US Ex-Police Officer Sentenced To 22.5 Years For George Floyd Murder
NDTV
"The sentence is not based on emotion or sympathy," said Judge Peter Cahill, handing down the term at a Minneapolis court after prosecutors sought a 30-year sentence.
Former policeman Derek Chauvin was sentenced to 22 and a half years in prison on Friday for the murder of African American George Floyd, the killing that sparked America's biggest demonstrations for racial justice in decades. The white, 45-year-old Chauvin gave his "condolences" to the Floyd family in a Minneapolis court before Judge Peter Cahill handed down a lesser sentence than the 30 years the prosecution had sought. "The sentence is not based on emotion or sympathy," said Cahill during a tense hearing in which the court watched a recorded message by Floyd's seven-year-old daughter and heard from Chauvin's mother. He added that it had not been based "on public opinion" either but on the law and the facts specific to the case, as he acknowledged the "deep and tremendous pain" the case had caused, particularly to the Floyd family.More Related News