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Justice Department Brings Federal Criminal Charges Against Derek Chauvin, 3 Others

caption: A picture of George Floyd hangs on a fence barrier that surrounds the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapolis on March 30. The Justice Department is bringing criminal charges against former police officer Derek Chauvin for allegedly violating Floyd's rights and using excessive force in restraining him.
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A picture of George Floyd hangs on a fence barrier that surrounds the Hennepin County Government Center in Minneapolis on March 30. The Justice Department is bringing criminal charges against former police officer Derek Chauvin for allegedly violating Floyd's rights and using excessive force in restraining him.
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Updated May 7, 2021 at 10:57 AM ET

The Justice Department has filed federal criminal charges against Derek Chauvin, accusing the former police officer of using excessive force and violating the civil rights of George Floyd. Floyd died after Chauvin pressed on his neck for more than nine minutes on the pavement outside a convenience store in Minneapolis last year.

Three other former officers on the scene that day — Thomas Lane, J. Alexander Kueng and Tou Thao — have been charged federally in connection with Floyd's death. Two of the men, Kueng and Thao, are accused of failing to intervene to stop Chauvin. All three face a charge of failing to provide medical care with "deliberate indifference" to Floyd's suffering. They already are preparing for a state trial in August.

Chauvin also faces a separate federal indictment related to a 2017 incident where he allegedly used a neck restraint "without legal justification" on a 14-year-old and beat the teenager in the head with a flashlight.

Federal civil rights prosecutors from Washington worked hand-in-hand with the U.S. Attorney's Office in Minnesota to build the case.

Such federal charges are rare, in part because it is difficult to meet the high legal bar they require. To succeed, prosecutors must prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Chauvin acted "willfully" to deprive Floyd of his civil rights and used force that was "constitutionally unreasonable."

In those cases, officers can argue in their own defense that they acted out of fear, panic or even poor judgment, some of which featured in Chauvin's defense to state charges in a trial that concluded with a conviction on all counts last month. Chauvin has moved for a new trial, citing alleged jury misconduct and pretrial publicity.

The video of Floyd, who was Black, pleading for his life and crying for his late mother reverberated around the globe, as people who watched it took to the streets in the summer of 2020 to protest police brutality and racial injustice. Floyd's young daughter met President Joe Biden on the campaign trial, and he often repeats her statement that her "daddy changed the world."

The case is yet another demonstration of the Biden administration's emphasis on civil rights. In the Trump administration, then-Attorney General Bill Barr declined to approve a plea deal with Chauvin after Floyd's death, reasoning that he preferred to cede that ground to local authorities and that the situation in Minneapolis was incendiary enough.

But the U.S. Justice Department has weighed in with federal charges in other cases, including the brutal police beating of Rodney King in California in 1991; the murder of nine Black parishioners during a Bible study at a historic church in Charleston, S.C., in 2015; and the death of a young woman protesting against hate groups in a vehicular assault in Charlottesville, Va., in 2017.

The current Attorney General, Merrick Garland, told ABC News he was "shocked" by the video of Floyd's death and saddened by the persistence of racial discrimination in housing, education and the justice system.

The new federal criminal cases are separate from an ongoing civil rights investigation Garland announced April 21, that will examine whether Minneapolis police have engaged in a pattern or practice of discrimination, including excessive force and mistreatment of people with disabilities. Authorities in Minnesota have welcomed that civil investigation, which could take months to pursue. [Copyright 2021 NPR]

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