Of the many revelations from the investigation of Derek Chauvin in the death of George Floyd, it ranks relatively low.
But back in January, authorities were scratching their heads after a Taser issued to the ex-Minneapolis police officer was recovered during a traffic stop in Burnsville — more than seven months after Chauvin was fired for his role in Floyd's in-custody death.
The specifics of how and when the device was taken have not been disclosed publicly. Neither was the identity of the person found with the stolen device or the circumstances that led to the traffic stop in the south metro suburb.
"At this point we are unsure when this Taser was taken, or where it was located when it was taken," Minneapolis police Cmdr. Travis Glampe wrote in a report several days after its recovery. He wrote that after determining that the stun gun was one of theirs, the department's Taser training coordinating officer confirmed that the device belonged to Chauvin. The head of the department's internal affairs then contacted BCA agent James Reyerson, who oversaw the agency's investigation of Floyd's death, to arrange the device's retrieval, according to the report.
Investigators baffled
A Minneapolis police spokesman declined to comment. Inquiries to the Burnsville Police Department weren't immediately returned, and a spokesperson for the Dakota County Attorney's Office said she was unaware of the case and that it wasn't immediately clear whether anyone has been charged with a crime.
Far from a central question of the case, the Taser's disappearance has still baffled investigators.
It's possible the device was taken in the chaos of the torching and looting of the Third Precinct police station during last summer's unrest — a defining moment in the protests and riots that erupted after Floyd's death.
Authorities say that looters stole various police equipment and files from the burning building. Some were later recovered, including a vest belonging to Tou Thao, another of the officers charged in Floyd's death.