There was no evidence of strangulation or damage to the tissue around the neck, which leads me to believe he put little to no pressure on the knee that was on his neck. The cop should get at most involuntary manslaughter, in my opinion.
I am not a doctor, but... that sounds very off. And George Floyd did at least once say something like "I can't breathe". And do you have a source for:
There was no evidence of strangulation or damage to the tissue around the neck,
? And is that sufficient to rule out kneeling contributing or being the largest or by itself sufficient cause of death?
Wikipedia writes among other aspects this:
The medical examiner's final findings, issued June 1,[65] classified Floyd's death as a homicide caused by "a cardiopulmonary arrest while being restrained" by officers who had subjected Floyd to "neck compression".[66][67] Other significant conditions were arteriosclerotic heart disease, hypertensive heart disease, fentanyl intoxication, and recent methamphetamine use.[63][66] The report states that on April 3 Floyd had tested positive for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, but does not list it as a fatal or other significant condition.[68][69]
Which describes "neck compression" as seemingly relevant from what I can tell. Though, that paragraph might be wrong.
From just looking at the reports and seeing everything else that was wrong with him at the time (4x the lethal dose of fentanyl (that alone is enough to kill someone) and methamphetamine, his heart condition, and the China virus), I'd say it's unlikely the kneeling was the largest contributing factor to his death. The guy was basically a dead man walking that day.
There was no evidence of strangulation or damage to the tissue around the neck, which leads me to believe he put little to no pressure on the knee that was on his neck. The cop should get at most involuntary manslaughter, in my opinion.
I am not a doctor, but... that sounds very off. And George Floyd did at least once say something like "I can't breathe". And do you have a source for:
? And is that sufficient to rule out kneeling contributing or being the largest or by itself sufficient cause of death?
Wikipedia writes among other aspects this:
Which describes "neck compression" as seemingly relevant from what I can tell. Though, that paragraph might be wrong.
He said he couldn’t breathe while standing up as well.
Neck compression just means he put some pressure on his neck. If you read the actual autopsy, there was no damage to the neck muscle, no bruising.
He didn’t show signs of asphyxiation or suffocation, so his airway wasn’t blocked.
Given that info, there’s no way the knee contributed to his death, other than by adding to his stress at the time.
I am not a doctor, but that... sounds very off, I must admit.
Right here.
https://thedonald.win/p/FzFxLEL3/x/c/12ih0PezXr
Thank you, though, as far as I can tell, that does not quite answer fully the second question I had:
From just looking at the reports and seeing everything else that was wrong with him at the time (4x the lethal dose of fentanyl (that alone is enough to kill someone) and methamphetamine, his heart condition, and the China virus), I'd say it's unlikely the kneeling was the largest contributing factor to his death. The guy was basically a dead man walking that day.