The death of Daunte Wright, who was shot by a Minnesota officer during a traffic stop, has been ruled a homicide, medical examiner's office says https://t.co/WF5YIbp34N
— CNN (@CNN) April 12, 2021
Category: Police State
Extra-judicial killing
I remember saying at the time this guy (who killed right-wing activist Aaron “Jay” Danielson, a supporter of the far-right group Patriot Prayer, during the Portland protests last year) was probably an informant who was deliberately killed, and then Trump confirmed my suspicions by taking credit for his public execution.
A lawyer friend had pointed out that, in early June 2020, Reinoelh racked up 4 Class A misdemeanors, including having a loaded Glock in his car while speeding 111mph (with his 11-year-old son in the car) and three serious traffic violations. The fines totaled $660,000.
A few days later, he had his first Instagram post documenting his joining the protests. His Facebook posts were mildly lefty memes for the previous five years, nothing extreme. In early July, he was stopped by police in Portland, and cited for resisting arrest, some other resisting misdemeanor, and carrying a loaded weapon without a permit.
This was a month after he had another weapons charge, still unresolved, so Portland police should have held him. Not only was he let go, the charges were dropped and the incoming DA says he doesn’t know why.
My friend notes she was able to pull up all this information within an hour of Reinoelh being named the shooter.
"Police Say an Antifa Activist Likely Shot at Officers. His Gun Suggests Otherwise."
Shocking story. https://t.co/Zm2mbnEAsA
— Mehdi Hasan (@mehdirhasan) April 11, 2021
Murderers
This shocking body cam footage of an officer shoving snow in a suspect’s face surfaced a day ago. The Acting Chief of Akron, Ohio PD claims that since the investigation is still ongoing, it’s unclear whether the officer should be fired. I call bullshit. https://t.co/Eu1gppsuJH
— Marjorie Gaylor Queen 🏳️🌈 (@Tim_Tweeted) April 10, 2021
Nail in the coffin
This was, quite simply, the most powerful witness I’ve ever seen. I can’t imagine they won’t convict Derek Chauvin now, but as we all know, anything can happen.
Dr. Martin Tobin: "Mr. Floyd died from a low level of oxygen. And this caused damage to his brain that we see, and it also caused [an arrhythmia] that caused his heart to stop." #ChauvinTrial pic.twitter.com/6DRnCToTEs
— Aaron Rupar (@atrupar) April 8, 2021
Surprise!
https://twitter.com/aroseblush/status/1379117984090886153
Derek Chauvin trial
Derek Chauvin should not have knelt on George Floyd’s neck after he stopped resisting, former sergeant testifies https://t.co/8bjRCCmmVn
— Suburban Guerrilla 💙 (@SusieMadrak) April 2, 2021
Guilt
A common theme of the Derek Chauvin murder trial so far: Witnesses’ sense of guilt over letting down George Floyd https://t.co/HvVP0KgEYc
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) March 31, 2021
Derek Chauvin trial
Heartbreaking, just heartbreaking. Powerful witnesses. I hope Derek Chauvin gets convicted, but of course, he’s a cop and we know that evidence will have nothing to do with whether he’s convicted.
The teenager who filmed the fatal arrest of George Floyd testified today at the trial of Derek Chauvin:
"It seemed like he knew it was over for him. He was terrified, he was suffering."https://t.co/QnRBWQKPnK pic.twitter.com/ujxuVGUODM
— CBS News (@CBSNews) March 30, 2021
Emotional moment in today’s testimony pic.twitter.com/rXG1mg1LSz
— Acyn (@Acyn) March 30, 2021
The next four witnesses, who watched George Floyd plead for his life as Derek Chauvin kneeled on his neck, are not being shown on camera because they are so young.
Let that sink in.
Too young to be shown on camera but witnesses in a murder trial.
— Yamiche Alcindor (@Yamiche) March 30, 2021
As I see the photos again, the one thing I can’t get out of my mind are Chauvin’s hands in his pockets. The look of utter anguish on George Floyd’s face contrasted with Chauvin’s hands in his pockets, as if he were just chatting with friends, is gut wrenching and maddening.
— Mar (@mmcph7515) March 29, 2021
The apple and the tree
Straight talk from a former DC police chief: 'We keep using “just a few bad apples.” But, I mean, at some point in time, you have to take a look at the tree.'https://t.co/ttT8BTCLzW
— Thomas E. Ricks (@tomricks1) March 27, 2021
Who do they work for, again?
NYPD Fights to Keep Eyes Off Discipline Records https://t.co/sE8sA6QC6F @NinaPullano
— Courthouse News (@CourthouseNews) January 19, 2021
