NEW Info FREES Chauvin?! Breakdown Of Appeal w⧸@Legal Mindset(UNBIASED)
Episode Stats
Length
2 hours and 20 minutes
Words per Minute
208.41798
Summary
On this episode of Fed It, Myself and Andrew Esquire break down the Daunte Wright-Chauvin Appeal. This is a case that has divided the country and divided the law enforcement community for a long time.
Transcript
00:00:00.180
All right, and we are live. What's up, guys? Welcome to Fed It. I'm joined by this white guy, a.k.a. I'm just kidding.
00:00:06.140
Shout out to Andrew Esquire, man, a.k.a. Legal Mindset in the House. Guys, we got a great show planned for y'all.
00:00:10.500
We're going to break down the Chauvin' Appeal, man. This is going to be a good one, guys. Let's get into it.
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Okay, guys, I used to be a special agent while I'm launching your investigations.
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This is the arrest paperwork, okay? So here is the booking.
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Cases that I did mostly were human smuggling and drug trafficking.
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Those are like two crimes that I'm a very good agent, very strong agent.
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I did a lot of big cases. I've done Title III intercepts, which is basically listening to phones.
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I've written hundreds of affidavits to arrest people.
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I've been a grand jury and testified a million times. I've done big cases.
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I've done. All right, what's up, guys? Welcome to Fed It.
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I'm here with my boy, Andrew Esquire, a.k.a. Legal Mindset Man.
00:01:01.240
So, Andrew, can you introduce yourself to the people, man?
00:01:02.800
You're the special guest. I'm so happy to have you here.
00:01:04.540
Sure. Thank you, guys. I'm a long time from a Myron.
00:01:11.040
I'm in South Korea most of the time, most of the year.
00:01:17.760
So I have a lot of experience dealing with cases, especially appeals.
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I worked on, I was on moot court when I was in law school, and I've reviewed lots of different appeals.
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So this is an appellate case today we're going to be looking at, which is going to be really exciting for me.
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I'm a member of what people refer to as LawTube, the lawyers on YouTube.
00:01:45.740
But I am the only red pill attorney, the only one who's really living that life.
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Every take I've had on Chauvin is going to be extremely controversial because this is a heated topic.
00:02:01.220
But you guys just have to understand, let's remove the emotions from this, and we're going to do a legal analysis.
00:02:07.800
I'm going to give you my point of view as a lawyer.
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Myron has his point of view as a law enforcement officer.
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So together, we're going to analyze this and say, hey, what looks right?
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Hey, this could be something that makes him walk or no, this isn't that strong of an argument.
00:02:28.840
We got Chris because obviously today is a very important show, man.
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And, yeah, guys, Andrew is going to be going back.
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And, you know, we've been meaning to do this for you guys for a bit.
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I like I knew the one to punch between, you know, my background, his background would be really exciting for you guys.
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And I know that this is going to be controversial.
00:02:49.120
Myron, though, Myron, you don't like controversial.
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You always run away from controversial topics, right?
00:02:54.600
Yeah, you're known for never tackling controversy.
00:02:56.800
Yeah, as we're trending all over the world right now for being assholes, shout out to the Australian interview.
00:03:04.820
But, no, all jokes aside, guys, as you guys know, this case is extremely – it's very sensitive.
00:03:17.560
It happened right in the middle of the pandemic.
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It destroyed the city of Minneapolis, which it still hasn't recovered.
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And not just Minneapolis because, like, the BLM riots that came from that led to so much else.
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And even during the trial, we're going to talk about this.
00:03:33.920
You had the Daunte Wright-Kim Potter situation happen during the trial of Derek Chauvin.
00:03:39.680
And then you had, of course, the riots in Kenosha, which led to the Rittenhouse situation.
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Like, it's not – this one incident, this one incident sparked so much.
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Now that you mention it like that, yeah, Rittenhouse would not have happened if it was not for George Floyd.
00:04:01.880
So that's why it's interesting that we go back to this.
00:04:04.180
We revisit this on appeal because we knew this was going to be appealed.
00:04:07.340
And we say, hey, what is a good grounds to get out and what's a bad grounds?
00:04:13.260
We're going to look at mistakes that the prosecution made because whenever you bring a case as a prosecutor –
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and Myron's been on the side of law enforcement.
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Because me and Andrew both looked through this appeal, and there was a lot of fuck-ups, guys.
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We're going to go over it, and we have a couple points that we're going to cover.
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So first, let me hit these super chats real quick if there are any, and then we're going to get into it.
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We're going to give you guys the basic background on the case on what happened as far as –
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because we're going to need to refresh your guys' memories.
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This case happened, what, almost two years ago now at this point, right?
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It's going to be a year here in a couple of days.
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If you guys aren't subscribed to Legal Mindset, subscribe to that YouTube channel, man.
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Before everything, before he was famous, before all this went down, before the controversy.
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He was with me when I was working with Uncle Sam.
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Yes, you guys are going to get a perspective from two people, right, that actually know this type of stuff.
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We're going to take our emotions out of it, how we personally feel.
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We're going to give you guys just the facts, okay?
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You got to understand, this is a legal analysis.
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This is just looking at it from the standpoint of law enforcement and from the standpoint of a lawyer, right?
00:06:04.440
We're not doing this for a political thing, left, right, although we're going to call out, we're definitely going to call out points that the prosecution, the state, when they made it political.
00:06:14.300
You know, they went out of their way to make it political, and that's not a good thing.
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So, like I said, I want you guys to watch this with an unbiased mind.
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We're going to break this down objectively, okay?
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So let's pull up the first video, Chris, please, where we're going to give you guys a quick little three-minute breakdown of what happened in this case.
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So you guys kind of get a perspective and refresh your memory on the facts of the case.
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It should be the first – it should be, like, a three-minute YouTube video, Chris.
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We're making sure that we don't give you all that static, goddammit.
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So it's good to get a recap of the event because it has been a while.
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Now, we're not going to watch the whole nine-minute incident, but this is just a general breakdown in the incident because a general overview.
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This is prime legal commentary and law enforcement commentary.
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By the way, Legal Mindset has a perfect voice for a cartoon character like on Family Guy.
00:07:37.420
on May 25th, and the security cameras of this local restaurant are rolling.
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A blue Mercedes has been parked curbside on East 38th Street for several minutes.
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We do not have footage showing when it arrived.
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A police car pulls up in front of this local convenience store, and two officers walk in.
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Minneapolis police said in the statement their officers responded to a report of a forgery in progress,
00:08:12.400
meaning someone was trying to use counterfeit money in a store.
00:08:16.240
A few minutes later, the officers crossed the street and approached the vehicle.
00:08:20.900
So, guys, just so you guys know, you know, using counterfeit money is a federal offense.
00:08:24.420
That's something that the Secret Service investigates.
00:08:26.500
But any time, and as you guys know, like, in 2020, there was a big uprise in scamming,
00:08:32.280
fakes, checks, and everything else like that that was going on.
00:08:34.780
So, normally, would the police respond for something like this?
00:08:38.560
But with everything going on, I'm not surprised that they pulled up.
00:08:47.660
The police said they found the suspect in his car.
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The first officer approaches the driver while his partner walks around to the passenger side.
00:08:56.900
The interaction between the officer and Floyd can't clearly be seen from this angle.
00:09:02.440
But the driver of this black vehicle filmed part of it on his phone.
00:09:06.360
The officer struggles to get Floyd out of the car.
00:09:09.340
His colleague walks over to help him put the handcuffs on.
00:09:12.580
The black car pulls away and drives off after a few minutes.
00:09:20.520
So, anytime you go hands-on, guys, I'll tell you this from a law enforcement perspective.
00:09:23.920
Like, you're automatically, it's elevating the situation.
00:09:26.800
You know, when someone, you're giving them verbal commands, they're not listening to you.
00:09:30.240
It's very obvious that he's on something, you know, which is, you know, problematic because if they're on something, you know, typically it heightens the situation where they're going to be stronger.
00:09:42.900
They're going to have less apprehension to do stupid shit.
00:09:45.160
So, it's a little bit of a dangerous situation because you don't necessarily know how they're going to react when you're going hands-on.
00:09:50.020
And when you're a street cop like these guys, you don't know what you're going to run into.
00:09:53.080
You know, fortunately for me, you know, coming from the feds, you know what you were dealing with.
00:09:56.300
But when you're on the street like this and you're showing up to calls, you don't know who you're dealing with a lot of the times.
00:10:00.720
And there's, we're going to get into this when we get into the appeal itself, but there's testimony from a passenger in that car that George Floyd was high.
00:10:11.840
And we're also going to pull up the death certificate.
00:10:14.860
So, I mean, that's at this point a non-controversial fact of this scenario.
00:10:20.720
The officer lifts him back up before leading him towards the sidewalk where he directs Floyd to sit on the ground.
00:10:35.700
Redacted body cam footage from that new officer was released by the park police chief.
00:10:40.520
The officer exits the car to see his two colleagues questioning Floyd and two people who were just in the car.
00:10:54.060
So, I think it's important to note that this, we have two different agencies on scene here, guys.
00:10:57.780
We got Minneapolis Park Police and then we got the Minneapolis City Police.
00:11:01.780
So, and that's why they're saying it's redacted because, well, park police probably wanted to try to get, not be involved in this as much as they can.
00:11:11.120
And because the city actually settled with the estate of George Floyd.
00:11:15.100
So, the park police probably were like, yeah, we don't want to have to settle too.
00:11:18.340
We don't want to be part of this, literally, civil liability.
00:11:22.440
So, they just want to make this very clear to you that there's two different police agencies here at work, which I didn't even realize that Minneapolis has their own park police.
00:11:36.080
The video has no sound, so we don't know what was said between the two officers and Floyd in this moment.
00:11:42.800
They walk him across the street back towards their squad car.
00:11:51.800
Police originally said they noticed Floyd going into medical distress and called an ambulance to the scene.
00:11:59.300
Another police car pulls up, obstructing our view from this angle and making it hard to clearly see what unfolded in the next four minutes between the officers and Floyd.
00:12:10.020
We do see Officer Chauvin pull up to the scene with his colleague.
00:12:15.800
And behind the vehicle's open door, we can make out what seems to be a struggle.
00:12:20.320
Whatever was happening between Floyd and the officers at that very moment caught the attention of this passerby who stops to watch.
00:12:36.400
Yeah, because I've noticed that sometimes with certain videos, like with the playback, like you'll get this minor static guy.
00:12:46.300
A witness standing on Chicago Avenue captures part of the scene unfolding behind the squad car.
00:12:52.180
One officer looks over as three of his colleagues restrain Floyd, who is lying face down on the ground in handcuffs.
00:12:59.020
We don't know how Floyd ended up on the ground.
00:13:02.860
One officer is pressing his knee into Floyd's neck, which we see clearly in.
00:13:08.100
Yeah, and then you can see we can play a little bit longer.
00:13:10.580
And then you can see, obviously, taken only seconds later by another witness standing in front of the grocery store.
00:13:16.280
She captured the next 10 minutes of his deadly arrest up until he is taken away in an ambulance.
00:13:22.640
OK, so, guys, I see in the chat some of you guys are saying, like, again, guys, we're not saying that he's innocent.
00:13:28.560
What we are saying is that the prosecution made some serious mistakes in the prosecution and it could potentially have him walking.
00:13:35.160
So I need you guys to, you know, take two seconds real quick.
00:13:39.520
Understand that we're going to break down the case from an objective standpoint.
00:13:42.780
We're simply saying that the prosecution made some serious mistakes in the case.
00:13:46.660
We're going to read the appeal, which actually has some serious merit to it.
00:13:49.380
Yeah, if anything, if anything, guys, what we're saying is, is that the prosecution and many of these cases where people should be guilty.
00:13:57.660
The state fucks up by bringing the wrong charges.
00:14:10.720
The whole thing is the whole situation is the state oftentimes tries to go for more.
00:14:18.600
They try to go for these extreme charges when they really shouldn't.
00:14:23.360
He may walk because solely because they brought the wrong charges.
00:14:28.240
The thing about an appeal is the defense only has to win on one point.
00:14:32.400
If they can prove one point, one single point, he has to walk.
00:14:39.120
That's what we're trying to tell you guys is that it's not that we're saying he's innocent.
00:14:44.600
But what I am saying is that the prosecution made some serious fucking mistakes on this thing.
00:14:50.720
And you guys are going to see when we read this appeal.
00:14:52.120
So, if anything, you guys need to know what happened.
00:15:12.280
In the United States, we have something called due process.
00:15:17.080
So, this is something that helped us during the pandemic.
00:15:19.080
That we have a constitution, and y'all that are abroad do not have a constitution.
00:15:25.700
You guys were totally locked up when a lot of us were free because a lot of these restrictions
00:15:30.300
in the U.S. were thrown out as unconstitutional.
00:15:33.060
We just had the mass mandate on planes thrown out as something that's unconstitutional because,
00:15:39.780
And because we have a constitution in Canada, your constitution is optional.
00:15:43.820
Trudeau can suspend it whenever he feels like it.
00:15:45.960
Australia doesn't really have an enforceable constitution.
00:15:49.940
All these countries we saw during the pandemic not have a constitution.
00:15:53.600
So, in the U.S., for this case, the particular two amendments we're going to look at are related
00:16:00.640
to due process, and that's the Sixth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment.
00:16:05.340
So, Chris, can you bring up the Sixth Amendment tab?
00:16:18.000
In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a speedy and public trial.
00:16:25.420
So, you have a right to have a trial that doesn't take 10 years to go to trial because otherwise you're locked up for 10 years.
00:16:32.000
And whether or not you're guilty, you're in jail.
00:16:43.140
That does not mean that the jury already comes in and be like, this guy's guilty.
00:16:47.500
If they come in like that, they can't sit on the jury.
00:16:55.900
Of the state and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, which district shall have been properly asserted by law,
00:17:01.580
and to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation, to be confronted with the witnesses against him,
00:17:07.940
to have the compulsory process for obtaining witnesses in his favor, and to the assistance of counsel for his defense.
00:17:14.380
So, those are all the protections you get in the courtroom.
00:17:19.460
Guys, and the big thing I want you guys to really take away from this is trial by an impartial jury of the state, man.
00:17:27.500
That is so important because you can't go in there with a jury that basically is already like, no, he's guilty.
00:17:33.000
Well, what the hell's the point of having a court?
00:17:35.500
What the hell's the point of having a trial if they're going to make you guilty?
00:17:40.020
And then also being able to confront your accusers.
00:17:44.480
So, this one, this Sixth Amendment, was originally interpreted to only apply to the federal government.
00:17:50.380
But then you had the 14th Amendment, and we jump over to that one, Chris.
00:17:56.320
And the 14th Amendment, through actually case law related to racial restrictions, right?
00:18:05.140
A lot of the racial prohibitions in the South were banned by use of the 14th Amendment, which includes a due process clause.
00:18:13.460
So, I'm going to read this whole thing, but there's one specific part that you should pay attention to.
00:18:18.800
So, all persons born and naturalized in the U.S. and subject to the jurisdiction thereof, it's right there, are citizens of the U.S. and of the state where they reside.
00:18:28.340
No state shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States, nor shall any state deprive any person, right here, of life, liberty, or property without due process of law.
00:18:48.800
That's the important part right there for us right now.
00:18:51.700
You, a criminal case, is the ultimate deprivation of life, liberty, and property.
00:19:05.100
And in order to do that, in order to take that ultimate liberty from you, they've got to give you due process of law.
00:19:09.940
And due process of law means a lot of things, but essentially it's all the elements that come together to make a fair trial.
00:19:21.340
It is so important that if this is violated, right, if these amendments are violated, someone that's guilty will walk.
00:19:31.880
That when the prosecution prosecutes a case, if they fuck up and they infringe on someone's rights, even if the person is guilty, like in this case, the guy will walk.
00:19:41.920
Because the importance of upholding the law outweighs prosecuting a single individual.
00:19:48.300
Because the way the government looks at it here in the United States, guys, is it's better to let a criminal walk than to let someone rot in jail that's innocent.
00:19:58.800
So they're going to uphold the law, even if it means letting people walk.
00:20:02.140
And this is what happens when, you know, a lot of the times, I hate to say it like this, but DAs, the state court in general, fucking kangaroo courts.
00:20:18.860
And this is why federal, guys, you want to know why federal courtrooms are not allowed to be taped?
00:20:23.220
Because they don't want to turn it into a kangaroo court where they're doing shit for the most to get some, to get some publicity, whatever it is.
00:20:29.060
Nobody can bring in their phones in the federal court.
00:20:30.800
So, I mean, you know, can you imagine if people were live streaming from federal, I mean, it just creates such an issue.
00:20:35.920
You even saw in the Johnny Depp court, in the Johnny Depp Amber Heard trial, you had somebody get kicked out of the courtroom because of her behavior.
00:20:46.220
And people were seeing it and the jury was like hearing about it like third hand.
00:20:55.940
It was like TVs, you know, cameras everywhere, whatever.
00:20:58.560
The state becomes more involved in like punishing the guy for like public appeal appreciation.
00:21:03.960
Then like charging the right things, you know, prosecuting the case the correct way.
00:21:07.720
And it sucks because it's like they got the cameras on.
00:21:10.000
I'm like, oh, we got to get this guy for murder one.
00:21:11.880
And then, you know, they try to cash a check that they can't full that they can't fulfill.
00:21:16.020
And then, bam, people walk free like O.J. Simpson.
00:21:20.120
This is something that should apply to everybody.
00:21:21.680
No matter what the crime is, no matter what you do, you're allowed to get due process of law.
00:21:25.280
You're allowed to get all these same protections.
00:21:29.460
People get so in their feelings about this case.
00:21:44.800
So, OK, so let's get into the facts of this bad boy.
00:21:47.300
So now that we established the Sixth Amendment, 14th Amendment, and we have the general facts of the case that, you know, Floyd was, you know, encountered by police and everything else like that.
00:22:04.300
If you want to scroll up to the top just so you see the two names, like this is just the formatting here.
00:22:08.540
So, yeah, state of Minnesota versus Derek Michael Chauvin.
00:22:12.320
So in this case, I'm going to show you the structure.
00:22:18.840
So at this level, he's already presumed to be guilty.
00:22:21.640
So the person who has to challenge it is the appellant.
00:22:24.740
So the challenger, the guy who's got to say, hey, the court got it wrong.
00:22:29.020
So in this case, Chauvin is the appellant because he's guilty.
00:22:36.600
And they have to interpret this in a light favorable to the appellant.
00:22:42.000
So when they're reviewing it, they're saying, OK, let's assume that let's look at this in a light.
00:22:47.980
Essentially, let's look at this as if the legal arguments had had some level of merit, not as if they're merit.
00:22:57.720
We'll see the we'll see the actual ways they're challenging this.
00:23:03.560
We can scroll past this and we'll scroll past that.
00:23:15.480
We're not going to go through all the issues presented.
00:23:17.480
OK, so here are all the issues that are challenging on.
00:23:22.880
This is this is why appeals are so, you know, controversial because one issue is enough.
00:23:30.040
Whether venue should have been changed, the jury fully sequestered or the trial delayed due to pretrial publicity and riots.
00:23:45.040
So a lot of times if it's too hot, if it's too controversial in a city, they can bring it to another city in the state.
00:24:03.820
And hey, it still might not be totally impartial, but it's better.
00:24:15.100
Now, this is one where I'll just say it right now.
00:24:18.300
I don't think the sequestering argument is a strong argument in 2022 because because they probably wouldn't take their phones away.
00:24:26.680
See, to really make sequestering work, you got to take the phones away.
00:24:34.640
They ran into the issue with the Glenn Maxwell case.
00:24:40.880
He lied on his questions that he had never been a victim of sexual abuse.
00:24:44.880
And then he went and like talked about the entire trial on Twitter and he did an interview and all this other shit.
00:24:51.620
And like it's like they're probably going to go after him for perjury for lying.
00:25:01.420
That's a bad argument in 2022, but it's the defense's job to throw out as much as they can.
00:25:10.520
That's what this fence got to do is they got to go in.
00:25:12.620
Guys, remember, all they need is one thing to stick.
00:25:14.780
That's what I'm trying to present to you guys here.
00:25:19.560
And when you guys see all the errors that the prosecution made, then you guys are going to see where we're coming from here.
00:25:28.280
We're saying the prosecution did not cross their T's and dot their goddamn eyes.
00:25:35.640
There's a lot of issues with how the prosecution did this case.
00:25:39.660
And if he walks, you guys are going to know why.
00:25:42.460
He only needs one of these things, guys, to make it stick.
00:25:45.240
And when we go through this, you guys are going to see what I'm talking about.
00:25:53.440
Oh, by the way, the last one there, if you want to scroll up real quick, because I want to read the last part there.
00:25:57.460
That first one, the trial delayed due to pre-trial publicity and riots.
00:26:03.080
We're going to show you guys the video and some of the pictures.
00:26:07.300
But if you remember, there were riots going on during the trial.
00:26:13.800
Do you guys remember Dante Wright and Kim Potter?
00:26:15.880
That's the cop who shot Dante Wright when she thought she was going for a taser.
00:26:20.760
Like, she clearly thought she had a taser and she shot accidentally Dante Wright.
00:26:36.220
The same guys who would tell the girls on FNF to get out their feelings or on their feelings right now.
00:26:39.920
Listen to the law and get out of your feelings, Chad.
00:26:43.140
I mean, if this is too tough for you guys to watch, then you guys don't have to watch it, man.
00:26:46.480
I'm just telling y'all that this is there might be the charges might get dropped here, man.
00:26:54.060
Or he might walk because, guys, the prosecution did a sloppy job.
00:27:01.020
Oh, and then Hero Dapper, 2 Box Myron Gaines, you have an identity problem.
00:27:07.340
Jaymont24, autopsy report said George had high oxygen levels in his blood when he died and also had a lethal dose of fentanyl on his system.
00:27:14.620
This proves the knee on the neck did not kill Floyd.
00:27:17.860
And we're going to show you guys the autopsy report here soon.
00:27:25.720
OK, number two, whether a police officer can be charged with felony murder with assault as a predicate defense.
00:27:30.600
OK, this is some complicated legal shit, right?
00:27:36.100
We're going to break this down for you, but let me just put it this way.
00:27:38.320
So, felony murder, felony murder occurs when a murder, a death occurs while a separate, keyword separate crime is being committed.
00:27:54.280
What's a classic case as law enforcement where you've seen felony murder charged?
00:28:12.960
So, you pull up to the bank, and you've got guns.
00:28:18.260
And all of a sudden, the cops, they start shooting.
00:28:31.280
That's something you could see happening if you rob a bank.
00:28:33.940
It's something that naturally follows from that.
00:28:35.640
So, even if you didn't intend to kill that person, let's say you didn't actually, like, intentionally shoot them.
00:28:43.020
Let's say the cops are shooting at you, and they accidentally friendly fire each other.
00:28:51.060
Because if you had you not robbed that bank, that death would not have happened.
00:29:02.480
And state law in the state of a state versus Dorne says you cannot do what they did in this case with how they charged it.
00:29:11.180
You cannot use assault, the underlying assault, to justify calling stuff felony murder.
00:29:18.220
That would essentially make any assault where there's a death, a murder.
00:29:23.480
They would pretty much, you'd pretty much get away, get rid of manslaughter, right?
00:29:26.760
Manslaughter as a charge doesn't exist anymore.
00:29:29.220
If this is legal precedent, by the way, this is, like, horrible legal precedent.
00:29:34.300
If this is allowed, there's no more manslaughter.
00:29:37.820
Every single crime is felony murder because there's always an assault.
00:29:40.380
If you can get somebody for manslaughter, you can get them for assault.
00:29:44.720
So if you can get back from it, it's a lesser offense.
00:29:48.480
So that means you can get them for felony murder.
00:29:51.200
You can't use the underlying, the minor crime to get the major crime.
00:29:58.800
There's something called mens rea to have murder.
00:30:02.620
Can you tell guys, can you tell the people what mens rea is?
00:30:07.200
That's why first degree murder, we say cold-blooded murder.
00:30:14.020
These guys couldn't prove that Chauvin intended to murder George Floyd.
00:30:20.420
That he had the state of mind to murder George Floyd.
00:30:28.760
And this is a problem with the left and the AG in Minnesota.
00:30:35.360
Which actually hurts their case when they do that, guys.
00:30:37.360
They could have convicted him clearly on manslaughter.
00:30:50.160
We're going to talk about aggravating the sentencing later.
00:31:02.240
And this is entirely a mistake on the prosecution.
00:31:04.780
And if it gets thrown out because of this, that is a prosecutorial fuck-up.
00:31:13.920
You know, if they had just charged it manslaughter, he would have pled.
00:31:18.860
But, obviously, this was an emotionally charged case.
00:31:29.240
And just so you guys understand, like, Andrew's making this very clear.
00:31:32.260
You cannot use assault as a prerequisite, right, for a felony murder.
00:31:38.400
Like we said before, it has to be foreseeable that that murder would occur during the commission of that crime.
00:31:43.020
So bank robbery, burglary, maybe a, you know, some other kind of violent crime.
00:31:53.420
Like that would be – these are all crimes where a murder would be foreseeable because it's violent in itself.
00:32:02.940
But something like this, assault, you know, because it's an ambiguous – it's a fairly ambiguous charge, you know, assault.
00:32:10.880
Assault can be – literally you touching someone can be deemed as assault in some places.
00:32:26.120
Let me give a great example because this is the actual case, State v. Dorn.
00:32:32.820
And they're messing around by a bonfire, right?
00:32:55.340
They can't say – if he just pushes him, the crime was pushing him, right?
00:33:01.240
But he didn't intend for him to die in the fire.
00:33:03.780
Like, to stumble drunkenly into the fire, catch on fire, and die.
00:33:12.140
It would almost be like if a drunk hoe was on the balcony and they'd get nudged, right?
00:33:16.020
You're not intending for them to, like, stumble over and fall, you know, 80 floors down into the, you know, Biscayne Bay.
00:33:25.120
So, once again, it would make manslaughter irrelevant.
00:33:28.340
That's why they've got to not do this or get around this.
00:33:32.720
And just so you guys know, because I know some people might want to try to challenge that, understand, guys, the precedent for this is called State vs. Thorne, okay?
00:33:40.500
Which basically set the case law precedent that you cannot, assault is not a prerequisite for felony murder.
00:33:46.860
So, that in itself was a fuck-up that they used assault to justify a felony murder.
00:33:55.600
Speaking of Maxwell slash Epstein-like cases, was curious if you would be willing to cover the Franklin Credit Union scandal that happened in the late 80s.
00:34:14.640
So, we got a venue situation with the jurors, and then we got the issue with assault murder, which is the charge, what they came at him for.
00:34:23.980
Okay, so there's something called cumulative evidence, i.e., at a certain point, you're dogpiling.
00:34:30.080
In this case, they had so many witnesses come in to testify for use of force.
00:34:35.840
Now, each witness was supposed to come in to testify about something slightly different or something different.
00:34:41.200
That's how they managed to, like, let this happen.
00:34:48.980
In cases, you're not supposed to get into what is called a battle of witnesses.
00:34:52.680
You're not supposed to get into, okay, I have 19 witnesses saying this, and you have 19, and, you know, make it last all day, all night.
00:34:58.840
Well, in the Chauvin case, this is a rare situation where they did not just allow it, but they allowed a ridiculous amount of witnesses to testify at the same thing.
00:35:07.120
And we're going to show you when we scroll down and get into the facts here.
00:35:09.860
There's a graphic that – we'll do it later, Chris.
00:35:12.280
Where it shows they actually used in their closing argument the fact that they had multiple witnesses as proof – like, as conclusive proof that it was unreasonable force.
00:35:23.340
What should have happened is they get one witness to testify about use of force.
00:35:29.080
Maybe if they get two, well, the defense can get two now, right?
00:35:32.900
A subject matter expert on this is what you would want.
00:35:35.620
But, yeah, that's also strange that they did that.
00:35:39.620
That they had a million people come in on use of force.
00:35:42.040
Now, if it was something different, like, for example, if it was a ballistics guy or whatever – and this wasn't a ballistics case, but whatever.
00:35:47.560
You know, if this is some other sort of expert, that's fine.
00:36:00.460
They control – the prosecutors completely control how many witnesses they called.
00:36:06.220
They could have brought in two, and it would have been fine.
00:36:13.820
Whether prosecutorial misconduct justifies reversal – okay, we'll talk about it when we get to it.
00:36:17.640
But the issue here is that – the issue here for prosecutorial misconduct is that they presented discovery late.
00:36:24.960
So discovery is when you give documents to the other side.
00:36:29.620
Let's say Myron's law enforcement and I'm the defense.
00:36:34.780
I got to give him anything that my client has or anything that's in my possession.
00:36:45.800
Well, not only did the prosecution fail to do that, but they gave a lot of it, the majority of evidence in some cases, after the deadline and some of it even during the trial, which is insane.
00:36:57.560
Let me explain how much – let me tell you guys something.
00:37:03.360
If you don't hand over discovery, you can get disbarred for that shit.
00:37:08.000
I don't think – I need you guys to really understand.
00:37:15.120
If I arrest someone, right, and we indict him, after he's been indicted, I have to get that discovery over 9 out of 10 times.
00:37:23.720
The AUSA is not going to indict until they have all the evidence anyway, 9 out of 10 times at the federal level.
00:37:28.420
And then if I do have to give some stuff, they're not going to wait more than two weeks.
00:37:34.380
The fact that they didn't hand over – and, guys, discovery is essentially me as a law enforcement officer giving all the evidence over to my prosecutor.
00:37:42.700
And then that prosecutor shares that with the defense counsel.
00:37:45.440
The defense counsel has to have everything that is going to be used against their client.
00:37:52.920
I mean, it's to the point where if I – this is why I tell you all the time.
00:37:56.380
Remember how I tell you guys classified information is useless in the court of law?
00:38:01.740
So if I can't – if it's not – if it's classified, I can't give it to the prosecutor because the prosecutor can't give it to the defense counsel.
00:38:09.280
So this is why I tell you guys all the time, classified information is fucking useless.
00:38:13.420
However, it's happened before when the FBI has done this shit.
00:38:15.840
They have used classified information, and during the course of investigation, they're like, oh, fuck?
00:38:25.180
They have to declassify it and give it over to the defense counsel.
00:38:27.700
That's how fucking important discovery is, guys.
00:38:33.780
They will declassify documents to give it over to the defense counsel or drop the case.
00:38:39.300
When you got a terrorist in custody and you got some classified information, what are you going to do?
00:38:42.660
You're going to go fucking to the FBI headquarters?
00:38:46.020
You're going to hand it over to the fucking defense counsel.
00:38:49.880
They will declassify documents for a case if it's important enough to go ahead and get the prosecution, man.
00:38:57.220
If you do not hand over discovery, you will get disbarred.
00:39:01.860
You can literally – it is a serious, serious issue.
00:39:05.460
So the fact that they were handing over documents in the middle of trial?
00:39:10.620
From a legal standpoint, from a lawyer's standpoint, that is, like, insane.
00:39:18.820
Why did the prosecutors – guys, if this gets overturned, blame the prosecutors.
00:39:32.320
And, again, like I said before, guys, for some of you guys that are just joining, real quick little summary of what's going on.
00:39:37.260
And, by the way, they had – this is a real quick summary, though.
00:39:48.680
I think even more than 13 because they were rotating in and out, right?
00:39:52.540
They had an insane tag team of attorneys on this case throughout the course, not just during the actual trial, but doing the research to back this up.
00:40:01.080
This was a case that had unlimited funding from the state.
00:40:03.500
So, they had no excuse to be making these amateur hour mistakes.
00:40:07.440
So, a quick little summary for some of you guys that are wondering.
00:40:12.120
Got my boy, Andrew Esquire, from Legal Mindset.
00:40:16.640
For some of you guys that know, obviously, Derek Chauvin, police officer, former for Minneapolis Police Department,
00:40:20.920
was charged and convicted of felony murder for the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis that read to the riots and everything else like that.
00:40:31.340
We're going to be breaking down the appeal, okay, that Chauvin's defense filed recently, okay, to go ahead and get the charge pretty much dropped and he can walk.
00:40:42.900
And the thing we're breaking down, guys, is all the mistakes that the prosecution made during the course of this case.
00:40:48.400
So far, we've already identified three or four, which are major ones.
00:40:51.800
First, venue, right, venue issues, as far as, like, them not moving the trial to somewhere where it can be a little bit less biased, where the riots weren't occurring, okay?
00:41:02.620
They're using assault as a prerequisite for murder, guys, which is not, according to State v. Dorne, that is not, you can't do that.
00:41:10.980
You can only do felony murder when there's a crime being committed where it's foreseeable that murder will happen, not assault, but, like, let's say a robbery or a grape or a burglary, something like that, right?
00:41:20.400
And then third, we have a discovery issue, which I just explained to you guys the importance of discovery in the legal proceedings.
00:41:26.040
Nothing can happen without discovery, because you guys got to understand, the Defense Council is defending against everything that the prosecution is giving them during discovery.
00:41:35.680
In other words, the defense is formulating their entire case based on what the prosecution gives them.
00:41:41.820
So if the prosecution does not give them discovery with ample time to prepare, that's a big fucking issue.
00:41:47.680
And I just told you guys before, I've had AUSAs drop cases.
00:41:53.700
But, of course, it's a state case, so I'm not surprised that they did a big blunder like that.
00:41:57.140
But, guys, we've only covered three things that are major fuck-ups, and we have some serious issues here.
00:42:06.600
However, the fact that he may walk because of these stupid mistakes made by the state, when I didn't even know they had 13 attorneys.
00:42:21.740
Like the state, that attorney general would have given unlimited funding to this.
00:42:26.520
They would have funded anything regarding this.
00:42:28.220
And yet they're making amateur and literally amateur mistakes.
00:42:31.600
This is stuff that a law student knows not to make these mistakes.
00:42:35.140
But they went there because they felt like they had to go extra.
00:42:40.620
When you start to get in your feelings, you lose your objectivity.
00:42:44.700
And that's what we're trying to tell you guys on this.
00:42:46.080
You got to stay objective because sometimes you drop the ball.
00:43:08.300
What I honestly think was they were mostly charged.
00:43:11.020
They try to throw the book at them and, uh, they, they bit off a little bit more than they
00:43:15.080
And I think they definitely, uh, curb to the mob today curve to the riots.
00:43:19.540
Uh, I think that we're going to get into this cause we're going to show you the evidence
00:43:24.600
So rather the appeal points, we're going to show you some of the videos, some of the pictures.
00:43:28.500
Um, it, remember this was so charged and I think because it was charged, they messed
00:43:36.200
They could have gotten him like clean under manslaughter easily.
00:43:40.320
We already see a huge, that, that state versus Doran issue is already a huge one.
00:43:44.720
They, that's a, that's a legal mess up and that is a hundred percent in the process.
00:43:54.320
Whether, uh, whether not having show, not allowing Chauvin to present a complete defense
00:43:59.480
So this is the part where we get into a testimony about George Floyd being high.
00:44:07.400
I don't think this is that strong because it, yes, it should have been allowed in.
00:44:11.280
Um, there was somebody else in the car and they testified that George Floyd, uh, had been,
00:44:16.300
um, I believe he was on fentanyl and have been drinking as well.
00:44:21.820
Uh, however, um, it's not as strong because number one, the guy was allowed to plead the fifth.
00:44:27.300
They're saying, okay, well then law enforcement should be able to disclose because that was
00:44:36.820
And also because we have it in the death certificate, which we're going to pull up.
00:44:42.000
There's other evidence that shows that he was intoxicated at the time.
00:44:44.920
Uh, it just would have been better coming from somebody who was on scene and telling the
00:44:53.840
Uh, it's not like they didn't know, like they knew at the moment that he was, uh, intoxicated.
00:45:00.480
Next, whether failure to record sidebars resulted in a violation.
00:45:06.080
So, but I'm going to tell you what a sidebar is week from the defense is week.
00:45:10.940
We're telling you where they're fucking up with it and where they're winning with this.
00:45:15.660
So a sidebar is when they meet with the judge, you do not necessarily need to record
00:45:20.200
So there's, there's something that says that you need to keep a complete and total record
00:45:26.980
So it needs to be total transcriptions and they didn't record the sidebar.
00:45:30.920
So what they're saying is we don't have the sidebars to enter into evidence for the
00:45:40.880
Uh, definitely on a trial like this, they're not going to overturn it for something as weak
00:45:48.500
And a sidebar, can we tell the people with the side, what a sidebar is when the two attorneys
00:45:52.720
they go up to the judge and they speak privately.
00:45:54.960
The reason why they do that is because they don't want the jury to hear because what they're
00:46:01.640
So they go up to the judge by themselves and talk with the judge and the judge makes a ruling.
00:46:05.340
That's called a sidebar because they are literally on the side of the bar, essentially where
00:46:13.840
And a lot of times they're discussing legal matters, you know, jargon or whatever it may
00:46:20.000
Because the prosecution is going to make the strongest argument and you know that they
00:46:23.200
can, the defense is going to make the strongest argument they can, but you can't have the
00:46:26.500
jury seeing that you don't want it to bias them.
00:46:28.880
Uh, make sure you guys, by the way, make sure you're smashing the like on this video.
00:46:32.340
Cause you're not going to get an unbiased, you know, unemotional breakdown like this
00:46:37.200
Because you know, guys, people, Myron is obviously so afraid of controversy, right?
00:46:43.500
I mean, and same thing for my, same thing for my channel though, guys, I cover stuff
00:46:49.680
My thing is be your own judge, make your own decisions.
00:46:53.000
So if you guys want to make up your own decisions, follow me over there at, uh, legal mindset,
00:46:58.520
Um, all right, next one, whether upward departure in sentence was justified.
00:47:08.080
You know, no, uh, it, it means, it means they were supposed to give him based on the
00:47:14.580
So that is the guidelines that the state makes for sentencing people in the same situation
00:47:21.800
Um, you know, people that have otherwise had been, you know, good citizens, um, they're
00:47:27.240
supposed to be sentenced to a maximum of 150 months.
00:47:37.000
And there were two reasons why, two reasons why they over, they, they, uh, sentenced him
00:47:44.560
And the first one was, the first one was, was that he was in a position of trust and authority
00:47:54.160
Number two was, it was cruel and vicious, like a, a, a, a necessarily cruel that it was
00:48:04.000
The first one extending the sentence because he's a cop, because he's in a position of authority.
00:48:11.340
That is unprecedented, not just in Minnesota, but in the United States, there's no other
00:48:16.420
There's no other cases that have extended a sentence simply because somebody is a cop
00:48:29.700
And hopefully they actually, in this one, they can throw out that first one and say,
00:48:35.460
But on the second one, if you think he's guilty, then it's definitely cruel, right?
00:48:42.220
I mean, based on the amount of time here, then the jury at this point, by the way, when
00:48:46.360
you're in sentencing, you're going with the jury.
00:48:50.680
So if he's guilty, this is a hundred percent cruel and vicious.
00:48:54.160
The judge should have just leaned on that and said, that's my reason I'm giving him 270.
00:49:01.940
So in that case, the judge actually messed up by adding that first one that he's a police
00:49:06.200
He might actually end up getting his sentence reduced because he used that other factor
00:49:14.040
Hey, you had your knee on his neck for nine minutes.
00:49:17.780
That would have been enough to justify that upward variance.
00:49:21.000
But the fact that he threw that other one out there like he was a police officer and we
00:49:25.340
should break down to them why that's problematic because they're probably wondering like, well,
00:49:30.140
Well, what you guys don't get is that what that's going to do is that's going to have law
00:49:34.400
enforcement scared because you got to understand as a police officer, you're coming in and
00:49:37.840
you're, you're, you're, um, how do I say use of force is comes with the job, right?
00:49:44.980
So anytime someone goes hands on, anytime someone gets in a shooting, anytime some, and
00:49:51.880
Now they could be potentially looked at where, oh, you were doing your job up.
00:49:56.080
We can still put us to go after you because you're a police officer.
00:49:59.720
This is court precedent that applies to every single case.
00:50:03.540
So remember, this is not just going to apply in the Derek Chauvin case.
00:50:09.360
So anytime a law enforcement agent does anything, oh, well, you know, you're a position of trust
00:50:16.480
Hell, that could be for anybody that could be for firefighters, EMTs, anybody.
00:50:25.940
So you guys can see why that's problematic now, because it causes issues for anyone else
00:50:30.120
that's in a position of public trust where they'll be afraid to do their job.
00:50:32.780
And so what they should have done is they should have discharged him because it was cruel.
00:50:37.100
And also, mind you, if this was manslaughter, yes, the sentence, the recommended sentence
00:50:41.920
would have been lower, but they could have done the exact same thing, guys.
00:50:44.980
If this was manslaughter, they could have just said, yeah, it's aggravated.
00:50:52.900
The problem is, is that people just don't have the same mental thing.
00:51:03.920
And I know we use that like we're talking to each other.
00:51:16.960
When we say murder, we still want to say murder whether or not the person intended it or not.
00:51:21.220
But murder requires that, once again, the mens rea, the state of mind, right?
00:51:26.080
The state of mind is saying, I am going to kill this person.
00:51:30.660
I know that what I'm doing can kill this person.
00:51:33.120
Shooting a gun into a crowd, you know, that can potentially kill somebody.
00:51:51.200
But like I said before, guys, the mens rea, that's very important.
00:51:54.700
That's a term that not enough people throw out there.
00:51:58.040
But yeah, guys, you have to be in that criminal state of mind where I, you know, and make,
00:52:05.640
And if I shouldn't kill him, like, it's foreseeable.
00:52:10.380
Once again, you still need a state of mind regardless of the facts.
00:52:12.800
Like, that's something that is hard to understand for murder.
00:52:17.400
Intent is a state of mind of the person committing.
00:52:21.620
So regardless of the facts of the person who it's being committed upon, that's irrelevant
00:52:31.820
The law does not think about feelings like this.
00:52:33.940
It doesn't think that you feel like it's murder, that it feels bad.
00:52:45.040
It's not like we're just saying it's a throwaway charge, guys.
00:52:46.960
It's just saying that, like, you got to remember that Chauvin was on duty working.
00:52:52.380
So he has defense right there that I'm in uniform.
00:52:57.460
So that right there defeats the mens rea argument that they could say that he had the criminal
00:53:08.880
And he has the defense that, hey, I was not in a criminal state of mind while I was trying
00:53:25.920
However, the prosecutors never proved intent at trial.
00:53:40.220
They never proved it because they went with the felony assault.
00:53:43.900
Or sorry, felony murder with assault as the predicate charge.
00:53:57.620
We're trying to teach you guys, hey, the law doesn't care about your feelings, guys.
00:54:07.120
With the word unbiased, it seemed like this will be reasons to justify the live lynching.
00:54:15.140
I mean, the title gets people worked up sometimes.
00:54:26.240
You got to really, really put your fucking feelings aside, guys.
00:54:30.960
You guys, like, like I told y'all before, this was a clean cut manslaughter case.
00:54:40.080
They try to bite off a little bit more than they can chew.
00:54:42.500
And now the appeal might get sent and free, guys.
00:54:47.560
So we just showed you guys some of the problematic things right now that are conceded.
00:54:59.380
Do you have any more supers or is that we caught up?
00:55:08.640
So we're bringing this down for y'all unbiased.
00:55:10.300
We're even telling y'all where they fucked up on the appeal.
00:55:17.000
We're going to go past the arrest here because we all know what happened.
00:55:43.140
So guys, this is what Minneapolis was looking like, man, during all this.
00:55:51.160
Like stuff like this was going on in Minnesota during the trial.
00:55:57.540
A lot of stuff like this, you know, tons of property damage.
00:56:01.660
These were the second most costly riots in all of U.S. history.
00:56:07.740
So Destiny, as you guys know, she comes on the show.
00:56:23.320
And, yo, literally they told her, oh, yeah, no, we can't come out.
00:56:27.280
And it wasn't until she called like several times.
00:56:35.040
And they were, I don't know if like they were, because they were trying to defund the police
00:56:38.580
But, guys, emergency service were essentially suspended.
00:56:49.380
Like, even two years later, you know, as you guys can see, like, this is, it was crazy.
00:56:53.400
And remember all the riots that spawned off of this.
00:56:55.500
Like, this is, once again, this, this spawned so many other riots.
00:56:58.420
Then, of course, during the trial, we had Dante Wright and the riots that came off of that.
00:57:05.260
And then we had the biggest thing, and this is most controversial, was during the trial,
00:57:10.360
we had a sitting representative in Congress make a inflammatory statement about the trial.
00:57:39.340
And this woman is a, she's a representative out of California.
00:57:41.840
She's a sitting representative from California, Maxime Waters.
00:57:49.600
So they're, they're, you know, they swear an oath to the government and the constitution,
00:57:53.300
And, you know, she knows that protecting fair trials is important, not just under.
00:58:02.100
And she's over here as a government employee doing this shit.
00:58:15.660
You might have to refresh it or play it from the beginning.
00:58:28.000
I am very hopeful and I hope that we're going to get a verdict that is a guilty, guilty,
00:58:41.620
I mean, what happens if we do not go get what you just told?
00:58:59.800
Well, we've got to stay on the street and we've got to get more active.
00:59:07.060
We've got to make sure that they know that we need business.
00:59:13.780
Let me say, when she said this, when she said this, guys, the judge in the case, Peter
00:59:20.100
Cahill, the actual judge said in court that this was the most idiotic thing he's ever
00:59:27.140
seen because this statement alone could be enough.
00:59:33.000
The judge said this, that on appeal, this statement alone could be enough to overturn.
00:59:44.800
I'm just telling you what the judge said in court because she's literally saying, jury,
00:59:52.320
you give us this verdict or we are going to get more confrontational.
00:59:57.980
Myron, what do you think confrontational means?
01:00:09.420
The city of Minneapolis wanted this thing to end so that they can go back to working
01:00:15.940
Like, guys, remember how in the beginning of the show, we showed you guys what the
01:00:19.920
Sixth and Fourteenth Amendment were, and the Sixth Amendment was an impartial trial, an
01:00:33.580
You guys, a government employee from California coming all the way over to Minnesota, talking
01:00:45.180
That's why she's wearing that crazy mask and all that other shit, right?
01:00:47.580
Coming from California all the way in Minnesota, saying this as a government employee.
01:00:58.960
Would she have made that same statement if this was in California?
01:01:05.500
She's making a statement in Minneapolis where it's not her people.
01:01:11.820
This isn't her town that's going to burn because of this.
01:01:17.340
And let's look at the facts here because they show, Chris, can you jump up to the appeal?
01:01:22.040
And if you scroll down, there's going to be a list of all the statements that the jury
01:01:29.620
So the jury literally came out and made multiple statements in the brief.
01:01:35.900
So it keeps going down, keeps going down, keeps going down.
01:01:41.980
And I'll tell you guys, this is a former government employee.
01:01:44.700
There's a reason why something called the Hatch Act exists, which as a government employee,
01:01:52.580
Now, obviously, this basically damn near turned into a political situation.
01:01:56.800
As a government employee, guys, you keep your mouth shut when situations like this happen.
01:02:02.420
We're not going to read all of them, but I just want you guys to look at them.
01:02:07.280
And look, if they're speaking up that, you know, it's bad.
01:02:14.420
Juror number eight, concerns about safety for this particular case.
01:02:18.260
Because guys, the National Guard was out with armored cars.
01:02:27.220
So I said the security made them more concerned.
01:02:30.720
And then they went, oh, I'm concerned for my wife, my family.
01:02:33.400
And scroll down for the safety of those family members.
01:02:39.960
And you're especially concerned about harm and destruction.
01:02:51.640
Nervous about this case because the pressure of doing the right thing, considering broader
01:02:54.860
implications, reactions from the general public.
01:03:04.820
Also raised my concerns for herself and her kids.
01:03:11.280
I did have concerns just for the safety of my family.
01:03:22.300
Security of my family comes first and was concerned of seeing all the security around the courthouse,
01:03:39.040
It goes back to why we showed you guys the Sixth Amendment in the beginning.
01:03:41.920
When you are tried for a crime in the United States, it is your right to be tried by a jury of your peers impartially.
01:03:54.800
So there's two things they could have done here to fix this, right?
01:03:59.120
Number one, they could have changed the venue to outside of Minneapolis.
01:04:05.240
They should have moved it outside of Minneapolis.
01:04:06.940
Like, just having it in the city was creating a security issue.
01:04:20.240
Second of all, after the Dante Wright situation, this Maxine Waters situation, they should have called it off until things heated down.
01:04:29.980
There are people that were out there that flew out there specifically for that.
01:04:34.540
And with Dante Wright, that shooting that happened during the trial.
01:04:40.080
Kim Potter, who shot Dante Wright, thought she had a taser.
01:04:42.680
She accidentally pulled out her service weapon, her Glock.
01:04:54.540
These politicians, Maxine Waters, the people like her, they linked these things together.
01:05:00.780
But to me, these are two separate isolated incidents with completely different facts.
01:05:05.800
But they linked them together and the protesters came together on that.
01:05:09.180
You should have said, okay, it's too hot right now.
01:05:12.020
It made the atmosphere in Minneapolis even worse.
01:05:20.480
Again, guys, as things get crazier and crazier in Minneapolis, the jurors get more and more afraid.
01:05:25.280
Which, as they get more and more afraid for their personal safety, guess what?
01:05:31.700
And as there's more pressure on them to convict, guess what happens?
01:05:38.080
And whether we want to accept it or not, the reality is this.
01:05:56.580
Blame the prosecutors because they had the power.
01:05:58.940
They control so much of the case, the prosecutors.
01:06:04.920
They could have put as much time as they wanted on this.
01:06:18.520
He's serving the sentence just like he'd be serving the sentence if he was convicted.
01:06:27.280
Pick a safer venue out somewhere in the middle of nowhere.
01:06:41.200
And yeah, guys, I mean, this is the thing that's like I said before, man.
01:06:51.400
And it's like you might have a guilty guy walk now because the prosecution wanted to go for like a fucking like mega slam dunk doing all this extra shit.
01:07:00.620
Windmill in three times and trying to get, you know what I mean?
01:07:07.000
I saw that one from Haitian Jack about the police brutality.
01:07:15.160
Chauvin says 22 prior incidents of police brutality and was deciphered once he clearly abused his position as a law enforcement officer.
01:07:26.320
This was not a police brutality case for these other incidents.
01:07:29.340
Those other incidents weren't that you got to understand.
01:07:31.580
The law looks at the facts of the present case.
01:07:34.960
Like, even if you assume those things are true, even if you assume they're true, it wasn't the case that was at hands.
01:07:44.240
The point is, we're tried for all those things.
01:07:46.360
If those things weren't brought to trial, there's a reason for that.
01:07:58.320
They had to prove that he abused it in this instance.
01:08:04.860
They didn't have those facts out there to show that in this instance.
01:08:09.380
And like I said before, guys, this is if he walks, the prosecution fucked up.
01:08:24.000
I didn't watch all the video available, but I did see the videos focusing on the knee on the neck.
01:08:28.640
They mostly showed his knee floating above the neck.
01:08:31.180
OK, we're going to talk about that, too, with the with the use of force.
01:08:36.180
What would be the difference between a mass slaughter charge and negligent homicide?
01:08:41.800
And in fact, in some states, they're the same thing.
01:08:45.380
I don't want to law nerd out on you here, but involuntary manslaughter is essentially criminal levels of negligence.
01:09:00.580
So essentially, let's say you are chilling and I'm playing with my Glock.
01:09:06.600
He's just like throwing the clip in and out or like pulling the trigger randomly, you know, or whatever, like where he puts a bullet in and injects it, you know, puts it in and out.
01:09:16.660
Let's say you inspect somebody's car and you see that the brake wires are cut and you're like, but you're like, no, car's good to go.
01:09:28.260
If you knew and you see that and you're like, yeah, I know this car's brake lines are cut.
01:09:42.620
Think of it this way, by the way, negligent homicide is like involuntary manslaughter.
01:09:51.060
See, once again, that's why they if they did it.
01:09:53.580
So here's the thing, guys, if the media just covered this fairly, we would have gotten a fair trial and we would have gotten a conviction.
01:10:01.800
They got too hyped up on this, bro, because it was their cash cow because they saw this as their ticket to big ratings.
01:10:09.780
They made up all these lies like fiery, but mostly peaceful, you know, and they it took them so long to pedal back.
01:10:15.380
It took them so long to backpedal on the defund the police stuff.
01:10:20.740
What is it with the YouTube attacking your reputation by saying things that are not true?
01:10:24.360
I'm grateful for all the content you have provided.
01:10:28.600
Because we're not afraid to tell you guys shit like this right now.
01:10:32.580
We're covering something that's extremely controversial.
01:10:34.900
Hell, even people in the chat are a little mad.
01:10:40.280
We're just telling you guys that the prosecution seriously fucked up and he may walk because of it.
01:10:52.820
I'm telling you the laws as they're written right now.
01:10:55.140
If you guys feel like this is wrong, like, if you're in your feelings.
01:11:01.440
Because that's not the way the laws are written right now.
01:11:06.680
Regardless of how you feel about it, it's not the law.
01:11:15.480
Stop arguing because you're mad and listen and understand.
01:11:24.740
Like I said, we covered tough topics like this too, man.
01:11:28.260
Like I said, I knew some of y'all were going to get mad about this, but hey, man, we're
01:11:32.840
We're reading it to you guys, black and white, giving you guys the legal perspective on it,
01:11:48.020
Guys, like the video, by the way, because you're not going to get an unbiased breakdown like this
01:11:52.440
from two guys that come from this world anywhere else on fucking YouTube.
01:11:56.620
I mean, because this is something, guys, look, we try to cover this impartially.
01:12:04.040
Like we just put up the title and you guys are lit.
01:12:06.780
And we're telling you guys where the appeal is fucking up, too, because the defense made
01:12:13.700
But here's the big key that I want you guys to understand.
01:12:16.380
When you're the prosecution, you can't afford to fuck up.
01:12:19.760
When you're the defense, you can fuck up as much as you want.
01:12:27.220
That's why defense, they just throw everything, right?
01:12:32.440
Now, all the defense has to do is get one thing, guys.
01:12:43.020
So I hope you guys are enjoying this, by the way.
01:12:47.160
So we're going to scroll down past all these jury statements and we're going to get to
01:12:50.740
So if you wanted to scroll down to hit the next section, Chris, past this.
01:12:56.680
These are all jury statements concerned about safety.
01:13:00.940
I'll scroll back up real quick to this one, this heading.
01:13:05.440
The city of Minneapolis announces during the fifth day of voir dire.
01:13:10.880
So voir dire is when the jurors are being questioned.
01:13:14.080
So during the trial, this is part of the trial.
01:13:16.080
It's the first stage of the trial when they select a jury.
01:13:18.400
So on the fifth day of jury selection, it agreed to pay out the estate 27 mil.
01:13:28.920
Um, and just that announcement alone, knock two jurors out, like literally like knock
01:13:43.560
And once again, the city had control over this.
01:13:50.180
Most of the time, in fact, in almost all cases, in almost all cases, they wait till after the murder trial to settle.
01:13:58.820
But instead, they decided to do it during the trial.
01:14:02.540
That shows that they wanted to try to make that influence the jury.
01:14:14.180
Then they just had to wait like literally like two more weeks and it would have been fine.
01:14:17.960
And just so you guys know, the word there is a very sensitive process.
01:14:25.480
You know, you're figuring out who's qualified, who's not qualified.
01:14:28.360
You're getting rid of people that aren't necessarily going to be good jurors.
01:14:30.900
And for them, for the city to announce, hey, we're going to give him $27 million.
01:14:36.900
OK, they're basically admitting that that they fucked up to a degree.
01:14:46.000
Now, granted, I want to tell you from a legal perspective, sitting here as a lawyer, civil
01:14:54.200
Civil standard is preponderance of the evidence.
01:15:02.980
Think of reasonable doubt as ninety nine point nine.
01:15:13.120
That's the standard we're thinking of when you're a reasonable doubt.
01:15:18.160
But in the eyes of people, the reasonable common person.
01:15:21.820
You think, oh, if we're paying out this money, then he must have done it.
01:15:27.200
And here's the thing, just so I can visually show it to y'all.
01:15:29.280
Well, so let's say, you know, preponderance of the evidence is right here.
01:15:34.520
Beyond a reasonable doubt all the way up here when it comes to like what's required.
01:15:38.720
So preponderance of the evidence civil case right here.
01:15:48.860
OK, because preponderance of the evidence did not need to have to not need to bring nearly
01:15:52.940
as much evidence to show that he was liable and culpable for Nicole Simpson's death.
01:15:57.600
And he had to pay out on that civil suit and he lost it.
01:16:00.920
OK, so that just puts things in perspective for you guys.
01:16:05.500
However, a regular person ain't going to know that they're like, oh, city's paying.
01:16:14.060
That's what we showed you guys at the beginning of the podcast.
01:16:18.320
Again, guys, repeat after me to be tried by a jury of your peers impartially.
01:16:24.940
This right here is literally the definition of bias.
01:16:30.840
And once again, guys, remember, one thing is all it takes.
01:16:39.080
Bro, imagine being imagine you being a juror, right?
01:16:48.980
Oh, by the way, the city's paying the fucking victim.
01:16:55.920
I need you to be unbiased here and and listen to the facts of the case and everything else
01:17:18.220
Scroll on down to the next bolded, bolded section should be right here.
01:17:23.520
Like I said, guys, Brooklyn Center, which is right near right nearby.
01:17:27.620
Kim Potter shoots and kills Dante Wright, leading to renewed anti-police while it's still pending
01:17:42.340
It's not really useful unless you're really going to lock people in like a literally a
01:17:51.780
But so the sequestering part of that don't really agree.
01:17:55.800
However, delaying it, just putting that, putting it off for maybe a week or two.
01:18:31.440
So this is a very small one, but the media reports on it.
01:18:37.920
You could say, oh, that might have biased people, whatever.
01:18:43.680
So the court excluded evidence of the prior arrest on 19th.
01:18:49.080
Where Floyd made the same complaints when he was arrested.
01:18:53.180
So essentially, Floyd had been arrested before.
01:18:58.020
And if you want to scroll down here, Chris, to the next page.
01:19:04.600
He is like crying, saying he wanted his mother in this other one.
01:19:28.740
That's a strong argument for the defense to overturn this.
01:19:35.440
I think they should have admitted this evidence and allowed this in because it gives context.
01:19:40.200
That doesn't mean that what Chauvin did was right.
01:19:48.860
And this is something that should have been allowed out there.
01:19:54.740
So the court excluded evidence of training materials establishing that the Minnesota Police Department trains officers to put suspects into with one officer putting his knees on the suspect's back.
01:20:12.520
So the top picture, that's what they showed in court.
01:20:20.100
And they blanked out the picture that was as part of the training materials.
01:20:30.000
Guys, this photo is the Minnesota Police Department.
01:20:35.480
This is their own police department's training materials.
01:20:40.340
Their own police department's training materials.
01:20:56.280
But let them enter this into evidence and show, hey, in the training, they do a move like this.
01:21:01.520
This is a trainer in a training circumstance doing a similar move.
01:21:07.760
Not putting it in the materials is bad because it makes it look like, okay, why did y'all hide this?
01:21:17.100
I'll tell you guys this from my training, right?
01:21:19.120
When I was going through Agent Academy, everything that we did, all of our scores, our shooting range, all that stuff, it's all documented and scored.
01:21:28.700
And the reason why is because if you ever get in a use-of-force incident where someone gets hurt or someone gets killed or whatever, they can always pull your training file and see how you did.
01:21:38.720
So the fact that they pulled his training file and they found that he was trained to do this and then they withheld it?
01:21:45.860
Bro, I don't, man, this was a big fucking blunder by the prosecution.
01:21:51.580
And look, all they had to do was, you guys say nine minutes.
01:21:59.800
And says, oh, this is the training materials, right?
01:22:02.200
And they'll say, yeah, this is the training materials.
01:22:05.720
This is what literally the prosecution can say to the witness.
01:22:09.120
Let's say the witness on the training materials.
01:22:10.400
Myron, is it anywhere on the training, in this training, is it anywhere to put the knee on the neck for nine full minutes?
01:22:19.360
Is it foreseeable that putting someone in this specific position for nine minutes might cause harm?
01:22:31.540
You have to allow, you don't just get in evidence that is nice to your side.
01:22:38.180
Some of it favors the defense, some of it favors the prosecution.
01:22:40.700
But during the course of the trial, you're supposed to put everything else out and just say, and just defuse it.
01:22:47.660
It looks bad on the prosecution that they didn't, that they redacted it because this gives the defense a little bit of wiggle room to say, yo, why'd y'all hide this?
01:22:56.640
Oh, oh, it's because he was trained to do this.
01:23:00.400
I think he put his neck a little bit, his knee a little bit high on the neck.
01:23:08.180
So for this, for this, for the super chat, though, I want to say, I want to save our prediction for the end.
01:23:13.200
I want to save our prediction for the end, but we will give a prediction on whether it'll be overturned or not.
01:23:17.160
We'll do that at the end because I want to do it when you guys have seen all the evidence.
01:23:21.240
And we want y'all to go, we should take a vote in the chat too.
01:23:23.520
What y'all think after you guys go through everything.
01:23:24.800
After you see everything, whether it'll be appealed or not.
01:23:27.180
But again, guys, I want to make this extremely fucking clear.
01:23:33.640
We're not saying he should have put his neck, his knee on his neck for that long.
01:23:39.240
But what I am saying is that it's really bad that the prosecution didn't handle this during the trial and bring this up.
01:23:46.020
So now what it's allowed the defense to do is say, why'd y'all hide this?
01:23:51.560
See, look, the department trained him to do this.
01:23:54.040
OK, now it gives them the wiggle room to be able to contest this in an appeal where the prosecution, I don't know if they're going to respond to this.
01:24:07.080
They are allowed to file a brief that's like responding to this.
01:24:09.640
But the point is, is that once again, the judge only has to find one thing.
01:24:17.180
There's just so many reasons why it can be overturned.
01:24:20.760
And these aren't like some of these are strong reasons.
01:24:24.840
Like once again, and it's the prosecutor's fault.
01:24:36.380
They should have just showed it and then debunked it in court.
01:24:43.580
Because all they could have done, I'll tell you guys right now.
01:24:47.900
Because they would have probably had the training use of force guy there right from the Minneapolis
01:24:57.160
Is it standard protocol to put your knee on someone's neck for your knee on someone's
01:25:23.060
There's a point in the chat going on, by the way.
01:25:27.200
But I would like you guys to reserve it until we're done breaking this down.
01:25:31.860
But I want y'all, and we'll do a recap as well of all the blunders, and we'll take a
01:25:46.880
You're not going to get this analysis anywhere else, guys.
01:25:54.060
The state presented seven witnesses who testified on unreasonable use of force.
01:26:07.640
So they literally had a PowerPoint slide that showed the fact that they had seven witnesses,
01:26:20.400
You're not supposed to have people who are saying the same thing like this.
01:26:23.500
Literally, their PowerPoint slide proves that they did the thing they shouldn't be doing.
01:26:31.020
Guys, this is like TikTok girls telling on themselves for being hoes.
01:26:37.440
Yeah, this is probably one of the biggest things.
01:26:41.940
So cumulative evidence is when people are testifying on the exact same thing.
01:26:46.780
Experts, subject matter experts, like Ryan said, SME, subject matter experts, are testifying
01:26:54.300
This is not what we call court is not a battle of who has the most experts.
01:27:06.120
So maybe one of you gets an expert on use of force.
01:27:14.080
You know, you're not supposed to have one side getting 20 and the other side getting
01:27:21.440
If Chauvin had been a celebrity, let's say it was Alec Baldwin, an Alec Baldwin shooting
01:27:25.580
case, you better believe Alec Baldwin is going to have as many people as he wanted to because
01:27:30.860
But in this case, the state threw unlimited funds at this.
01:27:34.240
We're going to spend all our money on this cumulative evidence, this thing that can get
01:27:46.280
They're all from the fucking police department.
01:27:55.280
Well, one of them is one of them is a law school person.
01:27:57.080
One of them is a law school person, but a couple of them clearly for the department.
01:28:07.060
The fact that they had multiple witnesses for the same exact thing.
01:28:12.100
It's kind of like that saying, the lady doth protest too much.
01:28:15.340
Like, I think they did this literally because they know the city could look bad on this.
01:28:24.700
Chauvin was crucified in order to save the city.
01:28:34.240
That, literally, they shot themselves in the foot.
01:28:36.140
But the reason why they didn't show the picture in the trial is because they would have had
01:28:42.060
to go ahead and explain why the fuck you guys trained your police officers to put knees
01:28:48.520
And I'll tell you guys this from the Fed Academy.
01:28:50.640
They didn't teach us to put knees on necks ever.
01:28:57.500
Because they had literally people from the police department there.
01:29:02.660
So, are you guys seeing how this stuff comes together?
01:29:09.700
They didn't really care about this case enough to do it right.
01:29:12.780
To not do things like this that can get it overturned.
01:29:28.960
National Guard called out after testimony concludes to prevent riots and Congressperson calls for protesters to fight if a jury renders a non-guilty verdict.
01:29:37.500
This is Maxine Waters calling for people to fight if there's no jury verdict to get confrontational.
01:29:45.020
Like I said, the judge, Peter Cahill, legit said that that alone is an appealable issue.
01:29:54.280
To be honest, if there wasn't so much national news on it and he wouldn't have gotten killed if he ruled unfavorably, I mean, any other judge would have probably declared a mistrial.
01:30:07.740
You have a federal government official literally out there in the streets protesting with people saying, we need a guilty verdict or else we're going to continue to basically be out in these streets and cause havoc.
01:30:28.160
Yo, I hope you guys are liking this fucking video, bro.
01:30:30.140
Because me and Andrew are breaking this thing down on a molecular level.
01:30:41.740
So under the rules of evidence, which these are mirror, these are state rules, Minnesota rules of evidence, but they mirror the federal rules.
01:30:51.220
The state must disclose all matters within the prosecutor's possession or control that relate to this case.
01:31:01.160
So if you scroll down, it says right there, the court scheduling order requires all disclosures be completed by August 14th, 2020.
01:31:11.740
Well, well, if you go here, they failed to complete the defenses.
01:31:15.600
There's eight dates after August 14th on which the state made additional disclosures.
01:31:19.800
So of the 27,000 pages of documents, scroll up a little bit, Chris.
01:31:31.780
They only got 27,000 before August 14th and 15K, 15,131 pages after.
01:31:42.780
So like a third of the pages were after the deadline.
01:31:47.100
The state produced 139 gigs before and 172, the majority of the video evidence, the audio and video files, after late.
01:32:00.440
I explained that to you guys before, the importance of discovery and how if it's not adhered to, you throw the fucking case out, bro.
01:32:06.100
Like, this is, I mean, this alone, guys, this can get these prosecutors disbarred.
01:32:13.600
This is unethical behavior on the parts of the prosecutors.
01:32:19.300
This is really bad behavior on the parts of the prosecutors.
01:32:21.360
And once again, it only takes one piece of bad behavior.
01:32:26.360
One bad behavior on the part of the prosecutors is all it takes to get this thrown out.
01:32:32.120
Remember, guys, as the prosecution, okay, you cannot fuck up.
01:32:38.360
The defense literally makes their case off of you making mistakes.
01:32:43.040
And this is why the feds have such a high standard for their attorneys, because they got to make these cases airtight.
01:32:50.440
That's why the feds have a higher conviction rate, because they don't get silly shit like that.
01:32:59.380
I've seen agents literally get their cases thrown out for not bringing discovery within two weeks.
01:33:26.640
Worst case I saw in Glynn County, Georgia, was a baby who was shot in the stroller during a robbery by two teams.
01:33:37.540
The FLETC, the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center, is in Glynn County.
01:33:40.020
Did you guys bring up the juror that went on a promo tour?
01:33:46.500
But if you lied to be a juror, that's a problem.
01:33:49.400
You are allowed to write a book afterwards about your experience on the trial.
01:33:52.720
So that is actually a grift that a lot of jurors do after they're on the jury.
01:33:56.580
Like, I mean, if you're an average Joe, that's probably your best opportunity to make a lot of money real quick.
01:34:03.100
I watched the full trial, and I believe this trial was unfair, and I, me, believe he is innocent.
01:34:07.660
I hope in 2024 people don't fall for the lies again.
01:34:11.640
You're going to get some people to hate on you for saying that.
01:34:22.140
Golden Passes says, based on this overwhelming evidence, look like this is going to be overturned.
01:34:25.820
Do you guys think it's 100% case closed or 70% chance?
01:34:29.540
So, Marquis says, bad training is why the cops got off from Rodney King because they were taught to strike repeatedly with the ASP baton until compliance.
01:34:39.220
That is why they always pull the training, and that's why it's bad that they redacted the photo there.
01:34:48.640
Again, it opens the door for the defense to go ahead and creep in, and that's all they got to do is dilute it a little bit.
01:34:57.440
Okay, love how you two shared everything, and I mean everything, which all of these points do you believe the defense will likely lose?
01:35:10.180
So, in an appeal, you raise every single potential problem, and once again, for the 100th time, you only need to get one to stick.
01:35:24.640
All these chips, and you only need one to ride.
01:35:28.160
In fact, it's like each claim is like a separate hand.
01:35:38.020
Chas should look at video of the death of Tony Tempa.
01:36:00.000
I mean, that's something we're going to talk about here.
01:36:01.420
But, I mean, if it's anything, it's because the prosecution screwed up on this case.
01:36:05.940
Because some of these arguments the defense is raising are trash.
01:36:15.400
While Floyd wasn't a threat once on the ground, the crowd was getting hostile and made the
01:36:20.280
cops' job take longer, which resulted in the nine minutes.
01:36:23.240
Well, I mean, the thing about an appeal is those are good facts.
01:36:27.700
But the point is, is that at an appeal, we're not talking about the facts.
01:36:32.420
So, if anything, like, at this stage, guys, there's no feelings involved.
01:36:36.080
This is a judge that is supposed to make an emotionless decision on the law.
01:36:40.480
This is like the facts of the facts, whatever was presented at the trial, is admitted.
01:36:47.820
If you guys notice, they're not talking about the facts anymore.
01:36:50.040
They're talking about everything that occurred during trial that fucked it up.
01:36:53.140
They're not talking about the facts anymore, guys.
01:37:07.920
This is good to break down because there's so much, guys.
01:37:09.900
You're learning so much about law enforcement, about prosecution, about court cases.
01:37:14.060
And, guys, one thing which I do on my channel, and I love that Myron does this, too, and this
01:37:17.720
is great, is he goes to the original source documents.
01:37:26.560
This is not, like, whatever other news you're getting your information from.
01:37:32.560
You guys, if you really want to understand, read it for yourself.
01:37:37.000
That's why I started my channel, to help people make their own opinions.
01:37:43.620
So there's a lot of stuff, a lot of information.
01:37:52.400
So they barred clothing with logos and slogans.
01:38:19.660
Like, once again, this show is like, this guy cannot get out of his feelings and say,
01:38:25.400
And if you, if you really want him to be convicted, you won't break the rules because
01:38:33.020
If you really want to convict him, play by the rules and get the conviction clean.
01:38:48.780
People don't understand when you, when you do emotional shit like this, it fucks it up,
01:39:00.860
You're allowed to belittle the event, the, the, the, the defense.
01:39:11.140
Some judges let them fucking go on a fucking rant.
01:39:14.380
And you can tell it's weak because it's only like three sentences.
01:39:29.380
After the trial, a seated juror in alternate admitted to providing false testimony.
01:39:34.000
In voir dire, once again, voir dire is jury selection and jury questioneers on issues directly
01:39:40.440
presidential to Chauvin bias and concerns for safety.
01:39:56.680
Go scroll down here to what they actually said here.
01:40:07.080
Uh, did you or someone close to you participate in any of the demonstrations or marches against
01:40:11.660
police brutality that took place in Minneapolis after George Floyd's death?
01:40:17.120
So they said, no, they're not in any demonstrations or marches when they survey says that is a lie.
01:40:34.540
Have you or someone close to you ever helped support or advocated in favor or of or against
01:40:45.600
The defense in this case were officers for the Minneapolis Police Department.
01:40:48.380
Is there anything about their employment with the NPD that would prevent you from rendering
01:40:57.500
Other than what you have already described above.
01:40:59.460
Have you or anyone close to you participated in protests about police use of force or police
01:41:06.100
Is there anything else the judges, the judge and attorney should know about you in relation
01:41:18.020
And they ask you questions, they ask you questions to make sure that you're going to be impartial
01:41:22.060
He said no to all these questions, which clearly is going to make him biased.
01:41:38.080
Now, they typically do not try jurors because it's a bad look.
01:41:45.360
So this guy lied to get on the jury when he was clearly biased.
01:41:53.340
So immediately after the trial, he contacted the media.
01:41:57.500
Mitchell stated that he has been pulled over by the police probably 50 times for no good reason.
01:42:03.540
One time having a cop pull a gun on him while he was changing a tire on the freeway
01:42:07.760
and answering what message he would give to those who asked to participate in the jury,
01:42:12.200
Mitchell said we would have a chance to make history.
01:42:18.540
He saw jury duty as one of the avenues to correct some wrongs and try to spark change.
01:42:26.740
He said that the verdict could have been rendered in 20 minutes but for one juror.
01:42:31.640
So confirming, confirming, bro, so bad we lost to Myron.
01:42:57.160
So once again, you got the protest that this guy was at in D.C.
01:43:07.220
So you see that last part, which says, get your knees, get your knee off our next BLM
01:43:15.140
So he was wearing those, that paraphernalia, the t-shirts and the cap at a protest in D.C.
01:43:21.940
So he's been proven that he was at a protest and he lied and committed perjury.
01:43:37.140
We pretty much already said that a million times.
01:43:40.360
But what, just like, this is probably one of the most egregious breaches of the United
01:43:49.400
Guys, my man admitted, okay, to circumventing the voidaire process to get in on the jury
01:43:59.020
so that he could convict a guy from a biased standpoint.
01:44:07.080
Guys, you see how this infringes upon Chauvin's Sixth Amendment rights.
01:44:15.240
It's, when you are tried in the United States for a criminal case, you have a Sixth Amendment
01:44:27.420
When you have issues like this, where people come in and try to take the law into their
01:44:34.580
This is a big, fucking, monumental fuck-up, I can't even describe, a bunk, all the other
01:44:41.920
problematic issues that we've come across on this case.
01:44:48.000
And he goes, and the fact that he had the gall to get on a radio station and admit this shit.
01:44:59.100
Do you guys see now where we're coming from on this?
01:45:02.020
Again, like I said, guys, even the worst criminals get the right to an impartial and fair trial
01:45:13.520
If you want to actually convict them, if you believe that this guy's guilty, you want to
01:45:26.440
It's like, for example, imagine it's like, you know, a Harlem Globetrotters game, right?
01:45:31.080
You know, well, you know, they're going to win, right?
01:45:33.340
It's like, why do you got to go out there and like kneecap the other guys on the other
01:45:40.720
And you have to, and then like, on top of it, you got to beat the other team with a baseball
01:45:45.740
And then the Globetrotters lose because they had to forfeit.
01:45:50.000
Because you beat the shit out of the other team who was going to lose anyway.
01:45:58.480
And I think I saw, you know, one of the super chats was talking about why they did it.
01:46:07.180
It's the one that said, yeah, right there from Anna, which says, if you guys see this
01:46:09.980
fumble, why couldn't the prosecution predict this or else the actual trial was just to
01:46:18.660
They went extreme to calm things down because here's the thing, the city and the PD and
01:46:23.700
the state, they were worried about the systemic, right?
01:46:28.220
Because it's being called systemic and they think that if they bend the knee and they're
01:46:36.160
People just wanted to see justice, but bending the knee to the narrative was where they went
01:46:42.860
And justice would have been done by just getting out the facts.
01:46:49.520
Like literally, bro, it, it was because emotional damage, bro.
01:46:58.140
Do you think the prosecutors, uh, no, uh, no, no, no, no.
01:47:02.320
Do you think all the prosecutor, uh, prosecutors did all this on purpose so he could win on appeal
01:47:13.680
A little bit of conspiracy, a little bit of truth there.
01:47:16.140
Uh, the emotional damage meme is the perfect caption from Aaron Jr.'s latest post on IG.
01:47:23.960
I hope you guys are liking the goddamn video because this content is fucking fire.
01:47:27.580
You will not see anybody else covering this like this.
01:47:33.440
They're going to be virtual signaling and all this other shit.
01:47:37.100
It's like, bro, we're not here to talk about if he's a good guy or a bad guy.
01:47:45.020
So when you guys read a case, you can say, oh, yeah.
01:47:48.260
Remember the law applies to people you like and people you don't like.
01:47:53.800
These laws apply to good people and to bad people.
01:48:02.220
You want these protections if the guy is innocent.
01:48:06.300
And like I told y'all before, they would rather let a guilty man walk than let an innocent
01:48:17.940
And that's why they take this stuff so seriously.
01:48:34.400
He's the one with the Black Lives Matter cap and the get your knee off our next BLM shirt.
01:48:42.520
Bro, why couldn't you just watch the trial from the side?
01:48:48.520
He doesn't realize he almost fucked it up for everybody.
01:48:50.380
This, this, by the way, once again, guys, this alone, this alone, this guy's dumb ass
01:48:55.820
social media behavior could screw up this trial.
01:49:01.180
Him wanting to make that change can literally screw up this trial.
01:49:05.400
Imagine if Chauvin walks because of this dumb ass.
01:49:11.820
No, he was on, he was actually, this guy was on the jury and he wasn't the alternate.
01:49:18.200
Just the only thing that could make this worse is he could be the foreman.
01:49:34.000
NFT said this is biased as fuck, but NFT, please tell us how this is biased as fuck.
01:49:50.680
I believe we got almost all of them, except for if you want to scroll down much more,
01:49:59.160
There's a part about the sentencing that I want to catch before we get out of here.
01:50:01.860
So just to explain to you guys about the sentencing.
01:50:06.900
Once again, we already went through, we already covered a lot of this on the jurors, on due process.
01:50:14.420
I think NFT meant the trial was biased as fuck.
01:50:21.400
This was the, this is a clean manslaughter case, bro.
01:50:23.860
If they had given it, given it manslaughter, Chauvin would have pled guilty.
01:50:31.720
They could have sentenced him in an aggravating sentencing and given him a lot of years.
01:50:36.100
Would have got probably similar to what he got already.
01:50:40.260
Honestly, he could have said, oh, did we talk about aggravated?
01:50:45.660
I want him to get to the argument on the aggregate.
01:50:57.480
here you go this is it once you get to the header okay yes yes yes uh we'll actually go up a little
01:51:12.200
bit more go up a little bit more uh no no no actually you can go down you go down go down
01:51:17.720
go back down to the last one okay okay there you go right here okay so m chauvin's sentence should
01:51:24.360
be reduced to the presumptive range so there's sentencing guidelines in every single state
01:51:29.880
yep that are those are guidelines in which under certain circumstances how should you be sentenced
01:51:35.000
if it's your first crime how are you sentenced right if you have no prior criminal history
01:51:39.720
how are you how are you uh sentenced if it's your ninth time committing the same crime
01:51:45.560
should you be marmon myron do you think you're someone who's committed the same crime
01:51:50.280
10 times should be sentenced the same way as a guy who's committed it for the first time
01:51:54.840
of course not exactly there's a reason why d1 the third time is a felony exactly yeah if you
01:52:00.280
knowingly do something over and over again it should be more severe stupid so this was his
01:52:07.560
first offense period he didn't have a criminal record yeah so the range was supposed to be between
01:52:13.000
zero and 150 months instead they considered this aggravated and gave him 270 and there's a two-stage
01:52:22.120
process so the first is there must be a factual finding there's one or more aggravating factors
01:52:26.840
present and two the court must explain why those factors create a substantial compelling reason to
01:52:32.280
impose a sentence outside the range so here's the two factors the court said number one scroll down chris
01:52:38.280
just a little bit okay number one chauvin abused a position of trust and authority number two
01:52:47.480
chauvin treated floyd with particular cruelty so let's hold on to those when we discussed this
01:52:52.200
earlier guys remember yep trust and authority number two particular cruelty okay so number one
01:52:59.160
sentence and guidelines do not recognize abuse of a position of authority as an aggravated factor
01:53:03.400
let's be very clear there's no case law on that it is not in the statutes being in a position of
01:53:08.920
authority is not a thing until now yep so guys they just made out of thin air in english they made
01:53:14.440
that out of thin air using that as aggravating circumstance that he was was in a position of
01:53:19.080
trust yeah and so scroll down a little bit so the argument here so i just want to make sure i get the
01:53:24.360
argument so essentially they made that a um a a uh factor uh and guess what it should not have been
01:53:37.240
a factor at all the cruelty now yes the cruelty i got a case the cruelty they had a great point
01:53:43.080
this was particularly cruel i mean if you're thinking if once again sentencing happens after you've
01:53:48.200
convicted him so if he's guilty nine minutes is cruel as hell it's it's super cruel yep so why not
01:53:55.320
just use that you didn't need to use the one and because the judge screwed up there once again one
01:54:01.240
mistake is all it takes because he screwed up they might reduce his sentence so the the appeal of the
01:54:06.520
appellate court could come back and say yeah we don't agree we're going to reduce the sentence but
01:54:10.200
guess what if he just said 270 months with one factor maybe they wouldn't reduce the sentence yep yep once
01:54:17.000
again the the the prosecution opened the door for the defense to come in and challenge them just like
01:54:23.640
they with redacting the the training photo just like um just like this where they they put an
01:54:29.880
unnecessary um aggravating circumstance unnecessary so that's it guys that was it this was filed by
01:54:37.240
william f mormon this is attorney number you can look him up and he's so let's recap real fast okay
01:54:41.960
there's a lot of issues here so okay so guys quick little summary as you guys know myron gains my
01:54:47.880
boy uh andrew esquire from my legal mindset we broke down let me make this very clear we both know and
01:54:54.760
think that chauvin was guilty of manslaughter okay now uh the problem is that the state charged them
01:55:02.600
with felony murder which to quite to be honest with y'all they brought off a bit more than they can chew
01:55:07.240
because uh there's a lot of issues with that charge okay so i guess let's start let's start in
01:55:12.520
order so number one yeah number one they failed based on the setup of the court by the the defense
01:55:20.920
argued the defense argued that failure to sequester the jury yeah failure to move the venue and failure
01:55:28.600
to wait when there's riots going on actively yeah was an issue yep sequestering bad argument but
01:55:35.880
waiting and moving it good arguments yep both of those are going to show them the fentanyl
01:55:44.040
oh let's show them the fentanyl we forgot about the fentanyl yeah let's show them the fentanyl uh
01:55:47.880
chris want to show the picture of the fentanyl it's uh the image on the far right so okay that was the
01:55:51.640
first point but this is this is another point we'll get to this another point we'll recap one more
01:55:56.200
don't worry no no that's the first part of it yeah okay so uh one more that one more argument guys or
01:56:02.120
one more thing that the defense had as well okay yes yep that's it pull that so so this was admitted
01:56:07.160
right so this was admitted in evidence this one was admitted in evidence where it says okay this is
01:56:11.720
george floyd's cause of death his death certificate cardio pulmonary arrest complicated uh complicating
01:56:19.880
law enforcement subdual restraint and neck compression so once again it said he was into cardio pulmonary
01:56:27.560
arrest that's what happened while he was being subdued and it was his contributing factors um
01:56:35.080
arteriosclerotic and hypertensive heart disease so he had heart disease he had fentanyl intoxication
01:56:43.320
and recent methamphetamine use so he was currently presently intoxicated with fentanyl
01:56:50.280
and he had recently used meth and down there under manner this is very important they brought this up at
01:56:56.440
trial but i want to refresh you guys memory so anytime it's a death that involves two people
01:57:02.840
the medical diagnosis is homicide but that is not a legal conclusion that's a medical diagnosis
01:57:09.720
so whenever two people are involved okay i didn't know this that's a homicide yep so let's say uh myron
01:57:17.080
um shot me in self-defense yeah you know i had a gun i'm trying to shoot myron he shot me in self-defense
01:57:21.800
it's ruled as a homicide oh because you shot me another human caused the death okay but that's
01:57:28.360
not a legal conclusion that he murdered me bam okay so you guys gotta separate out the medical examiner
01:57:35.080
doesn't make a murder conclusion okay he's just telling you the facts yeah he's just telling you
01:57:40.200
that another person it led to that okay yeah let's get this uh that's a big distinction giant super here
01:57:47.160
okay uh henny chris is here 200 bucks thank you so much shout out to myron andrew for breaking this
01:57:50.680
down because there was a lot of stuff that i don't know about this trial also thank you for all the
01:57:55.800
things that you put people on from money lifestyle the value of yourself laws etc because you truly
01:58:01.160
changed my life like the video thank you so much all the high q people out there that understand that
01:58:07.320
we're this is just an objective legal breakdown we're we're shitting on the prosecution and the defense
01:58:11.160
we're taking both we're in we're basically objectively looking at it and giving you guys
01:58:15.960
the plus and negatives of both sides and hopefully this equips you guys so you at home can look at
01:58:21.880
these documents for yourself and like i say on my channel legal mindset be your own judge make your
01:58:27.080
own decision when it's a case you really want to look at look at it and say hey i remember myron
01:58:31.800
talking about the fact that uh if there's a riot going on maybe they should move it maybe this is an
01:58:37.160
unfair trial for that because guess what somebody you like will be on trial and you're going to look
01:58:42.280
at these appeals you're going to look at these trial factors and you can make up your own mind
01:58:46.040
and say whether this is a fair trial or not because we are teaching you the law we're teaching the facts
01:58:50.680
shout out to any chris by the way i guess you're not drunk for this one
01:58:55.160
or is he yeah or is he uh uh none of these points will overturn his trial i have read a case where a
01:59:02.360
juror said racist remarks about blacks during the trial and he believed blacks were criminal
01:59:06.120
prosecutors knew not overturned did they appeal it though that's the question my friend did they
01:59:10.280
appeal it yeah did they did they appeal it and also what year was this was this 1892 like what
01:59:14.600
are we talking about right now like you know uh sorely to bass 10 bucks even if i believe he is
01:59:19.720
innocent i know i'm not a judge police officer or lawyer so when someone explained the law listen
01:59:23.720
if verdict uh was manslaughter it will never be disputed today opinion yeah yeah he would have
01:59:28.760
agreed to it he would have taken he would have taken that he would have pled to it because he knew
01:59:32.520
he would be guilty of it there's no way he would not plead to that when being questioned several times
01:59:35.880
floyd repeatedly denied being under the influence yeah well his literally his passenger testified
01:59:40.840
that he was yeah and that's what wasn't admitted uh the show of child was the montreal screw job we
01:59:45.960
wanted a clean wrestling match no interference uh the wrestling uh the least wrongful death the
01:59:50.200
most manslaughter okay and that's from juan antonio and that was from big al before thank you
01:59:53.480
and then the last one here uh sco 971 fed at 1811 if you have to be found guilty beyond a
01:59:58.520
reasonable doubt when the fentanyl on the system so that's a fact that the trial that's a good
02:00:02.440
point you brought up the fentanyl and that's what the defense tried to raise at trial so at trial the
02:00:07.480
defense tried to raise the fentanyl as the cause of death now the jury because they found him guilty
02:00:13.800
did not believe that so the fentanyl would be what we call in law a superseding cause so something that
02:00:20.600
caused the death other than the knee right saying the fentanyl was really the cause here not um not um
02:00:29.080
derek chauvin it was the fentanyl that killed him now they tried to raise that clearly the jury didn't
02:00:34.120
believe that yeah they didn't believe that but they tried to raise at a trial but at this point
02:00:39.240
we're not even getting to whether the fentanyl itself uh at trial was persuasive it's the fact
02:00:44.840
that they excluded evidence this is a problem guys at a trial you have to let all the evidence in
02:00:50.440
it's a procedure thing they screwed up on the rules they should have just let it in let the testimony come
02:00:56.200
in about the the friend saying the passenger saying that he's on fentanyl the police report that said
02:01:01.320
yeah no the guy said he's on fentanyl and he's intoxicated again the defense doing stupid to try
02:01:06.440
to you know dumb stuff they're trying to do maneuver some things that they didn't have to they could
02:01:10.120
have easily beat it they they wanted to make and also part of it was they wanted to make george floyd
02:01:14.520
look more clean than he was they wanted to say make him saint floyd yeah they didn't want to they
02:01:18.840
didn't want his character george floyd was no saint george floyd was no saint but that does not mean
02:01:23.640
that what happened was right and that does not mean that george floyd that derek chauvin doesn't
02:01:27.080
deserve to be punished people can be mixed bags people are mixed bags everybody's got good and
02:01:32.280
bad things within them right yeah but nobody deserves to be treated like that yeah by police
02:01:37.240
nobody deserves to be treated like that um by police anyone regardless of how they are what their moral
02:01:42.520
character is whether you're a good guy or a bad guy right uh so yeah and the fact that they tried to
02:01:48.280
do that is because of the politics because they wanted to make him into saint floyd they didn't need to do
02:01:53.320
that to win the case because they knew the defense was going to attack you know oh he had robbed a
02:01:57.000
pregnant woman before he had been arrested this many times he's a drug user he's an addict he's a
02:02:01.560
he's a he's a multiple time convicted felon they knew they were going to do that so the the the
02:02:06.120
prosecution pretty much was like okay we're going to go ahead and take away anything or get rid of
02:02:12.120
anything that's going to make our victim uh be in a less favorable light so to speak okay um all right so uh
02:02:18.760
um so okay so we're going to go ahead and uh recap everything right so if we pull up the appeal one
02:02:23.560
more time yeah andrew i mean uh chris please so okay guys so like i said before we're going to go
02:02:29.320
through all the defensive points as to why uh they think that this this conviction should be overturned
02:02:37.080
so uh we're going to show this appeal to y'all one more time we're going to run through the facts
02:02:39.880
we're going to give you guys a quick little recap on everything and then the poll is about away and
02:02:45.400
then what the po is active right now and then the poll is active right now all right perfect good
02:02:49.560
good call so let's scroll all the way to the top and we'll go to that little kind of list of the
02:02:53.400
issues and we'll just hit them quick one by one yep summarize and then you guys will be able to
02:02:57.400
come up with what you guys think as far as uh do you think he's going to walk again guys this is
02:03:01.960
not is is he guilty we've already established we're not talking about the facts i see you guys in
02:03:06.120
the chat talking about facts yeah this isn't about the facts guys like get away from the facts this is
02:03:11.080
about the law here and when i'm talking we're talking about the fentanyl that's a fact that the
02:03:15.400
case that's not for appeal the appellate issue is whether or not they should have let the evidence in
02:03:20.600
yeah it's not whether or not that caused his death yeah that doesn't matter that's irrelevant
02:03:25.000
yeah so it's where again okay uh the top the very top one where we had like the really short
02:03:28.760
points right there issues presented for review yeah right here so number one number one guys
02:03:33.160
venue should have been changed jury fully sequestered or delayed due to the publicity
02:03:37.480
okay then you changed yeah that's a strong point very strong trial delayed strong point sequestered
02:03:44.520
weak point weak point yep next okay second police officer can be charged with felony murder with
02:03:49.960
assault as a predicate defense this is a super strong point yeah this is a insane piece of law
02:03:56.440
that has no precedent and if you look at the a opposite means opposing so the the law that goes
02:04:02.280
against how they ruled so that's state versus dorian 887 northwest to second district 829 you
02:04:07.880
guys can look that up yep uh by the way this is linked but in the description you can look up that
02:04:11.320
case and read it it's clear you cannot do this you cannot go for assault to felony like what the
02:04:16.760
or assault to felony murder sorry right now the third point whether allowing seven witnesses to
02:04:21.480
testify on reasonable use of force is cumulative evidence justifying reversal i would say this is a
02:04:26.920
medium point this is pretty good i mean they shouldn't have brought in that many witnesses i don't
02:04:31.240
think they'll overturn it on that alone but this doesn't look good they brought in way too many
02:04:35.400
witnesses and now we from me me and you breaking it down we know why they did that yeah because they
02:04:40.680
redacted the the picture of the knee on the neck because seven of those witnesses were minneapolis
02:04:46.440
police officers yes so so that makes sense why they would because they would have to question them
02:04:51.080
well it's in your training putting knees on necks so explain that so that would put the city in a bad
02:04:55.960
position so now we know why they redacted it so yeah i would say this is a medium point there could have
02:04:59.400
been more riots over that training material we should we should measure so the first one the
02:05:02.840
first one with the with the venue and everything else like that i would say pretty serious because
02:05:06.920
minneapolis like where they had the venue was serious waiting was serious when there were
02:05:10.520
riots going on dante right situation that's good sequestering was bad yeah and then and then
02:05:14.280
the second one as far as the the law serious very serious very serious this one is medium medium
02:05:19.800
yeah next four next four okay keep going all right prosecutorial misconduct justifies
02:05:24.760
reversal this is really bad the the failure to disclose is pretty bad yeah i'm gonna say it's
02:05:30.040
it's me it's medium to bad this is pretty bad i mean not giving information in a timely manner
02:05:36.040
to the defense is really bad it's taken very seriously and because of that this is this is
02:05:42.120
another one that could be grounds i think this is very serious very serious because i've been there man
02:05:47.960
when discovery isn't i think this is one of the worst ones man yeah you need to give everything you
02:05:53.480
have over to the other side that's the whole point each side exchanges information you as a lawyer i
02:05:59.400
have a duty of candor to the court and candor to the opposing counsel that means i have to be honest
02:06:03.880
with them so i have to be honest to the court and honest to my opposing counsel yep and because they
02:06:09.000
didn't do that yeah not only could this get overturned but those those attorneys for the state
02:06:15.880
could all lose their law licenses they could be disbarred they could be fined
02:06:22.440
ethical issues man huge ethical ethical issues here huge this is huge whether not allowing chauvin
02:06:28.280
to present a complete defense justifies reverse so this is the part about allowing him to enter in the
02:06:33.320
evidence of the fentanyl this is a big deal they should have allowed it in oh also the training
02:06:38.440
material so this is both the training materials okay and the fentanyl yeah so that's so he as a
02:06:43.320
complete defense means entering all the evidence yeah right not allowing that in is big yeah on his part
02:06:50.760
yeah it's big and hiding the the redacting it was not a good move yeah you should not have done that
02:06:55.640
shouldn't have redacted it but now we know why they did that once again so it wouldn't make
02:06:59.000
their seven witnesses look bad exactly exactly guys there's always a reason for this there's
02:07:03.080
always a reason for this you got to think beyond guys like the video you would not have been able to
02:07:07.000
come to that conclusion had you not been had me here with my law enforcement experience and a
02:07:10.520
lawyer in here breaking this down for you those two regular people oh let me just do this you would not
02:07:14.760
have been that we just figured it out why yeah why did it redacted that yeah there's seven
02:07:19.640
witnesses on use of force literally would have looked stupid if they would have had a picture
02:07:24.040
there with the guy knee on the neck minneapolis police department training video yep would have
02:07:29.720
looked real bad would look really bad real bad all right let's continue on all right um whether failure
02:07:35.560
to record sidebars resulted in a violation of a fair run no this is bad well this is a weak argument
02:07:40.680
a weak argument it's a sidebar it's actually technically not even part of the record what's
02:07:44.680
important from a sidebar is the ultimate result how the judge rules and that is recorded so this
02:07:49.640
is a weak ass argument on the part of the defense so yeah not a good argument on the part of the
02:07:53.960
defense yeah and last one whether an upward departure in sentence was justified so this is
02:07:59.160
one where he gave a part answer partly it was partly it wasn't it was justified because it was cruel
02:08:05.640
that was justified but they screwed up by adding in the because he was in position of authority
02:08:11.720
that's unprecedented it doesn't exist in the guidelines it's nowhere so why did you have to
02:08:17.240
add that that's a screw up now the thing about this one is because it's sentencing if they did
02:08:21.960
rule in chauvin's favor on this one he doesn't get off he just gets a reduced sentence yeah yeah
02:08:26.600
so this one is is medium this is yeah they had it right half 50 right right this is at this point
02:08:31.240
he's guilty so that's sentencing which is the separate part wait was there more to that that was
02:08:35.320
it no that's it okay point so uh i want to see what the people think so what is the poll what is
02:08:39.560
the poll i want to see do you guys think he's gonna walk oh and then the juror the juror so
02:08:44.600
that was part of uh the impartial yeah yeah yeah but but that bro the jury was big too the jury was
02:08:49.160
huge yeah okay i'm i want to see what the audience says and then we'll give our predictions yeah yeah
02:08:53.720
and it's super chat here meaning that if he walks it has nothing to do with being innocent or guilty
02:08:56.920
all this with errors in the case just understand yes so because this is an appeal because it's not an
02:09:02.360
appeal this is just about errors this isn't about the facts yes guys so guys you guys are all on your
02:09:08.040
feelings on this but this is about the facts in the law the case is the guys the facts of the case
02:09:13.240
is done okay as far as we're concerned chauvin killed floyd we know that so now it's about did
02:09:19.880
he get a fair trial to prove that okay so we got wow 61 said yes 38 said no 368 votes so what do you
02:09:30.440
think myron want to give your take and i'll give my take yeah you you of course you're gonna go last
02:09:34.360
so i'm definitely gonna go yeah um okay but i gotta take it yeah uh i think there's a damn
02:09:40.040
good chance he's gonna walk and and i will say that the the the most egregious things from my opinion
02:09:46.760
are discovery not getting pushed over because i've seen literally cases lose just because of that and
02:09:51.800
and people literally i've seen heads roll i've seen district judges literally almost make attorneys
02:09:58.280
cry bro make a you'll say and see and make attorneys cry the federal system takes um i think it's rule
02:10:03.560
42 in the federal system discovery extremely serious so i think that's a big problem and then
02:10:09.800
uh the juror and if they don't if they don't indict him i don't know what the fuck is going on he
02:10:16.360
needs to go to jail yeah he needs to go to jail for undermining uh for undermining the the judicial
02:10:20.680
process yes uh and then what else what else was bad i think the training thing was bad that they
02:10:27.000
didn't disclose it that was that was just like why the fuck did you guys why are you hiding that you
02:10:30.600
just opened up a door for no reason that could have easily been defeated but it makes sense now
02:10:33.720
because a bunch of their witnesses for from minneapolis police department stupid um what
02:10:38.920
they should have done was pull another police department that does use the force the state
02:10:42.280
police what they should this is what they should have done and they did and they did have one of
02:10:45.160
those officers i believe one of those officers from like la like one of them was from could have used
02:10:49.080
anyone but they they could have just used him yeah so that solves two of their objections so
02:10:54.120
remember there are two issues one was the cumulative evidence having a bunch of witnesses for one
02:10:58.600
issue right that was one objection and the the hiding the training video so guess what have
02:11:05.400
one officer do use of force from outside of the department and then have one do it from inside
02:11:11.640
the department but he has no he's no relation to the training he like didn't do it he didn't put it
02:11:15.400
together like he wasn't involved in it at all exactly he wasn't involved in coordination because
02:11:19.560
i guarantee you some of those officers were yeah they could they could guarantee they were they
02:11:22.680
should use the minnesota state police because their training is going to be very similar to
02:11:25.960
the minneapolis state police they should have used them and then use that and then not use the
02:11:30.360
own officer so they wouldn't look as bad using their own training tapes but that's a whole other
02:11:34.280
thing stupid um so i think okay the discovery the juror that is out here wearing black lives matter
02:11:40.120
and no knees on next or whatever terrible terrible you should never been selected that that's so bad
02:11:43.960
on his social media um because now now he literally he lied he lied and he went on a radio station
02:11:49.960
after to add insult to injury um and then what else uh the other there was one other thing that was
02:11:55.800
really bad um that i was gonna say uh the the um the fentanyl that's not that's not there was one
02:12:03.400
of the evidence about fentanyl no there was one of the thing that like actually waters huh the statement
02:12:08.600
to fight in the streets get confrontational that was that was real bad that was real bad dude they can
02:12:14.280
end it just on that on that on that alone is the fact that the judge said at trial this is in the
02:12:18.920
record like i remember hearing this live and i was with lawyers and we were like what because it was
02:12:23.880
like a judge never says yeah like this can this alone can overturn it on appeal any other circumstance
02:12:30.920
would have it would have been a mistrial right there but he was scared he was scared peter yeah he
02:12:34.840
was terrified he was terrified oh now i know what it was um the ridiculous coverage by the media
02:12:41.880
and the fact that they did not move the venue i can't believe they'd actually held the trial
02:12:45.800
minneapolis yeah yeah i can't believe that stupid as fuck which they learned their lesson with the
02:12:50.840
rain house case they moved it it was not it was not it was not where uh where it occurred which was
02:12:56.120
smart yeah so uh all right man you give it away but yeah uh let's just read the super chat the case
02:13:02.120
impacts international soccer and sports in the world he will not win the appeal even if only because
02:13:05.720
the backlash yeah that would be huge and i think jeffro said the case was 1999 appealed to not work
02:13:09.720
innocent project got governor clemency in 2021 appeals failed yeah once again 99 uh that was
02:13:14.440
before a lot of this a lot of the movements in order to review these cases and uh you know
02:13:18.280
overturned some of these uh these old bad cases 1999 is years ago yeah bro um things have changed
02:13:24.680
cookies are yeah bro uh i leave tomorrow but uh yeah i'll be back in three weeks yeah he's gonna be
02:13:30.520
back and we're gonna do more i see you guys in the chat you guys love this so i mean i know some of
02:13:33.960
you guys are like yo um you know this is a sensitive case i get it but hey man you ain't gonna get
02:13:38.920
an unbiased uh situation like this so uh give us your okay the appeal at this level fails i think
02:13:49.880
these appellate court so here's my take there's three levels of the court there's the trial court
02:13:55.960
there's the appellate court which in the middle and there's the supreme court yes and i think the
02:14:00.520
appellate court is going to be scared they're going to be scared of what's going to happen if they
02:14:05.000
overturn this so maybe at most i think because they're going to be scared and this is so serious
02:14:10.920
they're they may modify the sentencing like they may have the balls to just modify the sensing but
02:14:15.720
not overturn the verdict but i think that goes to the supreme court and i think at the supreme court
02:14:21.000
they find one of the heirs i think there's too many all the way i just remember no just the state
02:14:25.880
supreme court right now okay okay okay but but it still could go to supreme court it could okay you
02:14:32.040
don't see it going but i think it can go to the state supreme court and they'll do it so at least
02:14:36.120
they show they took it seriously yeah because this is the george floyd case this is not the billy bob
02:14:40.760
case yeah this is a huge case and the fact that you guys are fired up in the chat shows how important
02:14:45.640
this is yeah right that like you guys are the proof you know that this is an important case they're over
02:14:50.920
here arguing the facts and shit we're like bro this is not about the facts anymore this is right
02:14:54.360
this is about the law the law and the trial itself and they screwed up on the law they really did they
02:15:00.040
made too many errors that a basic lawyer should never have made so it's going to go up i think
02:15:06.200
it's going to get there there and i think if they're finding an error it's going to be the state supreme
02:15:10.760
court level and that's where chauvin will walk damn i like that prediction bro that right there
02:15:16.200
you ain't gonna get that nowhere else nowhere else yeah you know what bro yeah you're so so he's going
02:15:21.960
to walk but it's going to be you know what you're right because the appellate court is just three dudes
02:15:25.560
it's like yeah there's too much heat no uh no we're good yeah guys that that's uh i like that
02:15:35.800
do you see do you foresee this going to the supreme court uh yeah it can't go to it can't you mean
02:15:40.440
u.s supreme court or states i'm talking about u.s supreme court it's gonna go say some cream
02:15:43.480
court yeah state supreme court i think it'll go um for sure i could i could see this one new
02:15:49.080
supreme because of the you know what it's because of the felony charge that is such a i will say one
02:15:53.640
thing that's so bad for the law is that is that interpretation that's that bad take on felony
02:16:00.040
murder yeah that could literally change the entire law in all the united states the impact on that
02:16:06.280
every crime will be a felony murder every single manslaughter every single involuntary homicide
02:16:12.040
they're all felony murder now because of this case it's insane it can't stand that's got to be
02:16:18.920
overturned that's a big problem that's a huge problem bro you're right you're if anything
02:16:27.640
that that's got to get fixed so that's got to get fixed you can't have that precedent on the books you
02:16:31.720
can't you can't do it they guys they screwed up the prosecutors screwed up on this man blame the
02:16:36.840
prosecutors blame the prosecutors we we know chauvin's guilty but the prosecutors might help him
02:16:42.200
fucking what bro all they had to do was do a lesser charge and they would have got him 100 in
02:16:46.680
the bag for sure it's an overcharge it's literally like you know like you're playing basketball you
02:16:51.800
got that one guy that's just doing all these random crossovers for no reason when it's like open lane
02:16:56.200
to the hoop he's just like doing this yeah yeah i got this whoo try to get the uh you know what's
02:17:01.000
that game nba street yeah special up doesn't get up in time and the shot clock runs out and you lose
02:17:05.640
by one point that's what the prosecution did here trying to be fancy for no reason yeah no reason they
02:17:11.000
didn't need to do this guys all they had to do was walk this in they only had to do the layup and
02:17:16.120
the prosecution because they were fired up because the mob was out there because maxine waters was
02:17:21.480
saying we need a guilty yeah we gotta first degree we gotta get caught in first degree and you know
02:17:26.200
what's so funny it shows how ignorant he was because she he wasn't even charged derek chauvin wasn't even
02:17:33.560
charged with first degree murder and this ignorant woman is out there in the streets saying give him
02:17:40.680
first degree this shows they had no respect for the rule of law no respect for the process and they
02:17:45.640
didn't understand the law they didn't even know the charges they didn't even know the facts nothing
02:17:49.560
they just were there with their emotions protesting like a bunch of retards and uh and and now this guy
02:17:54.840
might walk bro a murderer might honestly walk but just because people want to get in their feelings
02:17:59.400
because they couldn't do it right because they got emotional damage yeah man anyway guys like the video
02:18:06.120
subscribe to legal mindset okay subscribe to this channel hope you guys enjoyed this thing 1.3k 1.2k
02:18:11.320
almost 100 engagement guys thank you so much thank you appreciate it that's amazing guys all the
02:18:15.560
ninjas out there that were able to put their feelings aside and listen to the case and listen to the appeal
02:18:19.800
guys because like i said before hey it's done he killed him we know that now we need to talk about
02:18:24.440
how the trial went were his rights violated and guys i mean y'all saw a sixth amendment i didn't make it it
02:18:30.920
just it just says it's a right amendment a right to be tried by your peers impartially guys man he
02:18:40.040
might i i like your prediction man yeah so one more time for the people out there what's that my
02:18:44.440
prediction one more time is that the appellate court is going to puss out because it's too hot
02:18:50.120
it's too hot to touch it's going to go to the state supreme court the state supreme court will be the
02:18:54.440
ones to overturn it yeah they'll be the ones to find one of these issues at least one of them and i'll
02:19:00.280
take it a step further a little addition for the people out here if this goes to supreme court
02:19:04.200
federally yeah it's 100 it's dead it's dead it's getting overturned it's dead if it goes federal
02:19:09.400
the discovery alone is they're going to say are you serious are you kidding me this is like
02:19:12.920
ridiculous like in the felony the felony murder thing they're like no yeah just no if this goes
02:19:17.160
federally supreme court it's it's a wrap the juror alone is going to it up and and
02:19:21.160
and uh and that government the lady going up and said vaccine water showing up that's ridiculous
02:19:26.280
ridiculous man ridiculous here's legal mindset check them out guys go subscribe to his youtube
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channel subscribe to this one fed at 18 11. we're gonna when he comes back you're gonna come back
02:19:33.320
in oh yeah in the may june yeah you know what guys comment below what case you want me and andrew to
02:19:38.520
break down together we'll break down anything you guys got you want to do something happier than this
02:19:41.960
they'll do it whatever not that any kids is happy yeah but we'll break down anything for you guys i'm
02:19:45.480
happy to do this and i'm glad to be the first like in-person collab yeah you're the first first one
02:19:49.320
if you guys like this these in-person collabs like but myron know so he can you know have other
02:19:53.480
people on too yeah and that's probably gonna be you bro okay all right guys love y'all man peace peace
02:20:01.160
uh ncis okay uh okay all right let's let's break this down