2021
April
21
Wednesday

Monitor Daily Podcast

April 21, 2021
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As we digest the rare guilty verdict for a police officer in the death of Black man, three things stand out in the Derek Chauvin trial.  

• First, the unified stand taken by Minneapolis police. There was no code of silence, no corrupt brotherhood of the badge. Rather, we saw multiple officers construct a blue wall of integrity. Police Chief Medaria Arradondo testified that what former officer Chauvin did was “not part of our training, and is certainly not part of our ethics or our values.”

• Second, the wisdom of putting on the stand a 9-year-old girl who had witnessed George Floyd’s death. Even a child, jurors were told, understood Mr. Chauvin’s behavior was wrong. 

• Third, the composition of the jury: six white jurors, and six Black or multiracial people. Seven were women; five were men. They included a nurse, an immigrant, an auditor, and a grandmother. This was a jury of America – and it reached a united conclusion.

Still, a man died under the knee of a cop. “I would not call today’s verdict justice, however, because justice implies true restoration,” Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison said after the verdict. “But it is accountability, which is the first step towards justice.” 

Yes, a first step. This case alone won’t transform the U.S. criminal justice system. But it produced a seismic impulse for humanity to confront racial inequality (more on that below). And in a court of law, George Floyd’s life mattered.


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Today’s stories

And why we wrote them

Ann Hermes/Staff
Jessica Smith waves a Black Lives Matter flag as traffic is stopped in the streets around the Hennepin County Government Center as protesters react to the guilty verdict announced in Derek Chauvin's trial on April 20, 2021, in Minneapolis.
Nick Ut/AP/File
The owner of a clothing store reacts to seeing her burning business in Los Angeles on April 30, 1992. Her store was one of more than 300 burned by rioters after the acquittal of four police officers on trial for beating Rodney King.

The Explainer

Ariel Ley Royero/ACN/AP
Raúl Castro (right) raises the hand of Cuban President Miguel Díaz-Canel after Mr. Díaz-Canel was elected first secretary of the Communist Party at the closing session of the Cuban Communist Party's 8th Congress at the Convention Palace in Havana on April 19, 2021.

Points of Progress

What's going right
Staff

The Monitor's View

Reuters
A resident in Minneapolis takes a selfie in front of a mural of George Floyd after the verdict in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin.

A Christian Science Perspective

About this feature

A message of love

Ann Hermes/Staff
Staff photographer Ann Hermes was in Minneapolis for the announcement of the verdict in the trial of Derek Chauvin. Among the range of feelings she witnessed while talking with people and photographing them yesterday and today, she said a sense of resolve stood out, with people determined to make this moment a turning point in America's reckoning with racism. This gallery includes several of her portraits from Minneapolis along with comments her subjects shared with her.
( The illustrations in today’s Monitor Daily are by Karen Norris. )

A look ahead

Thanks for joining us. Come back tomorrow; it’s Earth Day! And on the eve of a global climate summit, we’re working on a story about why President Joe Biden’s big environmental proposals are framed around U.S. jobs, not climate alarms.

More issues

2021
April
21
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