In his fatal encounter with the Minneapolis Police over a counterfeit $20 bill, George Floyd used the word "please" nearly five dozen times as he pleaded for his life. At least two dozen times he told the officers he could not breathe, both before and during the time he was restrained.
As officer Thomas Lane ordered Floyd to get out of his car and to put his hands behind his head, Floyd continued to plead.
"Please don't shoot me, Mr. Officer. Please, don't shoot me, man. Please. Can you not shoot me, man?" Floyd said.
When Lane and fellow officer J. Alexander Kueng grabbed Floyd's arms, he said, "I'm not going to do nothing … I'm sorry Mr. Officer, I'll get on my knees, whatever."
The newly released transcripts of police body camera footage provide the most detailed accounts of Floyd's death, which ignited protests and riots across the globe.
The transcripts from the body cameras worn by former police officers Lane and Kueng were released Wednesday as part of lawyer Earl Gray's motion to dismiss criminal charges against Lane. The video footage from the cameras was attached to the Hennepin County District Court filing motion but was not publicly released by the court.
Kueng, Lane and former officer Tou Thao face charges of aiding and abetting murder and aiding and abetting manslaughter in the May 25 killing of Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man from St. Louis Park. Former officer Derek Chauvin, a 19-year veteran, faces murder and manslaughter charges.
As the encounter began with the two rookies, a confused Floyd apologized to the officers, whom he called "sir" and "Mr. Officer," telling them he'd just recovered from COVID-19 and had been shot before by the police.