Derek Chauvins lead defense attorney Eric Nelson played a video for the court on Monday that appears to show his client was kneeling on George Floyds shoulder not his neck. Black Lives Matter, and the mainstream media journalists that support them, have long claimed that the officer was kneeling on the 46-year-old drug addicts neck.
Nelson asked Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo if he was familiar with the concept of camera perspective bias before playing two different angles of footage from the scene.
The two videos he played were from teenager Darnella Frazier and the police bodycam footage from former Officer Alexander Kueng. In the video recorded by Frazier, the angle makes it appear that the officers knee is on Floyds neck, however, in the body camera footage from the same exact time, you can clearly see that his knee is on the criminals shoulder.
So, at least during some parts of the arrest, it is pretty clear that Chauvin had his knee on his shoulder.
The Post Millennial @TPostMillennial
Derek Chauvin's defense counsel Eric Nelson introduces the concept of "camera perspective bias." Minneapolis Police Chief Arradondo agrees Chauvin's knee looks like it's on Floyd's neck in the bystander video, but appears to be on his "shoulder blade" in the body-cam video.
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Share Tweet Gab Share TelegramTelegram P Share Email Derek Chauvins Defense Plays Video of Him Kneeling On George Floyds ShoulderNot His Neck By Cassandra Fairbanks Published April 6, 2021 at 10:57am 874 Comments Share (464) Tweet Gab Share TelegramTelegram P Share Email Derek Chauvins lead defense attorney Eric Nelson played a video for the court on Monday that appears to show his client was kneeling on George Floyds shoulder not his neck.
Black Lives Matter, and the mainstream media journalists that support them, have long claimed that the officer was kneeling on the 46-year-old drug addicts neck.
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Nelson asked Minneapolis Police Chief Medaria Arradondo if he was familiar with the concept of camera perspective bias before playing two different angles of footage from the scene.
The two videos he played were from teenager Darnella Frazier and the police bodycam footage from former Officer Alexander Kueng. In the video recorded by Frazier, the angle makes it appear that the officers knee is on Floyds neck, however, in the body camera footage from the same exact time, you can clearly see that his knee is on the criminals shoulder. 00:39 01:28
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So, at least during some parts of the arrest, it is pretty clear that Chauvin had his knee on his shoulder.
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Would you agree that from the perspective of Officer Kuengs body camera it appeared Officer Chauvins knee was more on Mr. Floyds shoulder blade? Nelson asked Arradondo.
Yes, Arradondo responded.