Richardcyoung.com

The Online Home of Author and Investor, Dick Young

  • Home
  • How We Are Different
  • About Us
    • Foundation Principles
    • Contributors
  • Investing
    • You’ve Read The Last Issue of Intelligence Report, Now What?
  • Your Survival Guy
  • The Great Reset
  • COVID-19
  • My Rifles
  • Dividends and Compounding
  • Your Security
  • The Swiss Way
  • Dick Young
  • Debbie Young
  • Key West
  • Paris
  • Dick’s R&B Top 100
  • Liberty & Freedom Map
  • Your Health
  • Ron Paul
  • Bank Credit & Money
  • Dick Young’s Safe America
  • Your Survival Guy’s Super States
  • Critical Race Theory
  • NNT & Cholesterol
  • Work to Make Money/Invest to Save Money

Is This the Real Reason George Floyd Died?

September 23, 2020 By The Editors

By Darwin Brandis @ Shutterstock.com

At the American Thinker, Don Brown, a former U.S. Navy JAG officer, and author of the book “Travesty of Justice: The Shocking Prosecution of Lieutenant Clint Lorance,”  details the full evidence of the death of George Floyd. He writes:

On Memorial Day, around 8 PM, Minneapolis Police are called to a local convenience store.  Two suspects passed a fake $20 bill to buy cigarettes.  When police arrived, the shop manager pointed across the street, where three suspects sat in a parked vehicle. George Floyd sat behind the wheel.

When the officers crossed the street to investigate, two other suspects, another man, and a woman, both black, stepped from the car and politely cooperated.

But George argued and disobeyed ten separate commands from officers to keep his hands up. After the tenth order, he finally put his hands on the steering wheel as instructed.

As George protested, police walked him across the street to the police cruiser, the vehicle shown in the bystander’s video.

That bystander’s video, isolated alone, implies that the officer cruelly forced George onto the ground, then callously put his knee on George’s neck, causing George to cry out, pitifully, “I can’t breathe.”

But when a Minnesota judge authorized the release of police body cam footage, a completer and more different story emerged.  First, the police never wanted George on the ground at all, and frantically tried getting him into the back of their squad car.

But Floyd, a strong six-feet-eight-inches tall, fought police every second, and tried pushing his way out. Police video shows George repeatedly saying, “I can’t breathe” long before he was on the ground, and before Officer Chauvin employed the infamous knee-restraint tactic.

This is crucial.

Claiming to be “claustrophobic” as they ordered him into the back seat, George Floyd demanded to be placed on the ground. So, the officers did not thrust him down to the ground and then put their knee on George’s neck, as the bystander’s video suggests.

Let’s delve into the evidence.

From Officer Thomas Lane’s body camera, at 8:09 PM, officers approached George’s vehicle, tapped on the window, instructing him to either put his hands up or put his hands on the steering wheel. But George refuses.

Ten separate times, police either instructed George to let them see his hands, or to put his hands on the wheel. Finally, George puts his hands on the wheel, protesting he had “not done anything.”

At 8:17 PM, officers walk George across the street. He keeps arguing, as they order him into the back of the squad car.

“I’m claustrophobic,” he claims, twice, resisting as they again order him to sit in the back seat. He screams, fights and resists getting in the squad car.

At 8:18:08, still standing beside the car and fighting the officers, he says, for the first time, with no knee on his neck, “I can’t breathe, officer!”  At this point, police are still ordering him into the back seat.

A bystander urges George to stop fighting. “You can’t win,” the bystander says.

George fights anyway.

Police push him in the back seat. He keeps resisting.

Nine seconds later, fighting from the backseat of the police car, George says three times, in rapid succession, beginning at 8:18:19, “I want to lay on the ground!  I want to lay on the ground! I want to lay on the ground!”  He repeats it a fourth time, five seconds later, ““I want to lay on the ground!”

Then, as if he knows he is dying, says, “I’m going down.”

At 8:18:39, fighting in the backseat, he again says, three times in rapid succession, “I can’t breathe!” Then again,” I can’t breathe.” And then, again, at 8:18:50 repeats, “I can’t breathe!”

At this point, George had demanded to be laid on the ground four times and said “I can’t breathe” at least six times, while in the back seat of the squad car, with no knee on his neck.

At 8:19:06, he again says, “I can’t breathe,” for the seventh time.

Of course he can’t breathe. A fentanyl overdose stops a man from breathing.

George fought the officers non-stop for over ten minutes before officers finally removed him from the car and put him down on the ground, beside the squad car, as George himself demanded.

Bystanders then film George on the ground, declaring, “I can’t breathe,”  as if this was the first time George said, “I can’t breathe,” and as if Officer Chauvin’s knee (not the fentanyl) caused George’s breathing problems.

Fox 9 in Minneapolis reported that Chief Hennepin County Medical Examiner Dr. Andrew Baker, in a memorandum filed May 26 concluded, “The autopsy revealed no physical evidence suggesting that Mr. Floyd died of asphyxiation.”

In other words, Dr. Baker initially ruled out Chauvin’s knee as causing George’s death.

In a second memorandum filed June 1, Baker described Floyd’s fentanyl level as “pretty high,” and a potentially “fatal level.”

Dr. Baker reported Floyd had 11 ng/mL of fentanyl in his blood, adding, “If he were found dead at home alone and no other apparent causes, this could be acceptable to call an OD. Deaths have been certified with levels of 3.”

In other words, while levels of 3 ng/mL have caused fatal fentanyl overdoses. George ingested nearly four times that amount, or 11 ng/mL of fentanyl, in his bloodstream.  In another document, Dr. Baker said, “That is a fatal level of fentanyl under normal circumstances.”

Granted, mounting political pressure led to subsequent private autopsy reports, paid for by the family, showing the cause of death as a combination of both fentanyl and asphyxiation from the officer’s knee.

Of course they do.

But the prosecution, to obtain a conviction, must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. They must prove that the officer’s knee, and not the massive fentanyl dosage, killed George Floyd.

That’s a tall order.

Not only that, but the infamous, “knee-technique,” which should be banned, was authorized by the Minneapolis PD.  Officer Chauvin followed authorized procedure, a technique for keeping a suspect on the ground, after George Floyd had fought officers for over ten minutes, and after, only — and this is the kicker — George requested, repeatedly, to lay on the ground.

But Chauvin’s knee is a red herring. The issue here is fentanyl.

 

Related Posts

  • Ray Kelly on Policing and George Floyd
  • When Will “Democrats Be Accountable”
  • Pres. Trump on the Death of George Floyd: Justice Will Be Served
  • Remembering the Great Lowell George
  • Author
  • Recent Posts
The Editors
Latest posts by The Editors (see all)
  • The Destructive Rise and Fall of BLM - May 20, 2022
  • More Returnees than Refugees at Ukrainian Border - May 17, 2022
  • Will the War in Ukraine End Before 2023? - May 16, 2022

Dick Young’s Must Reads

  • TOP HEAVY: Focus on Big Indexing Could Cause Market Chaos
  • The Three Best Retirement Decisions I Ever Made
  • Government Should Be Small, Laws Unobtrusive, and Men Left Alone
  • V4 Stands Against North African and Middle Eastern Invasion
  • Warning! Your Survival Guy’s on a Boil Water Advisory
  • Escape From the City: You’re Going to Like What You See
  • Conflict Between Democratic Sovereignty and Transnational Progressivism (Globalism)
  • America’s Silent Army with 423M Guns
  • DONBAS: Russian Tanks Face Gauntlet of Death from Javelin Wielding Ukrainians
  • Sen. Hawley Makes the Case Against U.S.-China Relationship

Our Most Popular Posts

  • Tucker Carlson Interviews My Favorite Florida Farmer
  • What’s Ahead for America During Biden’s Last Years
  • MARKET CHAOS: This May Take Time, Here’s How to Prepare
  • “We Cannot Save Ukraine by Dooming the US Economy.”
  • Baby Formula Gone Missing?
  • Jean-Pierre: Economy "Not Something that We Keep an Eye on Every Day"
  • BE VIGILANT: The Rats Are Scurrying in These Rough Markets
  • PRICES SOAR: Diesel Shortage Could Cripple America's Economy
  • Biden: A National Disgrace
  • BUSTED BUDGETS: Families Can't Afford Democrats' Anti-Energy Regulations

Disclosure

RSS Youngresearch.com

  • Job Market Survival Advice for Graduates and for Those YOU Love
  • BULLWHIPPED? Inventory Overhang Could Slow Growth in Certain Sectors
  • BUY THE DIPS? Can You Catch a Ginsu Knife?
  • MARKET TURNING: Canada’s Housing Market Turmoil
  • “I’ve Been with Richard Young for Over 30 Years Now”
  • All-Powerful Money Managers Voting YOUR Money Targeted by Senate GOP
  • HORDING CASH: Funds Hold the Highest Level of Cash Since 9/11
  • COMMODITY CRUNCH: Will Tesla Buy a Cobalt Mine?
  • Young Americans Fall in Love with Farming, Again
  • Your Survival Guy: “Sell in May, Buy After Labor Day?”

The Supreme Court Must Always Protect the Constitution

Our Daily Bread Threatened?

Joe Biden – Malicious, Incompetent, a Wannabe Left Wing Ideologue?

Jean-Pierre: Economy “Not Something that We Keep an Eye on Every Day”

Job Market Survival Advice for Graduates and for Those YOU Love

The Destructive Rise and Fall of BLM

Copyright © 2022 | Terms & Conditions | About Us | Dick Young | Archives