A gunman killed eight people and wounded several others before apparently taking his own life in a late-night attack at a FedEx facility near the Indianapolis airport, police said, in the latest in a spate of mass shootings in the United States after a relative lull during the pandemic.

Five people were hospitalized after the Thursday night shooting, according to police. One of them had critical injuries, police spokesperson Genae Cook said. Another two people were treated and released at the scene. FedEx said people who worked for the company were among the dead.

A witness said that he was working inside the building when he heard several gunshots in rapid succession.

“I see a man come out with a rifle in his hand and he starts firing and he starts yelling stuff that I could not understand,” Levi Miller told WTHR-TV. “What I ended up doing was ducking down to make sure he did not see me because I thought he would see me and he would shoot me.”

It was the latest in a recent string of mass shootings across the U.S. Last month, eight people were fatally shot at massage businesses across the Atlanta area, and 10 died in gunfire at a supermarket in Boulder, Colorado.

It was at least the third mass shooting this year in Indianapolis alone. Five people, including a pregnant woman, were shot and killed in January, and a man was accused of killing three adults and a child before abducting his daughter during at argument at a home in March.

Police have not identified the shooter or said whether he was an employee at the facility. They said “preliminary information from evidence at the scene” indicated that he died by suicide.

“We’re still trying to ascertain the exact reason and cause for this incident,” Cook said.

Craig McCartt, of the Indianapolis police, told NBC Today early Friday that officers still knew “very little.” Chris Bavender, a spokesperson for the FBI’s Indianapolis office, said that they are helping the police with the investigation.

Attorney General Merrick Garland was briefed on the shooting, and the White House said President Joe Biden would be. Biden’s advisors have been in touch with the city’s mayor and law enforcement officials.

Family members gathered at a nearby hotel to await word on loved ones — and some employees were bused there for tearful reunions. But other relatives said they still had no information about their loved ones hours later. Most employees aren’t allowed to carry cellphones inside the FedEx building, making contact with them difficult.

“When you see notifications on your phone, but you’re not getting a text back from your kid and you’re not getting information and you still don’t know where they are … what are you supposed to do?” said Mindy Carson, holding back tears. Her daughter, Jessica, works in the facility and she had not heard from her.

Police were called to reports of gunfire Thursday just after 11 p.m., and officers “came in contact with (an) active shooter incident,” Cook said. The gunman later killed himself.

“The officers responded, they came in and did their job. A lot of them are trying to face this, because this is a sight that no one should have to see,” Cook said.

Indianapolis Mayor Joe Hogsett lamented that the city was “confronted with the horrific news of yet another mass shooting, an act of violence that senselessly claimed the lives of eight of our neighbors.”

“In times like this, words like justice and sorrow fall short in response for those senselessly taken,” Gov. Eric Holcomb said. He ordered flags to be flown at half-staff until April 20.

A man told WTTV that his niece was sitting in the driver’s seat of her car when the gunfire erupted, and she was wounded.

“She got shot on her left arm,” said Parminder Singh. “She’s fine, she’s in the hospital now.”

He said his niece did not know the shooter.

Source Article from https://ktla.com/news/nationworld/9-dead-including-gunman-in-mass-shooting-at-fedex-facility-in-indianapolis/

A police oversight agency on Thursday released video of a Chicago police officer fatally shooting 13-year-old Adam Toledo last month. Mayor Lori Lightfoot called for calm as the city braces for protests throughout the night.

Video shows an officer exiting his vehicle and chasing Toledo, who is running down an alley. When the officer catches up to the teen, he orders him to raise his hands and yells, “Drop it, drop it.” The officer fires a single shot to Toledo’s chest as the teen raises his hands.

The teen drops to the ground and the officer rushes to administer aid and calls for backup. Police have said a semi-automatic pistol was recovered a few feet away. Lightfoot on Thursday said there was “no evidence” the teen fired the weapon before he was shot.

The March 29 incident began around 2:30 a.m. when gunshots were picked up by a police audio scanner. Less than a minute later, police encountered Toledo and 21-year-old Ruben Roman, who was tackled by police and taken into custody. 

An attorney for the officer accused of shooting Toledo claimed Toledo was armed and that the officer was “faced with a life threatening and deadly force situation” and “was left with no other option.”  

The attorney representing the teen’s family said Toledo was not holding the weapon when the officer opened fire. “Those videos speak for themselves,” attorney Adeena Weiss Ortiz said Thursday. “Adam, for the last second of his life, did not have a gun.”

Protesters marching in Chicago on April 14, 2021.

Shafkat Anowar / AP


Source Article from https://www.cbsnews.com/live-updates/adam-toledo-chicago-police-shooting-video/

In recent decades, sanctions have transformed from “old-style, countrywide embargoes,” such as those against Apartheid South Africa, to “targeted” ones focused on individual actors, said John E. Smith, former director of the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control, which enforces trade and economic sanctions.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/2021/04/15/faq-united-states-economic-sanctions/

A shooter opened fired at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis late Thursday night.

Seth Perlman/AP


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Seth Perlman/AP

A shooter opened fired at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis late Thursday night.

Seth Perlman/AP

A man opened fire at a FedEx warehouse facility in Indianapolis late Thursday night, killing eight people and injuring others. The suspect shot himself and is among the nine dead, according to police.

Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Public Information Officer Genae Cook told reporters at around 1 a.m. Friday that “multiple” victims were transported to hospitals throughout the area and had injuries “consistent with gunshot wounds.”

At least four additional people were injured and transported to a nearby hospital. One victim was in critical condition, Cook said.

The FedEx Ground Plainfield Center warehouse at 8951 Mirabel Road is about 5 miles from Indianapolis International Airport.

Cook said that Indianapolis Metropolitan Police officers responded to the warehouse shortly after 11 p.m. following reports of gun shots. As officers arrived, they came upon an active shooter, she said.

Interstate-70 near the airport was temporarily closed Thursday night in both directions as police responded to the scene of the shooting.

FedEx said in a statement to NPR:

“We are deeply shocked and saddened by the loss of our team members following the tragic shooting at our FedEx Ground facility in Indianapolis. Our most heartfelt sympathies are with all those affected by this senseless act of violence. The safety of our team members is our top priority, and we are fully cooperating with investigating authorities.”

It’s unclear how many workers were on duty during the shooting.

This is a developing story. Some things reported by the media will later turn out to be wrong. We will focus on reports from officials and other authorities, credible news outlets and reporters who are at the scene. We will update as the situation develops.

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/16/987929888/9-killed-others-injured-in-shooting-at-fedex-warehouse-in-indianapolis

The attorney for Adam Toledo’s family said the 13-year-old did not have a gun in his hand when he was shot and killed by a Chicago police officer.

The family was not present for a press conference late Thursday afternoon in La Grange Park. The attorney said the family is going through a lot of pain after seeing the body cam video of the shooting, which was released to the public by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability on Thursday.

“(It was) especially moving, saddening, distressful to see a 13 year old boy shot at the hands of the officer,” she said. “For those of you with children you can relate to some of the pain that the Toledos’ are feeling today.”

Local



The body camera video that shows the shooting begins with about 1 minute and 45 seconds of the officer driving to the scene in the Little Village neighborhood before exiting his vehicle and running down an alley.

“Police, stop! Stop right f***ing now,” the officer can be heard yelling as Adam appears to pause near a fence bordering a parking lot at the end of the alley. Toledo is then seen turning toward the officer with his hands up.

The officer can be heard yelling, “Hey show me your f***ing hands, drop it, drop it,” firing one shot as Adam turns and puts his hands up, just under 20 seconds after the officer exited his vehicle.

As Adam turns and raises his hands, he’s illuminated by a flashing light and the body camera footage appears to show that both of the boy’s hands are empty.

“Those videos speak for themselves,” she said. “Adam during his last second of life did not have a gun in his hand.”

A surveillance video from across the parking lot, though recorded from a distance, appears to show Adam make a tossing motion with his right hand behind the fence before turning to face the approaching officer. It was at that time that the officer fired.

“This is why I want to be especially clear right now that that child comply at the officer’s request, dropped the gun, turned around, the officer’s saw his hands were up and pulled the trigger,” he said.

The Cook County Assistant State’s Attorney said Toledo had a gun in his right hand when he was shot by police during a bond hearing for 21 year old Ruben Roman over the weekend.

A spokesperson for the SAO walked those comments back on Thursday.

“An attorney who works in this office failed to fully inform himself before speaking in court,” a spokesperson for the office said in a statement in response to questions over whether or not the teen was in fact holding a gun at the time of the shooting. “Errors like that cannot happen and this has been addressed with the individual involved. The video speaks for itself.”

Speaking on behalf of Toledo’s family, attorney Adeena Weiss Ortiz said the body cam video was hard for the family to watch.

Surveillance video from Farragut High School provides a different angle of the shooting. The family’s attorney believes Toledo tossed the gun behind the fence before turning to face the officer.

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability and the Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office are conducting investigations of the shooting. The attorney said right now the family just wants justice for Adam.

“I don’t know if the officer had enough time or not all I know is that the officer’s trained to not shoot an unharmed individual not shoot an unharmed child,” she said.

Source Article from https://www.nbcchicago.com/news/local/attorney-adam-toledo-did-not-have-gun-in-his-hand-when-he-was-shot-by-chicago-police/2487909/

Protesters and police clashed for a fifth straight night in Brooklyn Center, Minnesota Thursday, following Daunte Wright’s death over the weekend. 

Roughly 1,000 demonstrators gathered outside the Brooklyn Center police headquarters, with many staying well past the city’s 10 p.m. curfew. The protests grew tense after Brooklyn Center Mayor Mike Elliot announced just after 8 p.m. that a curfew would be going into effect from 10 p.m. Thursday to 6 a.m. Friday — to the surprise of some, according to reports.

Champlin was the only metro-area curfew that had been previously announced. Former officer Kim Potter, who is charged with second-degree manslaughter in the death of Wright, lives there with her family. 

FAST FACTS

Protesters threw rocks, cans, and fruit at law enforcement and shined lasers at officers’ eyes “in an attempt to blind them,” according to Operation Safety Net (OSN), a public safety coalition formed to respond to incidents related to the trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin.

“Protesters have begun to re-engage and throw objects over the fence, injuring officers and guardsmen with flying debris,” OSN tweeted. 

The state law enforcement coalition added that fireworks were shot and protesters were trying to cut the fence line surrounding the building in an attempt to gain entry into the perimeter. A fistfight also broke out among some in the crowd outside the fence, OSN wrote. 

Unlike previous nights, law enforcement officers stood farther back from the barricades, creating more distance from the protesters. A second line of fencing was also set up between protesters and the police department, FOX 9 of Minneapolis reported. 

Others shouted obscenities at police and shook the security fence, just hours after Chicago’s police review board released graphic body camera video related to the fatal officer-involved shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo last month. 

“It is happening in every single city, every single day across the country,” Jaylani Hussein, executive director of the Minnesota chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations, told protesters earlier in the evening. Hussein led demonstrators in a chant of “Say his name! Adam Toledo!”

Protesters also tied air fresheners to the fencing, an apparent nod to Wright’s mother, who said her son had one dangling from his mirror when he was stopped. 

Police shot and killed Wright, a 20-year-old Black man, during a routine traffic stop in Brooklyn Center, on Sunday. Potter, a 26-year veteran of the force, appeared to have intended to fire a Taser, not a handgun, Brooklyn Center Police Chief Tim Gannon said.

Follow below for more updates on the protests in Minnesota. Mobile users click here

The Associated Press contributed to this report

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/live-updates-protesters-police-clash-for-5th-consecutive-night-in-minnesota

In an internal MPD email obtained by WUSA9, the department informed officers that, beginning the morning of April 19, MPD would be “fully activated to support expected First Amendment demonstrations.”

Source Article from http://www.wusa9.com/article/news/local/dc/dc-police-activating-full-department-ahead-of-verdict-in-derek-chauvin-trial-george-floyd-protests-black-lives-matter/65-5a2f0c95-adf4-4a29-aeb6-789f5c132ed8

When the United States went to war there in 2001, the American public agreed almost unanimously with President George W. Bush’s decision. That November, still shaken by the attacks of Sept. 11, nine in 10 Americans said they thought sending troops into Afghanistan was the right thing to do, according to a Gallup poll.

Over the past 20 years, the public’s views on the United States’ presence in Afghanistan have shifted, but they haven’t totally flipped. The percentage of Americans saying it was a mistake to send troops to Afghanistan ticked up steadily in the 2000s, but plateaued in the mid-40s, where it remained in 2019, the last time Gallup asked the question.

That differs significantly from the country’s feelings about the war in Iraq: By 2007, 62 percent of Americans said sending troops there had been a mistake, according to Gallup. That number has not fallen below 50 percent since then. Similarly, by the time American troops headed home from Vietnam in the mid-1970s, six in 10 Americans were telling Gallup pollsters that the war there hadn’t been worthwhile.

No such public outcry emerged around Afghanistan. Shortly after President Donald Trump announced his intention in 2019 to bring home most of the American troops stationed there, an NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that just one in three Americans thought the United States “should have a rapid and orderly withdrawal of all troops from Afghanistan.” Fifty-eight percent opposed it.

Still, the issue has a relatively low salience for voters, as the number of U.S. casualties has remained low and the war has garnered scant attention in the American press — even as the political instability in Afghanistan has grown only more severe in recent years.

Source Article from https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/15/us/politics/afghanistan-polling.html

A shooter opened fire outside San Antonio International Airport — but was shot dead by a “hero” cop before anyone was hurt Thursday afternoon.

“The officer who stopped this saved a lot of lives,” San Antonio Police Chief William McManus said.

“This guy had a full box of ammunition, he had a .45-caliber handgun he was shooting at the direction of the terminal, at the police officer, and behind him. We were very lucky not to have a lot of people injured or killed during this event.”

The airport was locked down, but no one there was seriously injured.

The suspect drove into the airport arrivals terminal roadway going the wrong way at 2:30 p.m.

When confronted by a San Antonio Park Police officer in the road, the driver got out of his car and fired at the cop and at the building “indiscriminately,” McManus said.

The cop — an 11-year veteran of the department working overtime at the airport — returned fire, gunning down the shooter.

“The officer in my opinion was a hero today, saved a lot of lives that could have been lost by this actvie shooter,” McManus said.

McManus said the shooter was known to police and had “mental health issues.” Police believe he had been firing shots off a highway overpass earlier in the day.

Source Article from https://nypost.com/2021/04/15/san-antonio-airport-on-lockdown-after-officer-involved-shooting/

Fox News host Lawrence Jones opened “Fox News Primetime” on Thursday blasting the Democrats for attempting to “highjack” the Supreme Court with new legislation to add justices to the high court.

JONES: The high court highjacking is underway. A coalition of far-left Democrats convened this afternoon to roll out their most radical agenda point yet. Packing the supreme court.

Their plan? Create four new seats on the court and let Joe Biden nominate anyone he wants. Now I’m not a math guy, but if conservatives have a 6-3 advantage on the court, and the Democrats add four new justices, that would give the Left a 7-6 lead. What a convenient set of circumstances! But don’t you dare say they’re packing the court.

If you havent noticed Democrats have this all planned out. They want to abolish the filibuster. Jam through their radical agenda, and pack the court to uphold their outrageous laws. All in the name of “restoring democracy.” That leads me to ask one question — have Democrats lost control of their party…or has the party just lost its mind?

CLICK HERE TO WATCH LAWRENCE JONES’ FULL COMMENTARY
 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/media/lawrence-jones-democrats-push-hostile-takeover-of-the-supreme-court-has-the-party-lost-its-mind

CHICAGO – Reaction has been swift following the release of body cam footage that shows a 13-year-old boy with his hands raised less than a second before a Chicago police officer fatally shot him last month in the Little Village neighborhood on the Southwest Side.

Video footage of the shooting, released Thursday by the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, shows a CPD officer shooting Adam Toledo once in the chest around 2:30 a.m. on March 29 in the alley of the 2300 block of South Spaulding.

Adam was shot after he and another man, 21-year-old Ruben Roman, ran away from police. Officers initially responded to the area following a report of gunfire.

Adam Toledo’s family lawyer Adeena J. Weiss-Ortiz says the video “speaks for itself.”

“Adam, during his last wind of life, did not have a gun in his hands after the officer screamed at him, ‘show me your hands,’” she said. “Adam complied, turned around, his hands were empty when the officer shot him.”

WATCH: Toledo family attorney speaks out following release of deadly shooting

She says Toledo, who was one of five siblings, may have possibly had a gun in his possession earlier in the night but denied that he possessed one in his hands when a CPD officer opened fire.

She says his hands were up, in compliance with the officer’s demands. 

The shooting has drawn comments about why a 13-year-old was out at 2:30 a.m. Weiss-Ortiz says the circumstances don’t matter, pointing out that Toledo was unarmed when he was shot.

“A lot of people have asked about that, but I don’t think it matters whether he’s a choir boy or involved in any activity,” she said. “The fact is, he was shot, unarmed. That could have been me, my son, or any one of us in that alley that evening.”

As to why Toledo was out with 21-year-old Ruben Roman, WGN has learned that he was unknown to the Toledo family.

WATCH: Little Village community reacts to video release of Adam Toledo shooting

Governor Pritzker released a statement in the aftermath of the video’s release. Pritzker said in part: “As a father, I know to my core that Adam Toledo’s family is living a parent’s worst nightmare. My heart goes out to all who love him.”

“Parents deserve neighborhoods that will nurture their kids. Children deserve to be safe. Communities deserve to live with hope for the future.

Adam Toledo, a 13-year-old child, was shot to death. This is a moment that calls for justice for our children and accountability in all our public institutions.

The State of Illinois is committed to this work, whether it is transforming our justice system or investing in communities to create durable and long-term progress.”

Lt. Governor Juliana Stratton also addressed the video, saying that the “trauma is real on many levels.”

Mayor Lori Lightfoot spoke Thursday afternoon ahead of the release of video that shows the fatal shooting 13-year-old Adam Toledo.

“No parent should ever have a video broadcast widely of their child’s last moments,” Lightfoot said.

WATCH: Mayor Lightfoot speaks ahead of video release that shows fatal police shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo

Office of Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle called for “justice and accountability” in the shooting she labeled as a “tragedy.”

My thoughts right now are on a 13-year-old child who should still be with us.

Adam Toledo.

I grieve with his family and loved ones who mourn the unimaginable. My heart breaks as I think of my own children, grandchildren, and former students.

Let us pray for peace, which, I must admit, even I cannot find in this moment and every single time a person of color is killed by an officer.

There are far too many of these times now.

Adam Toledo was just a child and should still be alive.

We must demand justice and accountability for this tragedy and address the law enforcement system that have allowed this to happen time and time again.

Statement from Toni Preckwinkle

Illinois Senator Dick Durbin said in part: “In the midst of the trial of Derek Chauvin and the fatal shooting of 20-year-old Daunte Wright, Chicago has come to face the shocking fatal shooting of 13-year-old Adam Toledo.  He was a seventh-grader at Gary Elementary School in Little Village with his whole life ahead of him.  My heart breaks for his family and friends, who are grieving the loss of his young life.”

Speaking on the release of the video, a statement from the MacArthur Justice Center read, in part: “A 13-year-old boy was murdered by the Chicago Police Department.  The state-sanctioned shooting of a child is not only unimaginably tragic, but a reflection of how Black and Latinx people and communities are policed in this city, every day.”

The ACLU of Illinois says “The release of the body camera footage and other materials by Chicago police today cannot obscure one, central fact: a 13-year-old boy was shot and killed by those sworn to protect and serve our community. The video released today shows that police shot Adam Toledo even though his hands were raised in the air. The pain of seeing this footage only adds to the pain and grief experienced by the Toledo family and the community. We join all those mourning this loss of life.”

Source Article from https://wgntv.com/news/chicago-news/chicago-reacts-to-bodycam-footage-of-adam-toledos-deadly-shooting-by-police/

Derek Chauvin said in court Thursday that he will not testify in his murder trial shortly before the defense said it has completed its case and the prosecution reiterated the same, setting the stage for closing arguments and deliberations Monday.

“I will invoke my Fifth Amendment privilege today” to not risk making any self-incriminating statements in Hennepin County District Court, where the fired Minneapolis police officer is charged with killing George Floyd late last spring in Minneapolis.

Later in the morning, defense attorney Eric Nelson said, “Your honor, the defense rests.”

Prosecutor Jerry Blackwell did the same after the brief reappearance of a state witness.

With that, Cahill said, “The evidence is now complete for this case.”

The judge, in anticipation of jurors being curious about how long their sequestered deliberations might last, told them, “If I were you, I would plan for long and hope for short. … Whether it’s an hour or a week, it’s entirely in your province.”

Cahill had adjourned proceedings until Monday but unexpectedly called for the trial’s resumption Friday without the jury present. The topic was how the jury will be instructed by the judge.

Until Monday’s reconvening, the judge told the jurors that he and the attorneys will be going over administrative and legal matters including the wording of his instructions to them on how to apply the law in this case.

Cahill also told them they will have a computer and a monitor so they can go over audio and video evidence as they wish while in the deliberation room and not be required to return to the courtroom for any reviewing.

Chauvin’s declaration to invoke the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution came during a series of questions from his attorney and outside the presence of the jury.

Nelson and Chauvin were seated at the defense table as the defendant held a cordless microphone and had his voice heard for the first time on the record during the trial.

Chauvin agreed that he and Nelson have had many conversations about whether he would testify, including as recently as Wednesday night. Chauvin said he understood that any decision to testify was his alone and neither the state nor the court can equate silence with guilt.

Nelson reminded Chauvin that “the state would have broad latitude” should it have had the opportunity to cross-examine him as a witness in his own defense.

Cahill then reinforced the point about who decides. Asked this time by the judge whether this was his decision, Chauvin said, “It is, your honor.”

Chauvin is charged with second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the killing of Floyd last spring. Three other fired officers who assisted in Floyd’s arrest — J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao — are scheduled to be tried in August on charges of aiding and abetting murder and manslaughter. All four defendants are out on bond as their cases move forward.

Occupying the Floyd family’s seat in court Thursday morning was Arthur Reed, a cousin. Asked outside the courtroom about Chauvin’s decision not to testify, Reed said he felt that the prosecution “would have chopped him down second by second” should he have been questioned about why he remained on Floyd’s neck for more than 9 minutes.

“We didn’t think they were going to put him on at all,” Reed said.

He added: “We’re just ready to get this over with, make sure [Floyd] gets the justice he deserves. We think the state has put on an excellent case.”

Prosecutors then called Dr. Martin Tobin as a rebuttal witness to Wednesday’s defense testimony by Dr. David Fowler, who said that carbon monoxide from a nearby police squad may have played a role in Floyd’s death.

Tobin said he disagreed with Fowler’s contention that Floyd’s blood could have contained anywhere from 10 to 18% of the poisonous gas.

He said autopsy results showed Floyd’s blood had an oxygen saturation level of 98%, meaning, “all there was for anything else was 2%.” Tobin noted that humans normally have anywhere from 0 to 3% of carbon monoxide in their blood at any given moment.

The prosecution had intended to produce Thursday as evidence test results that specifically measured the carbon monoxide in Floyd’s blood. However, Nelson objected, saying the state knew months ago that Fowler would testify about carbon monoxide, and he called it “incredibly prejudicial to the defense” to present the test results after Fowler has already left the state.

Cahill ruled that Tobin could testify about how carbon monoxide could have affected Floyd, but not mention the test results, which were dug out Wednesday by Dr. Andrew Baker, the county medical examiner who did the autopsy.

“If he even hints at test results the jury has not heard about, it’s gonna be a mistrial, pure and simple,” the judge said.

“This late disclosure is not the way we should be operating here,” Cahill said, while at the same time emphasizing that he’s not assigning any ill intent to the prosecution.

Cahill said that he too noted that Fowler would testify about carbon monoxide, and the state had sufficient notice to test samples “and dig a little deeper.”

“It’s just serendipity that Dr. Baker calls the state and says, ‘Oh by the way, it does exist,’ ” Cahill said.

On Wednesday, jurors heard from just from Fowler, a retired forensic pathologist who testified that the 46-year-old Floyd died of a cardiac arrest combined with drug use, and not a lack of oxygen as several prosecution witnesses contended in their testimony.

Dr. David Fowler also testified that the manner of death was “undetermined” due to a combination of factors — including police restraint and carbon monoxide poisoning from a nearby squad car — that could point in multiple directions. The Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled last year that the manner of death was homicide, an act caused by another person.

Star Tribune staff writers Rochelle Olson and Chao Xiong contributed to this report.

Paul Walsh • 612-673-4482

Source Article from https://www.startribune.com/derek-chauvin-tells-court-he-will-not-testify-judge-unexpectedly-resuming-proceedings-this-afternoon/600046200/

Kim Potter, the former Brooklyn Center police officer charged with second-degree manslaughter in the fatal shooting of Daunte Wright, made her first court appearance Thursday.

Potter appeared remotely with her defense attorney, Earl Gray. She wore a flannel, button-down shirt and only spoke when prompted by the judge. Potter is next expected to appear in person at 1:30 p.m. local time May 17 in front of Hennepin County Judge Regina Chu.

During the hearing, Potter was visible only briefly when her attorney pointed his video camera in her direction. Potter was also told she is not allowed to “possess use or transport firearms, ammunitions or explosives” during the duration of the case, Hennepin County District Court Judge Paul R. Scoggin said during the brief appearance. 

Potter, a 26-year-veteran of the force and former head of the local police union, was released from a Hennepin County jail just before 5:40 p.m. local time Wednesday after posting a $100,000 bond.

Kim Potter is expected to be booked into Hennepin County Jail Wednesday. (KMSP)

DAUNTE WRIGHT SHOOTING: EX-MINNESOTA POLICE OFFICER KIM POTTER TO MAKE FIRST COURT APPEARANCE

She was arrested earlier that morning, three days after she is alleged to have fatally shot 20-year-old Wright during a traffic stop in the city of Brooklyn Center. Potter was initially taken into custody at the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension in St. Paul. 

Security fencing remained erected around Potter’s home in Champlin, Minnesota, a suburb of Minneapolis, Wednesday afternoon. Sources told Fox News that Potter and her husband, a police officer in a nearby town, left the residence – but a Champlin Police car was parked in the driveway and uniformed officers were seen standing behind the fencing.

Potter’s defense attorney did not immediately return a message left by Fox News on Thursday.

Though she was not physically present, Thursday’s hearing took place at the Hennepin County Public Safety Facility – which is located in the same heavily fortified complex as the trial for Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer charged in George Floyd’s death. However, Potter and her attorney both appeared virtually from what looked like an office setting.

Gray also represents Thomas Lane, one of the three other former Minneapolis officers charged with aiding and abetting murder and manslaughter in Floyd’s death.

According to the criminal complaint in Potter’s case, Brooklyn Center Police Officer Anthony Luckey, and his field training officer, Potter, conducted a traffic stop on a white Buick at 63rd Avenue North and Orchard Avenue North at approximately 1:53 p.m. Sunday. Both officers were wearing body cameras.

A courtroom sketch shows former Brooklyn Center police Officer Kim Potter, lower right, background, at her first court appearance along with her attorney Earl Gray, over Zoom on Thursday, in the traffic-stop shooting death of Black motorist Daunte Wright in Brooklyn Center, Minn. At the lower left is Hennepin County Judge Paul Scoggin, while other unidentified court personnel are seen at the top left and right. (Cedric Hohnstadt via AP)

Luckey identified the driver as Daunte Demetrius Wright. Luckey conducted a record check and discovered that Wright had a warrant for his arrest “for a gross misdemeanor weapons charge,” court documents say.

Luckey and Potter both approached the driver’s side of the vehicle and asked Wright to exit his vehicle and place his hands behind his back, according to time-stamped body-worn camera footage.

The victim exited the car and initially followed commands, court documents say. Luckey told Wright that he was being arrested for his outstanding warrant. At that time, Luckey and Wright were positioned just outside of the driver’s side door of the vehicle, which remained open during their encounter, and Potter was positioned behind and to the right of Luckey, video shows.

Wright pulled away from the officers and got back into the driver’s seat of the vehicle. Luckey “attempted to maintain physical control of victim,” and Potter “verbalized that she would tase the victim.” Potter “presented her department-issued Glock 9mm handgun in her right hand and pointed it at the victim, verbalizing again that she would tase him,” court documents say.

In this courtroom sketch, former Brooklyn Center police Officer Kim Potter makes her first court appearance on Thursday, over Zoom, in the traffic-stop shooting death of Black motorist Daunte Wright in Brooklyn Center, Minn. (Cedric Hohnstadt via AP)

Potter again verbalized “Taser, Taser, Taser” and then pulled the trigger on her handgun, firing one round into the left side of the victim. Wright then stated, “ah he shot me,” and the vehicle sped away for a short distance before crashing into another vehicle and coming to a stop. The victim was pronounced dead at the scene after medical intervention was unsuccessful.

After discharging her handgun, the body-worn video reports that the defendant allegedly exclaimed, “S—, I just shot him!”

Investigator Sam McGinnis later collected and reviewed the layout of Potter’s duty belt. McGinnis observed that the defendant’s handgun “is holstered on the right side of the belt and her Taser is holstered on the left side of the belt.” Both grips and handles of the defendant’s Taser and handgun face the defendant’s rear, and the Taser is yellow with a black grip.

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McGinnis noted Potter’s Taser is set in a straight-draw position, meaning the officer would have to use her left hand to draw the Taser out of its holster. McGinnis met with Hennepin County Medical Examiner Doctor Loren Jackson on April 12. The medical examiner determined the victim’s cause of death to be a gunshot wound, and the manner of death was homicide.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/us/daunte-wright-shooting-ex-minnesota-police-officer-kim-potter-court-appearance

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2021/04/15/maxine-waters-tells-jim-jordan-shut-your-mouth-house-hearing/7243432002/

Though the investigation has stretched for months, Gaetz has not been charged with any crimes, and he has denied wrongdoing. Greenberg, initially charged in a two-count indictment related to his alleged effort to smear Beute, now faces 33 federal charges, including sex trafficking of a child, aggravated identity theft, wire fraud and bribery. He has pleaded not guilty, but at a court hearing in Orlando last week, his attorney and a prosecutor on the case said they are in plea negotiations.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/matt-gaetz-investigation-origins/2021/04/15/28413d70-9bd8-11eb-b7a8-014b14aeb9e4_story.html

Police shot and killed an individual who began firing indiscriminately at people outside San Antonio International Airport in Texas on Thursday, police said.

The person, described as being in his 40s, drove up to Terminal B at about 2:30 p.m. local time and was confronted by a police officer, who had been warned of the vehicle driving the wrong way into the terminal. When confronted by the officer, the man got out of the car and started shooting wildly at the officer, the terminal and behind him, according to San Antonio Police Chief William McManus.

He was shot by police and was taken to the hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

One bystander was injured by shrapnel and another was injured as people fled from the area, police said. Neither injury was considered serious. No officers were injured.

“The police officer who stopped this saved a lot of lives,” McManus said during a press conference outside the airport Thursday afternoon. “We were very lucky today to not have a lot of people injured or killed because of this event.”

“The shooter had a lot of ammunition and a big hand gun that he was shooting indiscriminately,” he added.

McManus said the man was firing a .45-caliber hand gun.

The officer who stopped the individual was an 11-year veteran of the San Antonio Park Police. He was not identified by authorities.

The airport was locked down, but reopened a couple hours after the incident.

“There is no active threat to the public. As a precaution, the Airport has been put on lock down,” the San Antonio police tweeted.

San Antonio police said they believe the person who opened fire at the airport is the same individual who fired at people from a highway overpass near San Antonio’s Stone Oak neighborhood at about 10:30 a.m. local time. McManus said the man fit the same description and shell casings matched those fired at the airport.

No one was injured in that shooting.

Police said they were familiar with the shooter and that he had mental health issues. The FBI said there does not appear to be any connection to terrorism and it will remain a local investigation.

The lower level, where passengers are picked up, was locked down immediately as the shooting took place.

There was briefly a ground stop for arriving and departing airplanes at the airport.

Source Article from https://abcnews.go.com/US/police-shoot-man-firing-indiscriminately-people-san-antonio/story?id=77102234

Legislation to expand the Supreme Court proposed by House and Senate Democrats represents “a crisis of leadership and a failure on the part of President Biden,” George Washington University law professor and Fox News contributor Jonathan Turley told “The Story” Thursday.

“He [Biden] equivocated throughout the campaign, he didn’t want to admit that he viewed court-packing, as he did in 1983, as a bone-headed idea, a dangerous idea,” Turley told host Martha MacCallum. “Instead he fueled these demands to simply change the court so it would effectively carry out a more liberal agenda.”

“We need a president to say,  ‘This is enough. This is pure and raw court-packing,'” Turley continued. “The public has been always against court-packing. The polls are very high. They’ve never been equivocating in their own right. The public sees it for what it is. Liberal justices have opposed this. This is called a hostile takeover of the Supreme Court against the wishes of the public, even liberal justices, and against the weight of history.”

MacCallum recalled that the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg threw cold water on the idea of court-packing when she stated in 2019: “If anything that would make the court appear partisan. It would be that — one side saying, ‘When we’re in power, we’re going to enlarge the number of justices so we’ll have more people who will vote the way we want them to.’ So I’m not at all in favor of that solution to what I see as a temporary situation.”

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Turley then pointed out that many  of the liberal lawmakers who opposed former President Donald Trump’s nominees to the Supreme Court have been wrong.

“Gorsuch and Kavanaugh have voted on critical cases with the left more than the justices on the left have broken away [and voted] with the right. This court is not as robotic as people suggest.”

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/jonathan-turley-court-packing-hostile-takeover-supreme-court

Two boys hold signs at an April 6 news conference, days after a Chicago police officer fatally shot 13-year-old Adam Toledo.

Shafkat Anowar/AP


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Two boys hold signs at an April 6 news conference, days after a Chicago police officer fatally shot 13-year-old Adam Toledo.

Shafkat Anowar/AP

Chicago has released video footage showing the fatal police shooting of Adam Toledo, more than two weeks after the 13-year-old was killed during a foot chase in the Little Village neighborhood.

A graphic video captures what police have described as an alleyway confrontation between Toledo and an officer identified as Eric Stillman in the early morning of March 29.

In the footage recorded from the shooting officer’s body-worn camera, the officer appears behind the wheel of a squad car responding to a call of shots fired. About 1:44 in, the officer pulls over and jumps out of the vehicle and starts running after someone. Seconds later, he appears to slam into a person walking in the alley but continues his pursuit.

One minute and 59 seconds in, the officer’s audio comes on, and he can be heard yelling, “Police! Stop! Stop right fucking now.”

The boy, who is standing near a wooden fence, appears to stop and at 2 minutes and 3 seconds, the officer commands, “Hands. Show me your fucking hands!”

Toledo starts to turn to face the officer with both of his hands up.

A second later, the officer says, “Drop it,” and appears to quickly fire a single gunshot.

The blast rings out at 2 minutes and 5 seconds — 20 seconds after the officer began the foot pursuit. By 2 minutes and 6 seconds, Toledo’s body crumples onto the ground, though he appears to try to hold himself up.

“Shot’s fired, shots fired. Get an ambulance over here now,” the officer is heard to say. “Look at me, look at me. You alright?” he asks the boy.

The officer then stretches the child’s legs out and his full body comes into view. He is wearing a black Nike sweatshirt with the words, “Just Do It” that are now covered in bright, red blood, skinny jeans and white sneakers. His face and hands, which are near his shoulders are also smeared with blood.

At 2 minutes and 40 seconds, the officer asks, “Where you shot?” as he lifts Toledo’s sweatshirt, revealing his torso.

“Stay with me,” he says.

The boy’s face rolls from right to left. His eyes are bulging and mouth is agape as the officer calls for a medical kit. Other officers arrive and begin shouting for Toledo to stay awake. At 3 minutes and 30 seconds, the officer who fired at Toledo says, “I’m going to start CPR. I’m not feeling a heartbeat.” Seven seconds later he begins performing chest compressions.

He pumps on the boy’s chest for about a minute and a half, then at 5 minutes and 5 seconds, gets up off the boy, lets someone else take over, and takes a walk away from the cluster of officers. He can be heard breathing but doesn’t say anything. At one point he stands in a vacant lot, with his shadow looming in the frame and it appears that another officer steps next to him placing their hand on his shoulder. Neither can be heard saying anything.

At about 8 minutes and 7 seconds he sits on the ground against the wooden fence and appears to let out a quiet sob. His body can be seen shaking. He remains in the same position until he shuts off his camera at 9 minutes and 23 seconds.

Officials have expressed concern that the disturbing videos could set off a new wave of protests in the city against the police department, which activists accuse of brutality and abuse, especially against communities of color.

Stillman, the officer who shot Toledo, is on administrative duty.

Bracing for the release of the videos the Toledo family’s attorney issued a joint statement with Mayor Lori Lightfoot, pleading for a peaceful response from the community.

“We acknowledge that the release of this video is the first step in the process toward the healing of the family, the community and our city. We understand that the release of this video will be incredibly painful and elicit an emotional response to all who view it, and we ask that people express themselves peacefully,” the statement said.

Lightfoot also held a press conference just before the explicit videos were made public, asking for people to give the family “space to breathe.”

“No parent should ever have a video broadcast widely of their child’s last moments, much less be placed in the terrible situation of losing their child in the first place,” she said.

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which is investigating the shooting, after some public deliberation decided to publish the body-worn camera footage and other materials in an effort to be transparent with the public. But only after showing it to the Toledo family and giving them two days to process the boy’s final moments.

Community members have been calling for its release in recent weeks, during which COPA initially wavered on whether it could publish a video involving a juvenile and the Toledo family asked that it be delayed.

Events of March 29

Police have said that Toledo was killed in the early hours of March 29, when officers responded to reports of gunshots and encountered him and another male.

David Brown, superintendent of the Chicago Police Department, said at a press conference that a gunshot detection system reported shots in the 2300 block of South Sawyer Avenue around 2:30 a.m. local time. Officers arrived in time to see two males fleeing from a nearby alley, and Brown said one was armed with a handgun.

The officers pursued them on foot, which Brown said resulted in a “confrontation” in the alley. An officer shot the child in the chest, and he was pronounced dead at the scene. The involved officer discharged his weapon once, according to COPA, and body-worn camera captured the encounter. The officers involved have been placed on administrative duties for 30 days, Brown said, per routine protocol.

The other individual, who was apprehended at the scene, has since been identified as 21-year-old Ruben Roman. He was arrested last Friday over what police described as a “probation violation warrant for his participation” in the March 29 shooting, and also faces three felony charges: reckless discharge of a firearm, unlawful use of a weapon by a felon and endangerment of a child.

Cook County prosecutors said on Saturday that Roman had fired the gun at a passing vehicle, setting off the notification system, but that Toledo had been holding it during the encounter with police and was warned repeatedly to drop it before police shot him, the Chicago Sun-Times reported.

“If [Roman] does not bring [Adam] with him at 2:30 in the morning, if he doesn’t bring his gun with him while on gun offender probation, if he doesn’t shoot that gun seven or eight times on a city street with [Adam] standing right next to him . . . and then fleeing with that gun, none of this would have happened,” Assistant State’s Attorney James Murphy said.

Assistant Public Defender Courtney Smallwood argued that Toledo died “at the hands of the Chicago police officers, not my client,” saying there was no proof that the gun belonged to Roman or that he had brought Toledo outside with him in the first place, the Sun-Times reported.

Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot later vowed to hold the person who handed Toledo a gun accountable.

“Let’s be clear,” she said. “An adult put a gun in a child’s hand. A young and impressionable child. And one who should not have been provided with lethal force. A weapon that could and did irreparably change the course of his life.”

Toledo’s identity was not made public for three days. Brown said earlier this month that the delay was because Roman, whom he did not name, gave a false name for Toledo to police, and because his fingerprints did not match any database records. Ultimately, Brown said, police were able to identify him by looking through resolved missing persons reports.

The boy’s mother, Elizabeth Toledo, reported her son missing on March 26 but told detectives the next day that her son had returned, Brown said. When police contacted her again on March 31 to say his description matched that of an unidentified person in the morgue, she said he had left home again either late March 27 or early March 28, according to Brown.

At an April 2 press conference, member station WBEZ reported, Toledo’s mother said he had four siblings ranging in age from 11 to 24. She said she had last seen him when she put him to bed the night before the shooting.

Her lawyer, Adeena J. Weiss-Ortiz, translating from Spanish, said she was feeling judged by the community and wanted to share that she was a full-time mother to her five children.

At a community vigil several days later, Jacqueline Herrera from the anti-violence group Enlace Chicago read a statement on behalf of Elizabeth Toledo, in which she described her son as caring, imaginative and curious since birth. He loved the show The Walking Dead and had even gone to lengths to plan for a zombie apocalypse, with a bag packed and ready to go, WBEZ reported.

“This child wanted to be an officer. And he was shot by the hands of another officer,” Weiss-Ortiz said. “The mother wants to know the truth of all facts surrounding the death of her son.”

The seventh grader still played with Hot Wheels and Legos at home, and had no criminal history, his mother said.

Back and forth over video’s public release

COPA initially said it could not publicly release the footage of the shooting because it involved a juvenile. As WBEZ’s Patrick Smith reported for NPR, “Experts scoffed at that, and the city relented.”

Reversing course, COPA said in a series of tweets it had determined that provisions of state law intended to protect the confidentiality of juvenile records did not in fact bar it from releasing material related to the investigation. It announced plans to post the video publicly within 60 days of the incident, after showing it to Toledo’s family first.

The Toledo family viewed the video and other materials related to the shooting on Tuesday, COPA said, but requested that they not be released immediately “as the family continues to grieve their loss.”

Attorneys for the family described seeing the footage as “extremely difficult and heartbreaking for everyone present,” NBC Chicago reported.

COPA said Wednesday it had informed the family’s attorney it would release materials on Thursday including the body-worn footage, third party video, the gunshot detection recordings, Office of Emergency Management and Communications transmissions and arrest reports.

Lightfoot and the Toledo family released a joint statement on Thursday morning, acknowledging the pain and protest expected following the video’s release.

“We acknowledge that the release of this video is the first step in the process toward the healing of the family, the community and our city,” it read. “We understand that the release of this video will be incredibly painful and elicit an emotional response to all who view it, and we ask that people express themselves peacefully.”

Calls for justice and police reform

The city is bracing for protests Thursday in an already-tense atmosphere, amidst the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin and days of demonstrations over the police killing of Daunte Wright, a 20-year-old Black man in a nearby suburb.

To prepare for possible protests, the Chicago Police Department canceled days off for thousands of officers in specialized units, the Sun-Times reported, and is prepared to reschedule thousands of other personnel to 12-hour shifts.

Toledo’s killing has prompted a pledge to change police policy.

For years, activists and experts have advocated for Chicago police to adjust their department guidance on foot chases, saying it can lead to unnecessary violent confrontations, Smith told NPR.

Days after the shooting, Lightfoot called foot pursuits “a significant safety issue” and promised a change before the summer. She did not provide details but said a new policy will be based on input from both officers and residents.

The U.S. Department of Justice found four years ago that CPD officers “engage in tactically unsound and unnecessary foot pursuits, and that these foot pursuits too often end with officers unreasonably shooting someone—including unarmed individuals.”

“The impact of CPD’s pattern or practice of unreasonable force fall heaviest on predominantly black and Latino neighborhoods,” the federal investigation stated.

The ACLU of Illinois called a foot pursuit policy change long overdue.

“For four years, the City and CPD resisted repeated calls from advocates and the community to adopt a foot pursuit policy,” said Nusrat Choudhury, legal director at the ACLU of Illinois. “It should not have taken the death of a 13-year-old to finally get a response.”

Source Article from https://www.npr.org/2021/04/15/987718420/chicago-releases-video-showing-fatal-police-shooting-of-13-year-old-adam-toledo

Derek Chauvin said in court Thursday that he will not testify in his murder trial shortly before the defense said it has completed its case and the prosecution reiterated the same, setting the stage for closing arguments and deliberations Monday.

“I will invoke my Fifth Amendment privilege today” to not risk making any self-incriminating statements in Hennepin County District Court, where the fired Minneapolis police officer is charged with killing George Floyd late last spring in Minneapolis.

Later in the morning, defense attorney Eric Nelson said, “Your honor, the defense rests.”

Prosecutor Jerry Blackwell did the same after the brief reappearance of a state witness.

With that, Cahill said, “The evidence is now complete for this case.”

The judge, in anticipation of jurors being curious about how long their sequestered deliberations might last, told them, “If I were you, I would plan for long and hope for short. … Whether it’s an hour or a week, it’s entirely in your province.”

Cahill had adjourned proceedings until Monday but unexpectedly called for the trial’s resumption Friday without the jury present. The topic was how the jury will be instructed by the judge.

Until Monday’s reconvening, the judge told the jurors that he and the attorneys will be going over administrative and legal matters including the wording of his instructions to them on how to apply the law in this case.

Cahill also told them they will have a computer and a monitor so they can go over audio and video evidence as they wish while in the deliberation room and not be required to return to the courtroom for any reviewing.

Chauvin’s declaration to invoke the Fifth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution came during a series of questions from his attorney and outside the presence of the jury.

Nelson and Chauvin were seated at the defense table as the defendant held a cordless microphone and had his voice heard for the first time on the record during the trial.

Chauvin agreed that he and Nelson have had many conversations about whether he would testify, including as recently as Wednesday night. Chauvin said he understood that any decision to testify was his alone and neither the state nor the court can equate silence with guilt.

Nelson reminded Chauvin that “the state would have broad latitude” should it have had the opportunity to cross-examine him as a witness in his own defense.

Cahill then reinforced the point about who decides. Asked this time by the judge whether this was his decision, Chauvin said, “It is, your honor.”

Chauvin is charged with second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the killing of Floyd last spring. Three other fired officers who assisted in Floyd’s arrest — J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao — are scheduled to be tried in August on charges of aiding and abetting murder and manslaughter. All four defendants are out on bond as their cases move forward.

Occupying the Floyd family’s seat in court Thursday morning was Arthur Reed, a cousin. Asked outside the courtroom about Chauvin’s decision not to testify, Reed said he felt that the prosecution “would have chopped him down second by second” should he have been questioned about why he remained on Floyd’s neck for more than 9 minutes.

“We didn’t think they were going to put him on at all,” Reed said.

He added: “We’re just ready to get this over with, make sure [Floyd] gets the justice he deserves. We think the state has put on an excellent case.”

Prosecutors then called Dr. Martin Tobin as a rebuttal witness to Wednesday’s defense testimony by Dr. David Fowler, who said that carbon monoxide from a nearby police squad may have played a role in Floyd’s death.

Tobin said he disagreed with Fowler’s contention that Floyd’s blood could have contained anywhere from 10 to 18% of the poisonous gas.

He said autopsy results showed Floyd’s blood had an oxygen saturation level of 98%, meaning, “all there was for anything else was 2%.” Tobin noted that humans normally have anywhere from 0 to 3% of carbon monoxide in their blood at any given moment.

The prosecution had intended to produce Thursday as evidence test results that specifically measured the carbon monoxide in Floyd’s blood. However, Nelson objected, saying the state knew months ago that Fowler would testify about carbon monoxide, and he called it “incredibly prejudicial to the defense” to present the test results after Fowler has already left the state.

Cahill ruled that Tobin could testify about how carbon monoxide could have affected Floyd, but not mention the test results, which were dug out Wednesday by Dr. Andrew Baker, the county medical examiner who did the autopsy.

“If he even hints at test results the jury has not heard about, it’s gonna be a mistrial, pure and simple,” the judge said.

“This late disclosure is not the way we should be operating here,” Cahill said, while at the same time emphasizing that he’s not assigning any ill intent to the prosecution.

Cahill said that he too noted that Fowler would testify about carbon monoxide, and the state had sufficient notice to test samples “and dig a little deeper.”

“It’s just serendipity that Dr. Baker calls the state and says, ‘Oh by the way, it does exist,’ ” Cahill said.

On Wednesday, jurors heard from just from Fowler, a retired forensic pathologist who testified that the 46-year-old Floyd died of a cardiac arrest combined with drug use, and not a lack of oxygen as several prosecution witnesses contended in their testimony.

Dr. David Fowler also testified that the manner of death was “undetermined” due to a combination of factors — including police restraint and carbon monoxide poisoning from a nearby squad car — that could point in multiple directions. The Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office ruled last year that the manner of death was homicide, an act caused by another person.

Star Tribune staff writers Rochelle Olson and Chao Xiong contributed to this report.

Paul Walsh • 612-673-4482

Source Article from https://www.startribune.com/derek-chauvin-tells-court-he-will-not-testify-murder-trial-recesses-until-monday-s-closing-arguments/600046200/

Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2021/04/15/daunte-wright-kim-potter-appear-court-brooklyn-center-shooting/7234074002/