You must know if you make a statement like that, that Floyd didn't die on the scene but actually died in the hospital you should be prepared to back it up.
It's not my fault stories have disappeared off the internet. I thought that because I saw it, everyone else here saw it. They seem to see everything else.
He could have been pronounced dead on the scene, but he wasn't.
The whole thing was a sham. The people filming the event close up don't appear in footage shot from other locations, meaning that it might have been staged.
It was in the testimony of the hospital staff I believe. Stating that they drew blood from him while he was still alive. There was a technical term for doing this procedure while alive and a different name for the same thing but the person is dead. It was in the paperwork that the alive version was done at the hospital. I remember reading it during the trial.
There is nothing in that news story that says Floyd died in the hospital though.
Not in that story, but it was repressed and I only saw it in one or two places. But it does say Floyd wasn't murdered.
You must know if you make a statement like that, that Floyd didn't die on the scene but actually died in the hospital you should be prepared to back it up.
It's not my fault stories have disappeared off the internet. I thought that because I saw it, everyone else here saw it. They seem to see everything else.
If you believe the NY Times, they reported that Floyd was pronounced dead an hour after Chauvin's kneeling stunt. https://www.nytimes.com/2021/04/01/us/george-floyd-emt-paramedics.html
He could have been pronounced dead on the scene, but he wasn't.
The whole thing was a sham. The people filming the event close up don't appear in footage shot from other locations, meaning that it might have been staged.
I get a paywall and can't read the article.
Sounds like you and I agree that the EMTs behaved very strangely though.
Don't they immediately try to revive the patient?
Don't they ask the police how long the patient has been unconscious? Don't they ask if the patient has sustained any injury?
It was in the testimony of the hospital staff I believe. Stating that they drew blood from him while he was still alive. There was a technical term for doing this procedure while alive and a different name for the same thing but the person is dead. It was in the paperwork that the alive version was done at the hospital. I remember reading it during the trial.