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Journal by khallow
Derek Chauvin's murder trial is underway for the killing of George Floyd back in 2020. We have this enlightening testimony from a Lieutenant Richard Zimmerman of the Minneapolis Police Department. I believe "speaker 1" is the prosecutor in the trial ("speaker 4" may be defense and "speaker 5" may be the judge in the case). The number in parentheses is the time on the video associated with this transcript.

Speaker 1: (01:52)
Are you familiar with the use of force continuum?

Richard Zimmerman: (01:56)
Yes.

Speaker 1: (01:57)
Is that part of the Minneapolis Police Department use of force policy?

Richard Zimmerman: (02:01)
Yes, it is.

Speaker 1: (02:02)
Can you just describe in general what that means to the jurors

Richard Zimmerman: (02:05)
Yeah. Basically, the use of force continuum is guidelines, or it’s policy actually, that we have to follow. It’s when, for instance, when you arrive at a scene, no matter what the scene, the first level, the lowest level would be just your presence at a scene, in uniform. The next step up, maybe your verbal skills that you’ve learned to help diffuse a situation or learn information about whatever the situation is. The next step would be a soft technique, escorting the person by their arm, that type of thing. The next level would be a hard technique. That’s where you would use your, you maybe have to use your mace or handcuffs, that kind of thing. Finally, the top level on the continuum is deadly force.

[...]

Speaker 1: (04:11)
Have you ever, in all the years you’ve been working for the Minneapolis Police Department been trained to kneel on the neck of someone who is handcuffed behind their back, in a prone position?

Richard Zimmerman: (04:24)
No, I haven’t.

Speaker 1: (04:27)
Is that, if that were done, would that be considered force?

Richard Zimmerman: (04:30)
Absolutely.

Speaker 1: (04:32)
What level of force might that be?

Richard Zimmerman: (04:35)
That would be the top tier, the deadly force.

Speaker 1: (04:38)
Why?

Richard Zimmerman: (04:39)
Because of the fact that if your knee is on a person’s neck, that can kill them.

[...]

Speaker 1: (05:25)
Okay. Well, let me ask you this again. If you, as an officer, according to the training, you handcuff somebody behind the back, what’s your responsibility with regard to that person from that moment on?

Richard Zimmerman: (05:47)
That person is yours. He’s your responsibility. His safety is your responsibility, his wellbeing, and is your responsibility,

Speaker 1: (06:01)
Once you handcuff somebody, does that affect the amount of force that you should consider using?

Richard Zimmerman: (06:08)
Absolutely.

Speaker 1: (06:09)
How so?

Richard Zimmerman: (06:11)
Once a person is cuffed, the threat level goes down all the way. They’re cuffed. How can they really hurt you?

Speaker 1: (06:26)
Well, certainly there could be certain circumstances when a cuffed person could still be combative?

Richard Zimmerman: (06:32)
Oh, absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. But you getting injured is way down.

Speaker 1: (06:39)
What you mean by that?

Richard Zimmerman: (06:40)
Well, if you’re, you could have some guy try to kick you or something, but you can move out of the way. That person is handcuffed, and the threat level is just not there.

Speaker 1: (06:59)
So, by handcuffing somebody you’ve taken away some of their ability to harm you?

Richard Zimmerman: (07:04)
Absolutely.

Speaker 1: (07:08)
If somebody who is handcuffed becomes less combative, does that change the amount of force that an officer is to use under policy?

Richard Zimmerman: (07:19)
Yes.

Speaker 1: (07:21)
How so?

Richard Zimmerman: (07:23)
Well, if they become less combative, you may just have them sit down on the curb or, the idea is to calm the person down. if they are not a threat to you at that point, you try to help them, so that they’re not as upset as they may have been in the beginning.

Speaker 1: (08:01)
In your 30 years of training with the Minneapolis Police Department, and your experience, have you been trained on the prone position?

Richard Zimmerman: (08:15)
Yes.

Speaker 1: (08:17)
What has your training been, specific to the prone position?

Richard Zimmerman: (08:23)
Well, once you secure or handcuff a person, you need to get them out of the prone position as soon as possible, because it restricts their breathing.

Speaker 1: (08:38)
When you handcuff somebody behind their back … well, as part of training, have you been handcuffed behind the back?

Richard Zimmerman: (08:44)
Yes.

Speaker 1: (08:46)
Have you been trained on what happens to individuals when they’re handcuffed behind the back?

Richard Zimmerman: (08:52)
Yes.

Speaker 1: (08:52)
So, when somebody is handcuffed behind their back, how does it affect them physically?

Richard Zimmerman: (08:57)
It stretches the muscles back through your chest, and it makes it more difficult to breathe.

Speaker 1: (09:07)
If you put somebody in the prone position … Well, is it well-known this danger of putting somebody in the prone position?

Speaker 5: (09:16)
Sustained.

Speaker 1: (09:17)
How long have you had training on the dangers of the prone position, as part of a Minneapolis Police Officer?

Richard Zimmerman: (09:24)
For, since 1985.

Speaker 1: (09:30)
Is it part of your training regularly to learn about keeping somebody in the prone position?

Richard Zimmerman: (09:36)
Yes.

Speaker 1: (09:37)
What has the training band with regard to the prone position?

Richard Zimmerman: (09:41)
Once a person is cuffed, you need to turn them on their side or have them sit up. You need to get them off their chest.

Speaker 1: (09:51)
Why?

Richard Zimmerman: (09:52)
Because of the, as I had mentioned earlier, your muscles are pulling back when you’re handcuffed, and if you’re laying on your chest, that’s constricting your breathing even more.

Speaker 1: (10:14)
In your training as a Minneapolis Police Officer, are you provided with training on medical intervention?

Richard Zimmerman: (10:23)
Yes.

Speaker 1: (10:24)
I assume you’re not taught to be paramedics, but you receive some level of training?

Richard Zimmerman: (10:29)
Yeah. We’re first responders I think, is what our category would be.

Speaker 1: (10:33)
Does that include doing what we think of a CPR, chest compressions?

Richard Zimmerman: (10:37)
Yes.

Speaker 1: (10:38)
How often is that part of your training?

Richard Zimmerman: (10:42)
CPR? It’s every other year or so.

Speaker 1: (10:47)
As part of your training within the Minneapolis Police Department policies, is there an obligation to provide medical intervention when necessary?

Richard Zimmerman: (10:57)
Absolutely.

Speaker 1: (10:58)
What is the general teaching that you get with regard to medical intervention?

Richard Zimmerman: (11:04)
Well, again, it’s been that you need to provide medical care for a person that is in distress.

Speaker 1: (11:16)
Would that be true, even if you’ve called an ambulance to come to the scene?

Richard Zimmerman: (11:20)
Yeah, absolutely. The ambulance will get there in whatever amount of time, and in that time period, you need to provide medical assistance before they arrive.

TL;DR: The first quote establishes that there is a policy guideline, the "force continuum" for use and escalation of force. The second quote establishes that kneeling on a prone person is not official policy and it is considered the top level of deadly force in the "force continuum".

Finally, the meat of the testimony is in the final quote which establishes:

1. Police are responsible for people they handcuff and are required to give first aid medical care - even if an ambulance is called, should the person need it.
2. Handcuffed people are considered to be much lower threat because of the constraint and official policy is to use lower force on a handcuffed person.
3. Training is to move a handcuffed person from the prone position because of the breathing difficulties the position causes.

While it remains to be seen how these policies were enforced, I am reminded of people early on claiming this sort of thing is proper police procedure. Well, now we see it's not.

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The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 06 2021, @02:57PM (19 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 06 2021, @02:57PM (#1133895)

    Are we still in the prosecution phase?
    I would like to know how the restrained prisoner got out of the car, what the police were trying to accomplish keeping the prisoner outside rather than put him back in the car and take him immediately to jail, and finally what Chauvin can document about what the department trained him about kneeling on someone's neck.

  • (Score: 1, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 06 2021, @03:20PM (12 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 06 2021, @03:20PM (#1133900)

    what Chauvin can document about what the department trained him about kneeling on someone's neck.

    See page 26 [mncourts.gov] - scan of training manual with photographic depiction of an officer kneeling on the neck of a handcuffed suspect.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 06 2021, @06:46PM

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday April 06 2021, @06:46PM (#1133963)

      Yes, I know that slide. It shows what could be a neck restraint, but the accompanying text doesn't say mention one. While elsewhere the slides note that neck restraints require a supervisor notification. Was the image on the slide just showing an officer squatting to put on handcuffs? If a neck restraint was ordered, was it to be maintained for the entire nine minutes or so waiting for EMS arrival?

      In general, I would expect a 16 year police officer to know how to process a doped up criminal never-do-well. That doesn't make me a cheerleader for Chauvin. But there is a strong undercurrent of a politically desired outcome, because the city already gave a stack of taxpayer money to Floyd's family no questions asked, and the city expects Antifa to go on a rampage if Chauvin doesn't get convicted of murder. They're planning leaving the citizens helpless, the cowards.

    • (Score: 2) by DeathMonkey on Tuesday April 06 2021, @06:56PM (4 children)

      by DeathMonkey (1380) on Tuesday April 06 2021, @06:56PM (#1133966) Journal

      "Place the subject in the recovery position to alleviate positional asphyxia" - the bullet right next to that picture.

      The picture in question is very blurry and that knee may not even be touching his neck.

      • (Score: 2) by deimtee on Wednesday April 07 2021, @01:01AM (2 children)

        by deimtee (3272) on Wednesday April 07 2021, @01:01AM (#1134113) Journal

        Look at the officer's foot in that photo. The degree of bend in his shoes indicates that most if not all of his weight is on his feet, not the suspect's neck.

        --
        No problem is insoluble, but at Ksp = 2.943×10−25 Mercury Sulphide comes close.
        • (Score: 2) by FatPhil on Thursday April 08 2021, @09:17AM (1 child)

          by FatPhil (863) <{pc-soylent} {at} {asdf.fi}> on Thursday April 08 2021, @09:17AM (#1134715) Homepage
          Red herring. The force required to cause hypoxia/anoxia is very low, so the majority of the weight can be still on the foot.
          Not that I can see the image in question, that server refuses to serve me the PDF due to some failed TLS handshandy.
          --
          Great minds discuss ideas; average minds discuss events; small minds discuss people; the smallest discuss themselves
          • (Score: 2) by deimtee on Friday April 09 2021, @12:32AM

            by deimtee (3272) on Friday April 09 2021, @12:32AM (#1135106) Journal

            The detainee is face down, with his face turned away from the restraining officer. The knee, if it is contacting at all, is on the back of his neck/upper back. The other officer looks like he might be putting the handcuffs on.

            Regarding whether kneeling on the neck is policy, the bullet points next to the photo are:
            - Sudden cardiac arrest typically occurs immediately following a violent struggle
            - Place the subject in the recovery position to alleviate positional asphyxia
            - Once in handcuffs, get EMS on scene quickly to monitor and transport

            Nowhere does it say "kneel on his neck for nine minutes or until dead".

            --
            No problem is insoluble, but at Ksp = 2.943×10−25 Mercury Sulphide comes close.
      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @05:43AM

        by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @05:43AM (#1134181)

        Looks like he is partially on his side and they are getting ready to put him in a modified recovery (or even a sniffer position based on the arm positioning) to me. The person on the left is an instructor of the class explaining to others the position and the reflexive use of the arms as the other two rotate the suspect from the prone position. You can just see the subject preemptively guarding with lateral neck flexion and the legs positioned asymmetrically by the far officer.

    • (Score: 1) by khallow on Tuesday April 06 2021, @07:27PM (2 children)

      by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday April 06 2021, @07:27PM (#1133985) Journal
      I don't see the knee being placed on the neck, it just happens to be close. Notice also that the restrained person faces to the side not face down and that step two on that slide is "Place the subject in the recovery position to alleviate positional asphyxia". The testimony I cite indicates that face down and handcuffed with a knee in your neck is not the recovery position.
    • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @12:57AM (2 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @12:57AM (#1134112)

      That's clearly a PowerPoint slide. It should be a crime anyway.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @05:50AM (1 child)

        by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @05:50AM (#1134182)

        Worse. It is a printed off and then scanned in copy of a PowerPoint slide. Just export that thing straight to PDF. It is literally the same amount of clicks.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @02:33PM

          by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @02:33PM (#1134280)

          It is likely not that easy.

          This likely got out for one of two possible reasons:

          1) it is a copy filed in the court (in which case it was filed on paper, and the court does not have the original powerpoint doc to create a pdf for you from)

          2) it was supplied/leaked to the press by someone, and they did so by printing and posting that printout to the press. In this case the press also does not have the original powerpoint to create a pdf from for you.

          3) this has been around and around for years, as paper copies passed around/copied, and no one, anywhere, even in the department that created it, has any idea where the original powerpoint is located anymore, so they simply can't create a pdf from the powerpoint for you.

  • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Tuesday April 06 2021, @06:53PM (5 children)

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday April 06 2021, @06:53PM (#1133965) Homepage Journal

    The prisoner got out of the car through an open door. For whatever crazy reason, both doors to the rear seat were open. The cops finally got George into the back seat, and he right across, and out the open door. One dumbass or another screwed up. But, let's be careful here - we don't want to crucify a man for leaving a door open. That was just a dumb mistake.

    --
    Abortion is the number one killed of children in the United States.
    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @08:39AM (4 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 07 2021, @08:39AM (#1134210)

      Leaving that door open was negligence and the officer responsible should get a reprimand from their supervisor and corrective training.

      • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Wednesday April 07 2021, @06:30PM (1 child)

        by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday April 07 2021, @06:30PM (#1134391) Homepage Journal

        Where, exactly, do you end this sort of nonsense though?

        Let's start with the fact that police (or most of them) are uniformed officers. Have you ever worn a uniform? Ever stood a uniform inspection? The gig line has to be straight, no Irish penants, decorations must be place JUST SO, boots/shoes must be blackened or spit shined, depending on which kind of footwear and regulations, creases are razor sharp, or no creases depending on the specific uniform and your service's guidance, and it goes on and on and on.

        So, you show up before your shift, the inspecting sergeant finds an Irish penant on the back of your shirt. NEGLIGENCE!! COURT MARTIAL!! WHO KNOWS WHAT THE RESULTS OF SUCH NEGLIGENCE MIGHT BE!! SOMEONE COULD DIE!

        The point is, no one is perfect. Someone screwed up and left a door open. He shouldn't be hung for it. Chauvin made the decisions that seem to have resulted in a man's death. "No, we don't need to check his pulse. The EMT's can do that if they get here in time."

        --
        Abortion is the number one killed of children in the United States.
        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 08 2021, @05:46AM

          by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 08 2021, @05:46AM (#1134676)

          What part of my post said that the one who left the door open should be "hung for it"? The one who left the door open let a prisoner (temporarily*) escape custody and I spelled out exactly what corrective action should be taken: Attention drawn to the error and corrective reinforcement. That is the only way people learn from their mistakes.

          *What happened when said prisoner was recaptured is a separate issue.

      • (Score: 1) by khallow on Wednesday April 07 2021, @08:14PM (1 child)

        by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Wednesday April 07 2021, @08:14PM (#1134424) Journal

        Leaving that door open was negligence

        No, making dumb mistakes is not what "negligence" means.

        and the officer responsible should get a reprimand from their supervisor and corrective training.

        Talk about what happened, sure. Document (in case there is a pattern of such mistakes that indicate need for more training), sure. But what's the point of a reprimand for little shit?

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 08 2021, @05:52AM

          by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 08 2021, @05:52AM (#1134679)

          It wasn't just a dumb mistake. He allowed a prisoner to (temporarily*) escape custody, which he had a duty to prevent. That is negligence pure and simple.

          Perhaps my terminology is bit off. I understood that a reprimand is the proper procedure for documenting of misbehaviour and correction, even in relatively minor cases.

          *What happened on recapture is a separate matter and is on Chauvin's head.