George Floyd's Family In Houston Says - The Four Officers Involved Should Be Charged With Murder

The family of George Floyd -- who died after pleading that he couldn’t breathe while a police officer held him down with a knee on his neck -- say they want the four Minneapolis officers involved charged with murder.

“They were supposed to be there to serve and to protect and I didn’t see a single one of them lift a finger to do anything to help while he was begging for his life. Not one of them tried to do anything to help him,” Tera Brown, Floyd’s cousin, told CNN’s Don Lemon. In an emotional interview Tuesday night, Brown and Floyd’s two brothers held up his picture and spoke of a man who “didn’t hurt anybody” and who they described as a “gentle giant.”

“Knowing my brother is to love my brother,” Philonise Floyd said. “They could have tased him; they could have maced him. Instead, they put their knee in his neck and just sat on him and then carried on.”

“They treated him worse than they treat animals,” he said.

Four officers involved were fired Tuesday, the police department said, and state and federal authorities are investigating the case. That includes Officer Derek Chauvin, the man seen on video restraining Floyd with his knee, Chauvin’s attorney Tom Kelly said.

Kelly said he wouldn’t yet re- lease a statement on Chauvin’s behalf. No charges have been filed.

The Police Officers Federation of Minneapolis said in a statement the officers were cooperating in the investi- gation and urged “now is not the time to rush to (judgment)” while the officers’ actions are examined.

Minneapolis police said officers were responding to an alleged forgery Monday evening and were told a person later described as the suspect was sitting on a car. They found Floyd, who at that point was inside a car and police said he “physically resisted” after he got out. Officers handcuffed Floyd, who police said “appeared to be suffering medical distress.” He was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

Video captured by bystanders at the scene of the arrest shows an officer with his knee pressed against the neck of the 46-year-old, who was handcuffed on the pavement, complaining that his body hurt and he couldn’t breathe. Two officers handled the man on the ground while another stood nearby with his eyes on the bystanders as traffic passed.

Surveillance video obtained from a nearby restaurant showed the first point of contact police had with the man. An officer escorts a handcuffed Floyd out of a car and Floyd sits on the sidewalk. Moments later, the officer and another escort Floyd away, still with his hands behind his back.

George’s brother Rodney Floyd told CBS that he didn’t believe George was resisting arrest.

“You have eyes. I have eyes. You can see what you saw,” Rodney Floyd said in an interview that “CBS This Morning” aired Wednesday. “And I saw, and the nation saw ... and every black person saw, the same thing, be- cause it don’t happen to nobody else.” “They need to be charged with murder because what they did was murder,” Brown told CNN. “And almost the whole world has witnessed that because somebody was gracious enough to re- cord it.”

George Floyd’s sister Bridgett Floyd told ABC on Wednesday that she also wants the officers arrested.

The officers’ firings are “defi- nitely not enough justice for me and my family,” she told “Good Morning America.” I feel those guys need to be put in jail. They murdered my brother.”

A day after Floyd’s death, hun- dreds gathered at the same intersection where he was pinned to the ground and they later marched to a police precinct to protest.

The protesters chanted “No justice, no peace,” and “I can’t breathe.” Some demonstrators wheeled a shopping cart full of rocks just out- side the precinct and dumped it on the ground for people to throw, a CNN team there reported. Police used tear gas to disperse the crowd after some people turned unruly, a spokesman for the po-

lice department said. Findings on the cause and man-

ner of Floyd’s death remain pending and it is being investigated by local, state and federal law enforcement, the Hennepin County Medical Examiner’s Office said in a statement.

Mayor Frey offered his con- dolences to Floyd’s family Tuesday, adding that what the video shows was “utterly messed up.”

“For five minutes, we watched as a white officer pressed his knee to the neck of a black man,” Frey said in a news conference.

“When you hear someone call- ing for help, you are supposed to help. This officer failed in the most basic human sense,” he said.

“Being black in America,” he added, should not be “a death sentence.” The Federal Bureau of Inves- tigation has opened an investigation into Floyd’s death, which will focus on whether the Minneapolis Police Department officers involved “willfully deprived (Floyd) of a right or privilege protected by the Constitution or laws of the United States,” according to a statement from the FBI Minneapolis

Division.