A mixed martial arts fighter testifying at Derek Chauvin’s trial told the court that he called 911 about the former cop kneeling on George Floyd’s neck because he believed he ‘witnessed a murder’. Donald Winn Williams II, the prosecution’s third witness who
Jena Scurry, a 911 dispatcher who watched live video of police kneeling on George Floyd, testified on the first day of Derek Chauvin’s trial about how she called the officers’ supervisor because she felt ‘something wasn’t right’ A 911 dispatcher who watched
Derek Chauvin’s attorney insisted that the former Minneapolis cop was justified in his use of force against George Floyd and was not responsible for the black man’s death during his opening statement at trial on Monday. Defense attorney Eric Nelson delivered his
George Floyd’s brother on Monday took a knee for 8 minutes 46 seconds – the length of time Derek Chauvin pressed on the black man’s neck – outside the court on the first day of the police officer’s murder trial. Reverend Al
Derek Chauvin (pictured in a Minneapolis courtroom on March 15) has been charged with second- and third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the May 2020 death of George Floyd As of Monday, all 15 jurors who will hear the trial of former
Democratic Rep. Hank Johnson criticized Gov. Brian Kemp over the passage of Georgia’s new election bill, comparing it to the May murder of George Floyd. Johnson was on CNN in the aftermath of the passage of the state’s legislation, which puts new
Duke University has launched an investigation after a printout of George Floyd’s toxicology report was pinned to a Black History Month display. The flier, which insinuated that Floyd died of a drug overdose, appeared next to a photo of him on Saturday