Former Minneapolis Police officer Thomas Lane's attorney is accusing prosecutors in a new court filing of misstating the facts and law to defend their decision to charge him as an accomplice in the May 25 killing of George Floyd.
"Officer Lane did nothing wrong," attorney Earl Gray wrote Monday in a blistering, 21-page reply to the state's defense of the charges against his client.
The filing also offers a detailed account of Floyd's criminal background in Texas and Minnesota, and says that his persistent use of illegal drugs left him in a familiar position with police the night he died.
Floyd's aunt, Angela Harrelson, and uncle, Selwyn Jones, said they were disappointed Gray used their nephew's past to condone the officers' actions.
"Regardless of his past, nothing justifies the way he died," Harrelson said. "I just feel that to go after someone's character to justify his death — I'm not pleased with that. I'm not saying that he was a perfect person. He made mistakes. And he had a disease that he was working hard to fight against and it's a tough disease to fight."
Prosecutors had responded last week to a motion Gray filed in early July to dismiss the charges as legally deficient. They wrote that Lane recognized the officers were inflicting harm, and that the senior officer, Derek Chauvin, was violating police training and policies by kneeling on Floyd's neck for nearly eight minutes while he was handcuffed, stomach-down, in the street.
The prosecutors said that Lane continued to participate in the risky restraint even after Floyd complained that police were killing him.
Gray said they have already amassed 20,000 pages of evidence that reveal some facts he says the court should consider when deciding whether to dismiss Lane's charges before a trial.