Derek Chauvin trial: George Floyd’s girlfriend Courteney Ross testifies
George Floyd’s girlfriend breaks down in court as she reveals they were both addicted to opioids – and the drugs were sold by his friend who refuses to testify at Derek Chauvin’s murder trial
- Derek Chauvin’s trial over the death of George Floyd resumed on Thursday morning in Minneapolis
- The first witness called was Floyd’s girlfriend Courteney Ross, who broke down in tears within minutes
- She described how she and Floyd first met in 2017 at the Salvation Army, where he worked as a security guard
- Ross also spoke of how both she and Floyd were addicted to oxycodone, a prescription opioid painkiller
- She said they purchased pills from Floyd’s friend Morries Lester Hall, who was with him on the day he died
- Hall, a key witness for the state, filed a shock notice on Wednesday stating that he will not testify
George Floyd‘s girlfriend Courteney Ross revealed today that that they both purchased opioids from a friend who was in the passenger seat of Floyd’s car on the day he died and is now refusing to testify at Derek Chauvin’s murder trial.
The friend, Morries Lester Hall, a key witness for the state, filed a shock notice on Wednesday stating that he plans to invoke the Fifth Amendment against self-incrimination, meaning that he will not testify.
When Ross was cross-examined by Chauvin’s attorney Eric Nelson on Thursday, jurors heard that Hall sold controlled substances to both her and Floyd and that she ‘did not like Morries at all’.
Ross told the court how, in March 2020, just two months before Floyd’s death, he purchased pills that she did not recognize as the opioids to which both she and Floyd were addicted.
She said the pills, which she believes landed Floyd in the hospital due to an accidental overdose, appeared ‘thick’ and were not uniform, and that when she took them they did not have the same effect as opioids.
‘The pill seemed like it was a really strong stimulant. I couldn’t sleep all night. I felt very jittery,’ Hall said.
Earlier Assistant Attorney General Matthew Frank had broached the issue of Floyd’s drug use in an attempt defuse any damage that it might do should the jurors hear of it first from the defense.
George Floyd’s girlfriend Courteney Ross (left) broke down in tears within minutes of taking the stand at Derek Chauvin’s trial murder trial on Thursday as she described how they first met in 2017. Floyd and Ross are pictured right in an undated photo
Ross spoke of how both she and Floyd were addicted to opioids and said they purchased pills from Floyd’s friend Morries Lester Hall (pictured), who was with him on the day he died and is now refusing to testify. Hall is pictured left in an interview and right in body camera footage from the day Floyd died
Chauvin is seen (right) in court on Thursday, dressed in a light gray suit, white shirt and gray tie
Ross also revealed that Floyd had been hospitalized twice in March – on one occasion due to a drug overdose that saw him hospitalized for five days.
Clearly trying to draw a parallel between the symptoms of which Floyd complained the day he died and the earlier known overdose, Nelson asked if Ross noticed ‘foam coming from his mouth…a dry white substance’, when she took Floyd to hospital in March.
She said ‘yes’ and that he had complained of his stomach hurting and was ‘doubled-over in pain’.
According to Ross, on one occasion when she took pills believed to be bought from Hall she ‘felt like she was going to die.’
Ross went onto reveal that as well as noticing a change in Floyd’s behavior in the weeks before his death, she and Floyd bought pills from Hall one week prior to Floyd’s death.
Digging into his drug use Nelson asked Ross if she had told the FBI that there had been times when Floyd would be ‘up and bouncing around’ and other times when he would be ‘unintelligible’.
The defense has contended that Floyd died not from Chauvin’s knee on his neck, but from an accidental overdose of methampthetamine and fentanyl – high levels of which were found in his system.
In another surprising moment, Ross revealed that Floyd’s nickname for her was ‘Mamma’, suggesting that he may have been calling out for her when he was pinned down by police on May 25, 2020.
Floyd family attorneys Ben Crump and Antonio Romanucci released a statement after Ross’s testimony blasting the defense’s efforts bring Floyd’s drug use to the forefront of the case.
‘As the defense attempts to construct the narrative that George Floyd’s cause of death was the Fentanyl in his system, we want to remind the world who witnessed his death on video that George was walking, talking, laughing, and breathing just fine before Derek Chauvin held his knee to George’s neck, blocking his ability to breathe and extinguishing his life for all to see,’ the statement read.
Ross began crying even harder when Assistant Attorney General Matthew Frank pulled up the photo above of Floyd, which she described as a ‘dad selfie’
‘Tens of thousands of Americans struggle with self-medication and opioid abuse and are treated with dignity, respect and support, not brutality. We fully expected the defense to put George’s character and struggles with addiction on trial because that is the go-to tactic when the facts are not on your side.
‘We are confident that the jury will see past that to arrive at the truth – that George Floyd would have lived to see another day if Derek Chauvin hadn’t brutally ended his life in front of a crowd of witnesses pleading for his life.’
Ross broke down in tears within minutes of taking the stand as she described how she and Floyd first met in 2017 at the Salvation Army’s Harbor Light Center, a shelter where he was working as a security guard and she was visiting her son’s father.
The married mother-of-two said she was touched when Floyd asked to pray with her because she was going through a hard time in her own life – and they kissed in the lobby that same day.
Ross – who wore a gold necklace with her late boyfriend’s name – began crying even harder when Frank pulled up a photo of Floyd.
Then she laughed as she called the photo a ‘dad selfie’, before telling how hard it was for Floyd to be so far away from his two daughters, who lived in Texas.
She described the man who had called out for his mother in his dying moments as ‘a mama’s boy’ who was ‘devastated’ and ‘broken’ by her death in May 2018.
‘He seemed like a shell of himself like he was broken, he seemed so sad,’ she said. ‘He didn’t have the same kind of bounce that he had.’
Hall is seen (left in a red hat) with Floyd (right in a black tank top) inside the Cup Foods in Minneapolis on May 25, 2020, moments before police were called to investigate a fake $20 bill Floyd used to buy cigarettes
Ross was then asked to tackle head on the issue of drug abuse with which, she admitted, both she and Floyd struggled.
She said that they were both addicted to opioids having been prescribed them for chronic pain – including oxycodone, which he took in pill form, obtaining it through other people’s prescriptions to make sure the pills were safe.
‘Both Floyd and I, our story — it’s a classic story of how many people get addicted to opioids. We both suffered from chronic pain. Mine was in my neck and his was in his back.
‘We both have prescriptions. But after prescriptions that were filled, and we got addicted, and tried really hard to break that addiction many times.’
Ross said Floyd was an active man who would ‘run to the corner store’ to keep fit, and but explained that he was crippled by the neck injury that led to his opioid addiction.
Though he tried to get clean, she said it was something that he struggled with ‘every day’.
In March 2020, she said, she noticed ‘behavioral changes’ that made her suspect that Floyd was using again, or more, and that she too fell into heavier use at that time.
Around that same time Floyd tested positive for COVID-19 and quarantined with his roommates, who were also infected, Ross said.
In his opening statement trial attorney Jerry Blackwell promised to show that Floyd was ‘somebody to a lot of somebodies’. Ross, a ‘spark of life’ witness for the state, was there to show just that.
This is the second time that the prosecution has brought up Floyd’s struggles with drugs in a tactic designed to defuse the damage that might be done should the defense be the first to raise this aspect of his life.
Yesterday, jurors heard from Cup Foods clerk Christopher Martin who said that he clearly saw that Floyd was ‘high’.
Today, Ross told the jurors how she met the man she called ‘Floyd’ – one of her favorite stories.
‘In August 2017 I had gotten off work one night I worked in a coffee shop for 22 years now part time and I was tired and had just cleaned up and closed up the shop and went to go visit my son’s father who was staying at Harbor Lights the Salvation Army shelter,’ she said.
‘I entered Harbor Lights and when you visit there you have to ask for a person to come down so I had the receptionist call him down but he didn’t seem to be coming so I waited in the lobby I wanted to talk to him about our son’s birthday.
‘I was pretty upset and I started kind of fussing in the corner of the lobby and at one point Floyd came to me, Floyd had this great deep southern voice, raspy, [he said]: “Sis, you okay, sis?” And I wasn’t okay. And he said: ‘Well can I pray with you?’
‘I was tired. We’d been through so much, my sons and I. This kind person, just to come up to me [and say]: “Can I pray with you,” I’m alone in this lobby, it was so sweet. At the time, I had had lost a lot of faith in God.’
Ross’s account followed an intense day of testimony on Wednesday which saw the prosecution introduce multiple never-before-seen videos – including footage from Derek Chauvin’s body camera – and multiple witnesses break down on the stand as they narrated their role in the case.
Throughout the trial Chauvin has sat silent and expressionless next to his lawyer, taking copious notes on the evidence presented. He did the same on Thursday, dressed in a light gray suit, white shirt and gray tie.
The 45-year-old, who was fired from the Minneapolis Police Department in the wake of Floyd’s death, is charged on three counts in connection with Floyd’s death: second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.
If convicted on the most serious count, Chauvin faces a possible 40 years in prison.
If found guilty of manslaughter he faces a maximum penalty of ten years though he could be free within five.
Much hangs on the outcome of this trial – not least the likely fates of Thomas Lane, 38; J Alexander Keung, 27; and Tou Thao, 35; the three officers currently awaiting trial for aiding and abetting in Floyd’s death.
Members of the Floyd family arrive at the Hennepin County Courthouse for the fourth day of Chauvin’s trial on Thursday
A protester holds his sign in front of the fortified fence and National Guard vehicle protecting the Hennepin County Government Center on Thursday morning
Deputies stop a car driving into the secured Hennepin County Government Center underground parking area on Thursday
After Ross stepped down the jury was shocking new images of EMTs loading Floyd into an ambulance and attempting to resuscitate him after he was driven from the scene at Cup Foods on May 25, 2020.
Paramedics Seth Bravinder and Derek Smith were asked by the prosecution to explain what was happening in graphic video and stills of Floyd being placed on a stretcher and treated in the ambulance.
Some of the images came from video recorded by witnesses on the scene, while others came from the body camera of officer Thomas Lane, who rode with Floyd to the hospital.
Asked to describe Floyd’s condition, Smith said: ‘In lay terms, I thought he was dead,’ as the prosecution showed a screengrab of him checking for Floyd’s pulse.
Video showed Smith gesturing to Chauvin to remove his knee from Floyd’s neck so they could put his limp body on a stretcher.
Paramedic Derek Smith (left), who checked George Floyd’s pulse before Derek Chauvin lifted his knee (right), testified at the former officer’s murder trial on Thursday and said: ‘I thought he was dead’
Video showed Smith gesturing to Chauvin to remove his knee from Floyd’s neck so they could put his limp body on a stretcher
Jurors in Derek Chauvin’s murder trial were shown shocking new images on Thursday of paramedics attempts to resuscitate George Floyd after he was loaded into an ambulance and driven from the scene at Cup Foods
Body camera footage showed Floyd strapped into a Lucas device – a mechanical method of delivering chest compressions – after he had flat-lined in the ambulance
In images shown during Smith’s testimony, Floyd was seen slumped, and with his mouth bloodied as Smith said he did not have an obvious physical injury that would explain his dire condition.
Smith told the court that Floyd’s pupils were ‘large and dilated’.
Earlier the court heard extensive evidence about Floyd’s struggles with opioid addiction. According to the defense Floyd died as a result of an overdose and not of asphyxiation.
Bravinder was asked during his testimony what a medic would expect to see in the eyes of a patient who had suffered an opioid overdose. ‘We look to see if their pupils are really small, constricted, pinpoint,’ he said.
But when Nelson countered, asking what methamphetamine – one of the substances found in Floyd’s blood – does to the pupils, Bravinder said: ‘It dilates them.’
Paramedic Seth Bravinder (pictured) also testified on Thursday morning and said Floyd ‘flat-lined’ in the ambulance
Smith told the court that he detected a flicker of electrical activity in Floyd’s heart as they sped to the Hennepin County Medical Center and administered a shock in hopes of restarting a pulse. But, he said, Floyd remained ‘in his dead state’.
Images shown during Bravinder’s testimony showed Smith cutting Floyd’s shirt and preparing to put in an IV line as he began attempts to resuscitate him on the way to Hennepin County Medical Center.
Both Bravinder and Smith testified that they wanted to get Floyd into the ambulance quickly because he was in cardiac arrest.
Bravinder added: ‘On top of that there was also a crowd of people who were yelling and in my mind we had to get away from that because running a cardiac arrest takes lot of mental power, can be taxing and we want to do that in the optimum environment …to be in a controlled space.’
Bravinder said he stopped the ambulance en route to the hospital and went into the back to assist his partner when Floyd’s cardiac monitor was showing ‘asystole’ – the medical term for ‘flat-lined’.
‘It’s not a good sign,’ Bravinder said. ‘Basically just because your heart isn’t doing anything at that moment. There’s not — it’s not pumping blood. So it’s not — it’s not a good sign for a good outcome.’
Floyd was shown strapped into a Lucas device – a mechanical method of delivering chest compressions – after he had flat-lined as medics desperately tried to restore a heartbeat and ventilate him by placing an airway device in his mouth.
According to Bravinder, despite all efforts which included drilling a drip into bone in Floyd’s leg – a common technique in cardiac arrest when medics struggle to get Intra Vascular (IV) access – Floyd never regained a pulse during his treatment of him.
As Smith also recalled, Bravinder said at one point Floyd showed ‘pulseless electrical activity’ when his heart monitor picked up flickers of electrical rhythms but these were never strong enough to establish a pulse.
When prosecutor Erin Eldridge asked if it was important to start resuscitation efforts as soon as a pulse was lost, Bravinder said: ‘Yes, as soon as possible.’
‘The longer a patient goes without receiving resuscitation the less likely it is that resuscitation will be successful.’
Cross-examined by Nelson, Bravinder confirmed that he had personally been called out to emergencies involving drug overdoses and that police were called to such cases as a matter of course.
Nelson asked: ‘Is that because sometimes when people are treated for an overdose and they come round they become aggressive and violent?’
Bravinder responded: ‘Yes.’
On re-direct, Eldridge asked Bravinder: ‘Did you see someone who appeared to be unresponsive?’
He replied: ‘From what I could tell just standing from a distance, yes.’
Asked about Floyd’s state in the ambulance, Bravinder said: ‘I guess limp would be the best description. He wasn’t — he was unresponsive and wasn’t holding his head up or anything like that.’
Officer Thomas Lane is seen administering chest compressions in the back of the ambulance on the way to the hospital
Bravinder said he stopped the ambulance en route to the hospital and went into the back to assist his partner when Floyd’s cardiac monitor was showing ‘asystole’ – the medical term for ‘flat-lined’
Video then showed paramedics removing Floyd from the ambulance at a hospital, where he was pronounced dead
Over the first four days of testimony the prosecution has sought to paint an extensive and painful portrait of what happened on the day Floyd died, through videos and testimony from people who watched it unfold.
Wednesday’s hearing ended with testimony from Lt Jeff Rugel, who runs the Minneapolis Police Department’s Business Technology Unit and was called to authenticate officers’ body camera footage and other video evidence from the scene.
Brief footage from Chauvin’s body camera was played during Rugel’s testimony, revealing the officer’s perspective as he approached Floyd for the first time.
Chauvin was seen with his hands around Floyd’s neck as he and Officer Thomas Lane struggled with to get him into a squad car.
After a chaotic, blurred portion of footage, Chauvin’s camera fell to the tarmac and there was no more footage from his perspective.
In footage recorded by Lane’s body camera, Chauvin’s camera could be seen lying beneath the squad car.
It’s unclear exactly how the camera came to be on the ground during the confrontation.
Chauvin was seen with his hands around Floyd’s neck in never-before-released footage from the officer’s body camera played at his murder trial on Wednesday
Chauvin is seen struggling with Floyd in footage from Officer Tou Thao’s body camera
In footage recorded by Officer Thomas Lane’s body camera, Chauvin’s camera could be seen lying beneath the squad car
The footage from Lane’s camera had already been released publicly but had not been seen by any of the impaneled jurors and this is the first time that an expert witness has highlighted the discarded body camera.
Rugel told the jury how that Minneapolis police policy demands that officers wear their cameras at all times and to activate them during any activity or public interaction.
Lane activate his from inside the squad car as he and Officer J Alexander Keung arrived at Cup Foods and the footage ran through that initial encounter as the officer cuffed Floyd and urged him to stop resisting through the agonizing moments when he joined Keung and Chauvin in holding the man down.
As the encounter progressed the initial calm with which Floyd accompanied the officers across to their squad car deteriorated as the officers struggled to get him into the car.
Cuffed and chaotic Floyd started shouting that he can’t breathe as the officers attempt to get him into the back of the vehicle, ultimately wriggling out through the other door at which point Chauvin arrives.
Lane can be heard saying: ‘Just take him out,’ and is quickly pulled from the car and down onto the street.
The prosecution went onto show the distressing body-camera footage from both Keung and Officer Tou Thao’s body-worn cameras.
Asked if Chauvin also wore a body camera and if, based on his experience and expertise, that was ‘the box on the floor [beneath squad car 320]’, Rugel said: ‘Yes.’
The court then saw previously unseen footage from Chauvin’s body camera as he and Thao sped toward Cup Foods in their squad car.
The footage was paused as Chauvin’s hand reached toward the camera.
Judge Peter Cahill excused the jury for the day after each segment of body camera footage had been viewed and entered into evidence.
Rugel remained on the stand to answer technical questions from Nelson regarding the length and editing of the footage, as well as Minneapolis police policy regarding their usage.
Other developments on Wednesday included:
- Witness Charles McMillian, 61, who was the first person to confront police about their treatment of Floyd on the day of his fatal arrest, broke down in tears as the prosecution played footage of cops wrestling with the handcuffed black man
- Cup Foods clerk Christopher Martin testified about how his co-worker called the cops after he suspected that a $20 bill Floyd used to pay for cigarettes was fake
- Off-duty firefighter and EMT Genevieve Hansen, 27, returned to the stand after her testimony was cut short on Tuesday when Judge Peter Cahill reprimanded her for repeatedly interrupting and talking back to the defense attorney during cross examination
- The court abruptly went into recess during Martin’s testimony after a juror reported feeling faint and suffering a ‘dizzy spell’ due to what she labeled as anxiety
- Cup Foods broadcasted the trial live on a TV as the convenience store was thrust back into the spotlight over its connection to Floyd’s death