of his civil rights during an encounter in September 2017. He initially pleaded not guilty in that case in September.
Chauvin remains in prison on a 22 1/2-year sentence for the state case, a rare outcome and one of the longest ever imposed on a police officer for a killing in the line of duty.
Claiming responsibility in his federal case might help Chauvin in receiving a reduced sentence. Without a plea deal, Magnuson said, he faced the possibility of life in prison.
Federal prosecutors at Wednesday’s hearing asked for Chauvin to be sentenced to 20 to 25 years in federal prison, with five years of supervised probation and agreeing to never work again as a police officer. His federal sentence would also be served concurrently with his state sentence.
Magnuson is expected to sentence Chauvin at a later hearing.
Three other officers at the scene of Floyd’s death — Thomas Lane, J. Alexander Kueng and Tou Thao — were also included in the federal indictment. They pleaded not guilty in September and could go on trial in January.
Lane, Kueng and Thao, who were all fired from the Minneapolis Police Department, also face a state trial next year on charges of aiding and abetting murder and manslaughter.
Video recorded by a bystander and local traffic camera showed Thao standing between onlookers and his fellow officers as they pinned Floyd to the pavement after responding to a call from a convenience store in Minneapolis’ Powderhorn Park neighborhood about a counterfeit bill. Lane and Kueng were on top of Floyd as Chauvin applied deadly pressure to Floyd’s neck and he gasped for air.
Floyd’s death spawned months of racial justice demonstrations and unrest across the United States and the world with calls to address policing and systemic racism.
Chauvin in September signaled in a court filing that he would appeal his murder conviction, saying Judge Peter Cahill abused his discretion or made mistakes in his case.
Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com