Clinton Jaws - Derek Chauvin Found Guilty
Episode Date: April 20, 2021The jury has reached a verdict and it is bad news for Derek Chauvin. Chauvin found guilty for murdering George Floyd. Former cop, Clinton Jaws shows Derek Chauvin’s reaction as the verdict was read... in the courtroom. #Chauvin #ChauvinTrial #GeorgeFloyd call my hotline number 604-330-2512 https://www.clintonjaws.com/ https://open.spotify.com/show/3hWntbop6gLEg6RFR0aOzJ https://www.facebook.com/clinton.jaws.7/ https://twitter.com/ClintonJaws
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Verdict count one court file number 27 CR20 12646 we the jury in the above entitled matter as to count one unintentional second degree murder while committing a felony find the defendant guilty this verdict agreed to this 20th day of April 2021 at 144 p.m.
Signed juror four person juror number 19 same caption verdict count two we the jury in the above entitled matter as to count two third degree murder per person
an eminently dangerous act find the defendant guilty this verdict agreed to this 20th day of
April 2021 at 1.45 p.m. signed by jury four-person juror number 19 same caption verdict count three
we the jury in the above entitled matter as to count three second-degree manslaughter culpable
negligence creating an unreasonable risk find the defendant guilty this verdict agreed to this 20th day of
April 2021.
There you have it.
Guilty.
Derek Chauvin is found guilty.
The jury has ruled that Derek Chauvin murdered George Floyd.
And maybe we can move on now.
But you know that's not going to happen, right?
The protests are going to continue.
Did they even stop?
Did the riots even stop?
Biden's going to come out now with his mumbly-fumbly,
whatever he's going to say.
he'll make a big speech.
George Floyd family will come out.
They'll talk about systemic racism, police brutality.
They'll say that you want an example of systemic racism?
There it is right there.
I hope none of this happens.
I hope we just move on from it.
Because it's been a pretty bad year.
Could you imagine living in Minneapolis right now?
For a lot, it should be happy times they've been protesting for a year, right?
But you just know it's not going to stop.
It might even get worse.
I don't know what to think about it.
I don't know what to think about this.
You know, I watched a lot of that trial.
And I've seen a lot of deception and devious work.
You get your experts and you pay the experts.
You pay them to say what you want them to say.
It didn't even really seem like anybody was an expert.
You have, what, 12 lawyers against one lawyer?
It's supposed to be a fair process.
It just doesn't seem that fair.
The trial's in many.
They've already paid money to the family, George Floyd's family.
I mean, as a juror, you're going to see all this.
You have politicians that are coming out during this trial and tainting,
tainting the jury's mind.
I flip-flop.
I flip-flop throughout this trial.
It's such a sensitive topic that I'm even a little worried talking about it,
but I'm just being honest.
Just being honest.
I'm watching closing arguments.
And at one point I'm like, Chauvin, get off him.
Okay, now you have to give him CPR.
Give him CPR now.
Like the crowd was telling you to do.
I think I would have done that.
And they said right at the point where he took his last breath
was when Chauvin had his pepper spray out and he's talking to the crowd.
I don't distract it.
I don't know.
But at one point, flip-flop back and forth the entire time.
How about the jury?
it just seemed all confusing.
It really did.
You imagine being a juror how confused you would feel?
But at one point I'm like, man, you killed him.
And then all of a sudden I'll be like, well, hold on, Clint.
Floyd had 11 nanograms of fentanyl in his system.
You can overdose at three.
He is high as fuck.
He's got a bad heart, blood pressure through the roof.
narrowing of the arteries.
Blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah.
So just back and forth, back and forth.
As a jury, I don't know what my decision would have been.
You got to prove beyond a reasonable doubt,
but the whole time I got doubt in me.
And if you have doubt, well,
did they prove beyond a reasonable doubt?
What he died from?
You look at the video and it's obvious, right?
I don't know.
Then you find out what's wrong.
Like, would a normal problem?
person die that way or does that even matter if you had drugs in your system or your poor health
okay yeah shit that's that's what makes being a cop tough right what have we learned give people CPR
immediately i think we learned a lot from this and part of me thinks like i know what chauvin was thinking
he's not going to die they never die they never die they always lie how many times have people
People told me, inmates have told me, people have arrested, I can't breathe.
My heart's going through the roof.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
You just don't want to be arrested.
You just don't want to go to the backseat of the cop car.
You just don't want to be in jail.
As a watch commander, it seemed like every single shift, especially on the night shift,
when I had inmates in jail, I'd get the phone call from the guard that says,
inmate complaining about, you know, he's not feeling while he wants to go to the hospital.
They want to go to the hospital all the time.
Because they don't want to be in jail.
they want to be up at the hospital. It's nicer.
So a large part of my job was going back to cells, talking to the inmate, them telling me a
bullshit story, how they need to go into the hospital, and me usually saying no. Why?
Because we didn't have enough people working ever. And when you go up to the hospital,
you're tied up there for three hours. You've got to go with them. So a lot of times I just said no.
And then what happens there, right? And I guess I've been lucky throughout my career because none of them
died, but I say no, your heart is racing. Okay. You're not going up to the hospital. He dies and
sells. And then I'm hooped, right, for life? But it never happened. So I got lucky, I guess.
My point is, you don't think they're ever going to die. You don't ever believe what they have to say.
And maybe that's the wrong way to look at it. Maybe we learned a lot throughout this trial.
okay we won't put you on your we won't we won't prone you out we'll put you on your side we will be more
focused on your vitals now yeah hopefully the world can return to normal but you know that is just
not going to happen it might get worse before it gets better and that's all i have to say about that
and oh man well and i guess it's not because he still has to be sentenced so now we got more riots and
protests coming up. Then there's going to be appeal and there's more riots. What if he gets the
appeal, right? Anyways, bye-bye. Bail is revoked, bond is discharged, and the defendant is
remanded to the custody of the Hanepen County Sheriff. Anything further? All right. Thank you.
We're adjourned.
