Born in
Fayetteville, North Carolina, Floyd grew up in
Houston, Texas, playing
football and
basketball throughout high school and college. Between 1997 and 2005, he was convicted of eight crimes. He served four years in prison after accepting a
plea bargain for a 2007
aggravated robbery in a home invasion.[5] After he was paroled in 2013, he served as a mentor in his religious community and posted anti-violence videos to social media.[6][7][8][9] In 2014, he moved to the Minneapolis area, residing in the nearby suburb of
St. Louis Park, and worked as a truck driver and
bouncer. In 2020, he lost his job as a truck driver, and then his security job during the
COVID-19 pandemic.
Following his death, the City of Minneapolis settled a
wrongful death lawsuit with Floyd's family for $27million. Chauvin
was convicted on two counts of murder and one count of manslaughter on April 20, 2021,[10] and on June 25, 2021, was sentenced to 22 and a half years in prison.[11] The other three officers at the scene were also later convicted of violating Floyd's
civil rights.[12]
When he was two, after Floyd's parents separated, his mother moved with the children to the
Cuney Homes public housing,[6][17][18] known as the Bricks, in
Houston's
Third Ward, a historically
African-American neighborhood.[8][13][6] Floyd was called Perry as a child, but also Big Floyd; being over six feet (183 cm) tall in middle school, he saw sports as a vehicle for improving his life.[6]
The first of his siblings to go to college, Floyd attended
South Florida Community College for two years on a football scholarship, and also played on the basketball team.[6][20][21] He transferred to
Texas A&M University–Kingsville in 1995, where he also played basketball before dropping out.[22][23][24] Floyd became a friend of future
NBA player
Stephen Jackson, who was referred to as his "twin" because of their strong resemblance to one another, after being introduced in the mid-1990s.[25][26] At his tallest he was 6 feet 6 inches (198 cm)[27][15][28] and by the time of his autopsy he was 6 feet 4 inches (193 cm) tall and weighed 223 pounds (101 kg).[29]
Adult life
Post-college
Floyd returned to Houston from college in
Kingsville, Texas, in 1995 where he became an automotive customizer and played club basketball.[22][30] Beginning in 1994, he performed as a
rapper using the stage name Big Floyd in the hip-hop group
Screwed Up Click.[31][32][33][34]The New York Times described his deep-voiced rhymes as "purposeful", delivered in a slow-motion clip about "'choppin' blades' – driving cars with oversize rims – and his Third Ward pride."[6] The second rap group he was involved in was "Presidential Playas" and he worked on their album Block Party released in 2000.[35][36]
Criminal convictions
Between 1997 and 2005, Floyd served eight jail terms on various charges, including drug possession, theft, and trespass.[6][15] In one of these cases, Floyd was convicted of possessing half a gram of
crack cocaine in 2004 based on the sole testimony of police officer Gerald Goines. Later in 2019, Goines' involvement in the
Harding Street raid led to Goines being investigated for a pattern of falsifying evidence, resulting in the District Attorney of
Harris County, Texas, requesting in April 2021 a posthumous pardon for this particular conviction of Floyd's due to Goines' lack of credibility.[37][38] In October 2021, the
Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles recommended Floyd be pardoned for this conviction, but withdrew the recommendation (and also withdrew 24 other clemency recommendations) in December 2021 citing "procedural errors and lack of compliance with board rules", while announcing that they would reconsider these recommendations.[39]
In 2007, Floyd faced charges for aggravated robbery with a deadly weapon; according to investigators, he had entered an apartment by impersonating a water department worker and barging in with five other men, then held a pistol to a woman's stomach and searched for items to steal.[18][40][41] Floyd was arrested three months later during a traffic stop, and victims of the robbery identified him from a
photo array.[41] In 2009, Floyd was sentenced to five years in prison as part of a
plea deal,[40][42][43] and was paroled in January 2013.[22]
Post-prison life
After his release, Floyd became more involved with Resurrection Houston, a Christian church and ministry, where he mentored young men and posted anti-violence videos to social media.[6][7][8][9] He delivered meals to senior citizens and volunteered with other projects, such as the Angel By Nature Foundation, a charity founded by rapper
Trae tha Truth.[44] Later, Floyd became involved with a ministry that brought men from the Third Ward to Minnesota in a church-work program with drug rehabilitation and job placement services.[6] A friend of his acknowledged that Floyd "had made some mistakes that cost him some years of his life", but that he had been turning his life around through religion.[7]
In 2014, Floyd moved to Minneapolis to help rebuild his life and find work.[45][46] Soon after his arrival, he completed a 90-day rehabilitation program at the Turning Point program in north Minneapolis. Floyd expressed the need for a job and took up security work at Harbor Light Center, a
Salvation Army homeless shelter.[41] He lost the job at Harbor Light and took several other jobs. Floyd hoped to earn a
commercial driver's license to operate trucks. He passed the required drug test and administrators of the program felt his criminal past did not pose a problem, but he dropped out as his job at a nightclub made it difficult to attend morning classes, and he felt pressure to earn money. Floyd later moved to St. Louis Park and lived with former colleagues.[41] Floyd continued to battle drug addiction and went through periods of use and sobriety.[41]
An influential member of his community, Floyd was respected for his ability to relate with others in his environment based on a shared experience of hardships and setbacks, having served time in prison and living in a poverty-stricken project in Houston.[7] In a video addressing the youth in his neighborhood, Floyd reminds his audience that he has his own "shortcomings" and "flaws" and that he is not better than anyone else, but also expresses his disdain for the violence that was taking place in the community, and advises his neighbors to put down their weapons and remember that they are loved by him and God.[7]
In May 2019, Floyd was detained by Minneapolis police when an unlicensed car in which he was a passenger was pulled over in a traffic stop. Floyd was found with a bottle of pain pills. Officers handcuffed him and took him to the city's third police precinct station. Floyd told police he did not sell the pills and that they were related to his own addiction. When he appeared agitated, officers encouraged him to relax and helped calm him down, and they later called an ambulance as they grew worried about his condition. No charges were filed in connection with the incident.[41]
In 2019, Floyd worked in security at the El Nuevo Rodeo club, where police officer
Derek Chauvin also worked off-duty as a security guard.[47] In 2020, Floyd was working part-time as a security guard at the Conga Latin Bistro club, and began another job as a delivery driver. He lost the delivery driver job in January, after being cited for driving without a valid commercial license and for being involved in a minor crash. He was looking for another job when the
COVID-19 pandemic hit Minnesota, and his personal financial situation worsened when the club closed in March due to pandemic rules.[41] Also in March, Floyd was hospitalized after overdosing on drugs.[48] In April, he contracted
COVID-19, but he recovered a few weeks later.[6][14]
On May 25, 2020, police were called by a
Cup Foods grocery store employee who suspected that Floyd had used a counterfeit $20 bill.[49] Floyd was sitting in a car with two other passengers. Police officers forcibly removed Floyd from the car and handcuffed him.[50]
Floyd was murdered by
Derek Chauvin, a
white Minneapolis police officer,[51] who pressed his knee to Floyd's neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds[note 1][52]
while Floyd was handcuffed face down in the street.[53][54][55]
As seen in a witness's cellphone video,[6][56]
two other officers further restrained Floyd and a fourth prevented onlookers from intervening[57]: 6:24 [58][59]
as Floyd repeatedly pleaded that he
could not breathe.[13]
During the final two minutes[60]
Floyd was motionless and had no pulse,[61][62]
but Chauvin kept his knee on Floyd's neck and back even as emergency medical technicians arrived to treat Floyd.[63]: 7:21
The medical examiner found that Floyd's heart stopped while he was being restrained and that his death was a
homicide,[64][65] caused by "
cardiopulmonary arrest complicating law enforcement subdual, restraint, and neck compression",[2] though
fentanyl intoxication and recent
methamphetamine use may have increased the likelihood of death.[66][67]
A second autopsy, commissioned by Floyd's family,[68][69]
also found his death to be a homicide, specifically citing
asphyxia due to neck and back compression;[70][68][71]
it ruled out that any underlying medical problems had contributed to Floyd's death,[72]
and said that Floyd being able to speak while under Chauvin's knee does not mean he could breathe.[72]
On March 12, 2021, the Minneapolis city council approved a settlement of $27million to the Floyd family following a
wrongful death lawsuit.[73]
Chauvin was fired and charged with
second-degree murder,
third-degree murder and
second-degree manslaughter.[74][75] Chauvin was found guilty on all three
murder and
manslaughter charges on April 20, 2021.[56] On May 12, 2021, Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill allowed for the prosecution to seek a greater prison sentence for Chauvin after finding that he treated Floyd "with particular cruelty".[76] On June 25, Judge Cahill sentenced Chauvin to twenty-two and a half years in prison.[77]
Several memorial services were held. On June 4, 2020, a memorial service for Floyd took place in Minneapolis with
Al Sharpton delivering the eulogy.[82] Services were held in North Carolina with a public viewing and private service on June 6 and in Houston on June 8 and 9.[83] Floyd was buried next to his mother in
Pearland, Texas.[84][85][86]
In 2020, social media-based artists and activists posted tributes to Floyd, and one of the more popular tributes was a digital illustration created by
Shirien Damra which had more than 3.4 million "likes" on Instagram.[99][100] Damra's work was later turned into painted murals in many communities and other re-uses.[101][102] Other viral social media-based tributes to Floyd were made by
Nikkolas Smith, Stormy Nesbit, Dani Coke, Robin Hilkey, and Miriam Mosqueda.[103][104]
Street artists globally created murals honoring Floyd. Depictions included Floyd as a ghost in Minneapolis, as an angel in Houston, and as a saint weeping blood in
Naples. A mural on the International Wall in
Belfast commissioned by Festival of the People (Féile an Phobail) and Visit West Belfast (Fáilte Feirste Thiar) featured a large portrait of Floyd above a tableau showing Chauvin kneeling on Floyd's neck while the three other officers turn their backs and each covers his eyes, ears, or mouth in the manner of the
Three Wise Monkeys ("See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil").[105][106][107] One Houston mural is on the side of Scott Food Mart in the
Third Ward,[108][109] while the other is on the property of The Breakfast Klub restaurant in
Midtown.[110] A childhood friend of Floyd's said that Floyd would never "have imagined that this is the tragic way people would know his name."[6]
A
GoFundMe account to support Floyd's funeral costs and benefit his family broke the site's record for number of individual donations.[111]
By June 6, murals had been created in many cities, including
Manchester,
Dallas,
Miami,
Idlib,
Los Angeles,
Nairobi,
Oakland,
Strombeek-Bever,
Berlin,
Pensacola, and
La Mesa.[112][113] The mural in Manchester was defaced with graffiti, resulting in a
Greater Manchester Police investigation into the incident.[114] Beyond the creation of the mural, Floyd's murder has also brought attention to the presence of
institutional racism within the United Kingdom.[115] Protest graffiti has also been put up throughout Los Angeles, offering phrases such as "I Can't Breathe", "Say Their Names", and others.[citation needed] The phrase "Black Lives Matter" has also been used often in the outpouring of protest regarding Floyd's murder.[116] The phrase has been especially popular on social media platforms.[117] Since Floyd's murder, there has also been a global outcry for memorials commemorating bigoted individuals to be demolished.[118]
A bill proposed by US Representative
Sheila Jackson Lee, the
George Floyd Law Enforcement Trust and Integrity Act, was designed to reduce police brutality and establish national policing standards and accreditations.[119][120] In addition to the work of lawmakers, there has been an outcry from leaders in varieties of fields. Researcher Temitope Oriola, author of 'How police departments can identify and oust killer cops', wrote the piece intending to prevent more deaths mirroring Floyd's.[121] Oxiris Barbot, former
New York City Health Commissioner, wrote an article describing Floyd's murder as "collective moral injury" and compared it to "the sustained acuity of health inequities playing out in horrifying details through the COVID-19 pandemic."[122] Religious leaders have also been called upon to address violence taking place against black Americans.[123]
The length of time that Chauvin was initially believed to have had his knee on Floyd's neck,
eight minutes 46 seconds, was widely commemorated as a "moment of silence" to honor Floyd.[124][125]
Floyd's murder was featured prominently in The Economist, with the magazine running an
obituary, multiple articles, and numerous reader letters, ultimately making Floyd's legacy its June 13 cover story.[126] It wrote that his legacy "[is] the rich
promise of social reform."[127]
In August 2020, musician
John Mellencamp released the song "A Pawn in the White Man's Game" which was a re-working of
Bob Dylan's 1964 song "
Only a Pawn in Their Game" that reflected on the killing of
Civil Rights activist
Medger Evers. Mellencamp's version featured new lyrics that reflected the racial conflicts in the U.S. that followed in the wake of Floyd's murder. Mellencamp also released a video to
YouTube which included a warning that it might be seen as "inappropriate for some viewers". The video featured footage of protesters and police clashing violently in 2020 and 1968. YouTube eventually removed the video claiming it violated their community guidelines.[128]
On September 18, 2020, the Minneapolis City Council approved designating the section of Chicago Avenue between 37th and 39th Streets as
George Perry Floyd Jr. Place, with a marker at the intersection with 38th Street where the incident took place. The intersection had been the location of a makeshift memorial that emerged the day after his murder.[129]
On October 6, 2020,
Amnesty International delivered a letter with one million signatures from around the world to the US Attorney General
William Barr to demand justice for George Floyd. The human rights advocacy group demanded that the police officers involved in the murder of George Floyd be held accountable.[130] The NAACP, which has already published a criminal justice fact sheet, issued a statement voicing their support for the protests taking place demanding justice for George Floyd.[131][132]
On May 21, 2021, Bridgett Floyd gave a $25,000 check from the George Floyd Memorial Foundation to
Fayetteville State University in
Fayetteville, North Carolina, to be used for scholarships. On the same day, the city declared May 25 George Floyd Jr. Day.[133]
After Floyd's murder, a petition was started on the public benefit corporation website
change.org, asking for "Justice for George Floyd". The petition quickly gathered more signatures than any other petition that had ever been pushed on the site, amounting to roughly five million in the first few days.[134] The petition was considered a "success" with the sentencing of Derek Chauvin. At the time that the petition was closed to new signers, it had attained close to twenty million signatures.[135][136]
In 2022, Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles declined to issue a posthumous
pardon for the 2004 drug raid that led to Floyd's criminal conviction.[138]
Personal life
Floyd was the oldest of five siblings and had five children, including two daughters (aged 6 and 22 at the time of his murder) and an adult son.[139][140][141][142][143] He also had two grandchildren.[13][14]
In August 2017, Floyd met his girlfriend Courteney Ross in Minneapolis. In early 2020, the two separated.[48]
^
abcde"George Floyd, the man whose death sparked US unrest". BBC. May 31, 2020.
Archived from the original on June 3, 2020. Retrieved September 27, 2020. Growing up a gifted athlete standing at six feet six inches, friends who knew Floyd as a teenager described him as a "gentle giant" who shone on the field
^Stein, Marc (June 11, 2020).
"Stephen Jackson Was Known in the N.B.A. as an Agitator. Now He's Leading a Movement". The New York Times. Retrieved May 28, 2022. Jackson, 42, was introduced to Floyd through a mutual friend in the mid-1990s, before he was selected by the Phoenix Suns with the 42nd overall pick in the 1997 draft. The two bonded immediately over their facial resemblance — they habitually referred to each other as "twin" — and became close enough that Jackson brought Floyd as a guest to Washington in 2001 for the N.B.A.'s All-Star Weekend, where Jackson played in the Rookie Challenge as a member of the Nets.
^"Hennepin County Medical Examiner's Office Autopsy Report". Hennepin County. June 1, 2020. Archived from
the original(PDF) on June 4, 2020. Retrieved June 4, 2020. The body is that of a normally developed, muscular and adequately nourished appearing, 6 feet 4 inch long, 223 pound male
^Schkloven, Emma (June 2, 2020).
"Remembering Big Floyd".
Archived from the original on November 28, 2020. Retrieved November 16, 2020. Big Floyd, who also appeared on a track in 2000 as part of another group, the Presidential Playas, freestyled on at least half a dozen of Screw's famous mixtapes, if not more.
^"Complaint – State of Minnesota v. Derek Michael Chauvin"(PDF). Minnesota District Court, Fourth Judicial District, File No. 27-CR-20-12646. May 29, 2020. Archived from
the original(PDF) on May 30, 2020. The defendant pulled Mr. Floyd out of the passenger side of the squad car at 8:19:38 p.m. and Mr. Floyd went to the ground face down and still handcuffed.
^Brooks, Jennifer (May 28, 2020).
"George Floyd and the city that killed him". Star Tribune.
Archived from the original on May 28, 2020. Retrieved May 29, 2020. Down the road, people were marching and mourning Floyd, whose irreplaceable life ended after an arrest face-down on the asphalt of E. 38th Street.
^Priniski, J. Hunter; Mokhberian, Negar; Harandizadeh, Bahareh; Morstatter, Fred;
Lerman, Kristina; Lu, Hongjing; Brantingham, P. Jeffrey (April 19, 2021). "Mapping Moral Valence of Tweets Following the Killing of George Floyd".
arXiv:2104.09578 [
cs.SI].
Samuels, Robert; Olorunnipa, Toluse (2022). His Name Is George Floyd: One Man's Life and the Struggle for Racial Justice. New York: Viking.
ISBN9780593490617.
OCLC1312917362.
External links
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