death. we have our forensic and legal experts of analysis but first, we want to go in the courtroom, omar jimenez tells you the day in court. reporter: in one of the most highly anticipated moments of the trial. you conducted the autopsy on mr. george floyd? i did. reporter: hennepin county s chief medical examiner dr. andrew baker took the stand. with respect to mr. floyd, you didn t see any damage to the heart? that s correct. did you note anything resembling a pill or pill fragments in his stomach? i did not. reporter: it listed the death as homicide but specifically cardio pulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement constraint and next compression. no mention of asphyxia. in my opinion, the law enforcement subdue l restraint and next compression was more than mr. floyd could take by virtue of the heart conditions. reporter: according to testimony friday, in june 2020 he told investigators of george floyd, if he were found dead at home alone and no
it is surrender day for donald trump and first on cnn we ve learned the ex-president has replaced his top georgia attorney just hours before he s going to head to atlanta to be arrested. request denied. a federal judge tells two of trump s georgia co-defendants they will be arrested in the state s election subversion case, no way around it. and they have just one more day to surrender. who won? who lost? what is the one line people will remember? what is the one line a candidate most wishes he or she could forget? we re starting to see the impact of the first republican debate. i m john berman with kate bolduan and sara sidner. this is cnn news central. quite a day ahead. hours from now former president donald trump is going to leave his bedminster golf club in new jersey, travel to a jail in georgia where he will surrender to charges accusing him of running a criminal enterprise to stay in power. 964 days have now passed since trump demanded of that man, brad raffe
Court to the federal court. how does this play? reporter: it could, sara, they were going to continue to argue their case should be in federal court because they were federal officials at the time of the charges, the al glegations what they were doing for donald trump after the election. they say that everything they were doing were things that wouldn t have been done if they had not been federal officials working for donald trump at that time. but there is really a fight brewing here we re going to see spill over into court on monday at a hearing where mark meadows and jeffrey clark may have to present evidence about what they were doing. we know the district attorney is ready to call witnesses about that call that trump placed to secretary of state brad raffensperger in georgia to find votes after the election. and this is gearing up to be quite a series of days for these two men, because others who were working for trump, rudy giuliani, jenna ellis, sidney powell, have turned them