George Floyd's Murder Case: Former US police officer sentenced to 22.5 years

WASHINGTON: In the most mysterious and sensational murder case of George Floyd, former US police officer Derek Chauvin was sentenced on Friday to 270 months, or 22.5 years in prison. The murder of African American George Floyd took place last year in Minneapolis, Minnesota state.

Chauvin "is the first white officer in Minnesota to face prison time for the killing of a Black man," according to Minnesota Public Radio. "We need to recognise the pain of the Floyd family," Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill said in court.The sentence was not based on emotion or sympathy, the judge noted.

Chauvin, who was found guilty of murdering Floyd by a jury in April, said he declined to give a formal statement in court due to "additional legal matters," but expressed his condolences to the Floyd family. In his earlier ruling, Cahill concluded that Chauvin abused his "position of trust and authority" as a police officer and displayed "particular cruelty" when he knelt on Floyd's neck for over nine minutes during his arrest. Floyd was later pronounced dead at hospital.

Chauvin was convicted of second-degree murder and manslaughter as well as third-degree murder in April. Floyd's death sparked weeks of nationwide protests against police brutality and systemic racism last summer.

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