EDITOR'S NOTE
Hello,
It has been a year since Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin killed George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, on Memorial Day.
Since then, the city's Police Department fired Chauvin and the three officers who accompanied him that day. Chauvin was convicted of murder and manslaughter this spring, while the other cops await trial.
At the federal level, the Justice Department, under Attorney General Merrick Garland, is investigating police departments across the country in the wake of the killings of several Black people, including Floyd and Breonna Taylor. The four officers involved in Floyd's deadly arrest are all charged with federal civil rights violations.
But legislation has stalled. President Biden set the anniversary of Floyd's death as the deadline for a reform bill in Congress. That's not going to happen.
Instead, talks continue as Democrats try to convince some Republicans to sign on to the bill, which has already passed the House. The biggest hangup, as CNBC's Jacob Pramuk reports, is a provision to curb qualified immunity, which protects cops from most civil lawsuits.
Follow CNBC Politics' coverage of police reform efforts as talks continue in the Senate.
Thoughts? Email us at CNBCPolitics@nbcuni.com.
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Selasa, 25 Mei 2021
George Floyd: A year later
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