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After Floyd, Congress ready to plunge into policing laws
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After Floyd, US Congress ready to plunge into policing laws
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With new momentum, Congress ready to plunge into policing laws
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Former Police Officer Derek Chauvin’s conviction for murdering George Floyd has reenergized President Biden and Washington lawmakers aiming for reform.
Justin Bamberg, a South Carolina-based lawyer who has been involved in several cases involving shooting deaths at the hands of police, said he hoped the conviction marked “a turning point in civil rights, and just as important, opens the minds of law enforcement that you can be held accountable for your actions.”
Bamberg, who is Black, called the case a “great day for Mr. Floyd’s family, and everyone across America who believes in equal justice for all.”
In many quarters, though, there was sorrowful acknowledgement that the conviction brought little real solace.
Human being, not a political cause : Will Floyd s death, Chauvin conviction spur reforms? Jenny Jarvie, Laura King, Jaweed Kaleem © (Court TV via Associated Press) Former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin is taken into custody as his attorney Eric Nelson looks on Tuesday at the Hennepin County Courthouse in Minneapolis. (Court TV via Associated Press)
Racial justice advocates and legal experts on Tuesday hailed former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin’s murder conviction in the killing of George Floyd, expressing hopes the case could spur broader police reforms and help crack the “blue wall of silence” often adhered to by police when one of their own commits a crime.