By Mekishana Pierre This video is unavailable because we were unable to load a message from our sponsors.
If you are using ad-blocking software, please disable it and reload the page.
Embed Code Now playing
Gayle King was finally able to sleep at night after the Derek Chauvin trial verdict came out on Tuesday.
The
CBS This Morning co-host tells ET s Kevin Frazier that she was so anxious before they announced the verdict that she couldn t sleep or eat because there was so much at stake.
The former Minneapolis police officer, who was seen in videos kneeling on the late George Floyd s neck for more than nine minutes, was charged with second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. He was found guilty on all charges.
Court TV via AP, Pool
Slate published a piece yesterday which I think sums up a strain of progressive thinking in the wake of the Chauvin verdict: It’s good he’s going to prison but it’s bad this may lead people to believe the system works. The piece is headlined “Why Conservative Media Is Celebrating the Chauvin Verdict” and it focuses on the hidden bad intent behind people on the right agreeing with people on the left.
Blue Lives Matter devotees have long acknowledged the so-called bad apples scattered among U.S. police departments. Chauvin the murderer, in this view, is the exception that proves the rule. His conviction isn’t the very least Floyd’s community should expect after a neighbor was murdered, by a government employee, with their tax dollars. It’s proof that the system as it exists is not broken at all, that those advocating for systemic change are ginning up support for a radical agenda by manufacturing outrage over nothing, and that when something trul
Volunteer police officer in Michigan off force after calling Chauvin verdict BS
After the Minneapolis Jury found former Police Officer Derrick Chauvin guilty of murder and manslaughter, Taylor auxiliary police officer Kevin Lablanc posted on social media, calling the verdict B -S -.
By: WXYZ Staff
and last updated 2021-04-22 09:42:42-04
TAYLOR, Mich. â An auxiliary police officer has been removed from the Taylor Police Department after posting an explicit status on Facebook following the verdict in the Derek Chauvin murder trial.
Kevin Leblanc served as an auxiliary officer â an unpaid volunteer â for 10 years in the Taylor Police Department. However, the cityâs police chief confirmed that heâs been removed from the force for posting an explicit status after Chauvin was found guilty of murder and manslaughter in connection with the death of George Floyd.
Archive for April 21st, 2021 scpr.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from scpr.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
under the trump administration, just one was launched. in our exclusive interview this week with the attorney general, he vowed to use every resource to ensure equal justice under the law. and he now appears to be putting every police department in the nation on notice, david. all right, pierre thomas, with us live tonight, as well. pierre, thank you. and just moments before the chauvin verdict was read in minneapolis, news of another deadly police shooting, this time in columbus, ohio. a police officer shooting and killing a 16-year-old girl. authorities saying she was armed with a knife. the columbus division of police quickly releasing the officer s body camera video tonight, showing the scene, asking for patience while the investigation now unfolds. and what the mayor is now saying tonight. abc s trevor ault now from columbus, and we warn you tonight, the images, again, are disturbing. black women matter! black women matter! reporter: just hours after derek chauvin s guil