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He gives great area cuts! He has given me great head for…. He was the supervising officer the day George Floyd died and the one who dispatcher Jena Scurry, who testified Monday, alerted to a possible use of force incident after seeing officers on top of someone through city surveillance cameras. As a sergeant, Ploeger would review officers' uses of force, but he did not do a use of force review in the May 25, incident, as it involved a death in police custody and elavated to internal affairs, he said.

After receiving that call from Scurry, Pleoger said he rang Chauvin on his cell phone to inquire about what had happened. He was going crazy," Chauvin can be heard telling Pleoger on body-camera recording. The rest of the conversation was not recorded because Chauvin turned off his body camera, as allowed per policy. Pleoger tried to remember the rest of his conversation with Chauvin that day, saying he believed Chauvin told him officers had tried to put Floyd in the car and he became combative.

A bloody lip I think," he said. Pleoger said Chauvin told him Floyd suffered a medical emergency and they had called an ambulance. After the call with Chauvin, Pleoger said he went to the scene with the intention of doing a use of force review. When he arrived, he became the senior officer on the scene. He instructed Chauvin and another officer to come with him to Hennepin County Medical Center "to check on the party's condition" and told the two officers to get witness information.

Schleicher played a segment of police body-cam video in which Pleoger asks Chauvin to talk to witnesses. Once he arrived at the medical center, Pleoger said he was told by staff that Floyd was "doing poorly," and, later, that Floyd had died.

Pleoger said he called the liteunant in charge of the city at night to inform him of the critical incident, and that lieutenant prodded Pleoger to ask the officers involved if they used additional force. Only then did Chauvin tell Pleoger that "he knelt on Floyd or knelt on his neck," Pleoger said. Schleicher asked when the restraint of Floyd shoud have ended. Pleoger replied, "When Mr. Floyd was no longer offering up any resistance to the officers, they could have ended their restraint.

Under the medical assistance provision, officers are required to render medical aid and request EMS, if necessary. Asked by Schleicher if the dangers of positional asphyxia are "generally known" in the department, Pleoger said "yes. On cross examination, Nelson asked if Pleoger had ever been in a situation as an officer where a crowd starts to "yell" or become "volatile.

Asked if it had ever caused him "concern," Pleoger said yes. If someone was having a medical emergency at the same time, Pleoger said, officers would have to "deal with both kind of simultaneously. Nelson appeared to compare a crowd of bystanders with a "gun battle," asking Pleoger how he would handle a situation when there was a "threat" and someone in need of medical assistance, such as CPR. Jeremy Norton, a Minneapolis Fire Department captain who has been with the department for 21 years, told jurors about communications mix-ups as he and his engine crew received a radio dispatch to go to the Cup Foods location where the police struggle with Floyd had occurred.

He said the call was initially classified as Code 2, a non-emergency response without lights and sirens, for someone who might have a mouth injury. There was little other information, Norton testified. Shortly after leaving the fire station, a second radio dispatch raised the alert to Code 3, an emergency call with lights and siren. But there was no supplemental information, he said. After arriving outside Cup Foods, Norton said he saw a couple of Minneapolis police cars, off-duty firefighter Genevieve Hansen in a group of upset and angry bystanders, but no patient.

From speaking with Hansen, and a police officer inside the store, Norton learned that an ambulance carrying Floyd had left he scene. Seconds later, he received a new radio dispatch to rendezvous with the ambulance. He and his crew, all of whom had emergency medical technician certifications, joined the paramedics trying to resuscitate Floyd.

Norton said he and one of his crew members did continual pulse checks until the ambulance reached the hospital. Asked if they ever managed to get a pulse from Floyd, Norton told prosecutor Erin Eldridge "No, ma'am. Norton said he and his crew did a short debriefing after the incident. He filed a fire department report on the incident. Smith said he noticed on the scene that Floyd wasn't moving, was handcuffed and was being given no medical attention.

He checked for a pulse and found none. He said Floyd's pupils were large and dilated.



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