Derek Chauvin Verdict Means Accountability, Not Justice
Last year, the world watched Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin kill George Floyd in plain sight after arresting him for an alleged counterfeit bill at a convenience store. The footage released from the encounter sparked an international movement as protesters took to the streets for months, calling for racial justice and an end to police brutality.
On Tuesday, after weeks of arguments, the jury released a verdict in the Derek Chauvin trial: guilty on all three counts. For many, the verdict felt both inevitable and impossible: In spite of Chauvin鈥檚 egregious act being caught on camera, convictions against police officers who commit blatant acts of violence are a rarity thanks to the laws and systems that protect them and allow them to act with impunity.
On our podcast this week, we hear reactions on the ground in Minneapolis following the verdict's announcement, and check in with the 老澳门开奖结果's Policing Policy Advisor, Paige Fernandez. As one demonstrator, Osman, told us, the sense of victory was tempered by the knowledge that much work remains ahead:
鈥淭he man murdered another man in front of the world. There鈥檚 a lot more that needs to be done. There鈥檚 too many George Floyds that were not caught on camera...We鈥檙e not asking for change, we are demanding change.鈥