Chauvin Found Guilty, Black Communities No Safer

WASHINGTON – In response to the conviction of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd, the Center for Constitutional Rights issued the following statement:

Despite today’s guilty verdict, true justice for George Floyd and the other Black lives snuffed out by police has yet to be done. The key questions are whether Black people are safer from police violence because of this verdict? Can Black communities in Minneapolis, or anywhere in the country, breathe easier in light of this verdict? Will the next Black person confronted by police feel safer? Will they be safer? Would Daunte Wright be alive if this verdict had come a few weeks earlier? The answer is no. 

Derek Chauvin will now serve a penalty for acts deemed exceptional. But his behavior was not exceptional, and treating George Floyd’s murder as a consequence of extraordinary acts neither protects Black people nor captures the unreformable depravity of our system of policing. His murder is the predictable outcome of policing’s origin in slave patrols and the ongoing, constant threat to Black people of arrest, incarceration, violence, and death. Whatever solace comes from Chauvin’s conviction, as a society we must not treat it as justice. Black people will not be safe from police violence until white supremacy itself is on trial, until police forces are defunded and demilitarized, and until resources are reinvested in the health, safety, and thriving of Black communities.

Center for Constitutional Rights Executive Director Vince Warren is available for comment on the verdict. He is a leading expert and a frequent commentator on racial justice and discriminatory policing. Under his leadership, the Center for Constitutional Rights has litigated numerous cases over discriminatory policing and police violence.

This post was originally published on Radio Free.