Houston Allen Morris Charged With 13 Yr Olds Murder

Houston Allen Morris

Houston Allen Morris has been charged with the murder of a thirteen year old boy. According to police reports Houston Allen Morris was living with the boy, Isaac Hoff, and the boy’s mother when an argument broke out which ended with Morris stabbing Isaac in the chest killing the thirteen year old. Houston Allen Morris who was not allowed to be in the home due to protection orders filed by Isaac Hoff’s mother had been staying with the two for the last couple of weeks.

According to early reports Isaac Hoff mother and Houston Allen Morris was in an argument when Morris began striking the woman. The woman grabbed a knife to protect herself however Houston Allen Morris would end up with the knife and attempted to stab the woman, missed, and struck Isaac Hoff in the chest. Houston Allen Morris would be arrested and has been charged with murder.

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An Olivia man has been charged with murder in the stabbing death of a 13-year-old boy.

Houston Allen Morris, 38, is facing two second-degree murder charges and one attempted murder charge in connection to the death of Isaac Hoff.

Hoff died last week after being stabbed in the chest.

Court documents say Morris was in a romantic relationship with Hoff’s mother, who received an order of protection against him on March 1. Despite the order, Morris was living with her and her son for the last two weeks.

According to the criminal complaint, Morris started assaulting Hoff’s mother early Thursday morning when she grabbed a knife for protection.

Hoff was standing behind her when Morris allegedly grabbed the knife, drove it towards her and missed, fatally striking the teen instead.

Morris’ bail is set at $500,000 with no conditions and $350,000 with conditions.

His next court date has been set for April 25. If convicted, he faces up to 40 years in prison.

https://www.keyc.com/2022/03/28/olivia-man-charged-with-murder-stabbing-death-13-year-old-boy/

Houston Allen Morris Other News

A 38-year-old Olivia man with a history of domestic assault is accused of fatally stabbing a 13-year-old boy while assaulting the victim’s mother Thursday morning.

According to court documents filed in Renville County, Houston Allen Morris faces two second-degree murder charges and one attempted murder charge in connection to the incident.

The complaint says law enforcement were dispatched at 5:49 a.m. to an apartment in Olivia on the 800 block of East Lincoln Avenue. Officers were responding to the report of a domestic in progress, with a victim reporting he had been stabbed in the chest with a knife

When law enforcement arrived, they found the 13-year-old suffering from life-threatening injuries. He was taken to the hospital where he later died. A second victim, his mother, had lacerations to her head and right finger, as well as other cut wounds and bite marks. She was taken to an area hospital for treatment of non-life threatening injuries.

The surviving victim told authorities that Morris and her had been in a romantic relationship for about a year and had been living together for the past two weeks. She said Morris and her were arguing in the bedroom when he began assaulting her, the complaint said.

The boy woke up during the argument and called 911.

According to the complaint, the mother grabbed a nearby knife for protection, but Morris took the knife and began advancing toward her with it. They then began struggling over the knife, causing injuries to the mother’s hand.

As the two struggled over the knife, the boy was standing behind his mother. Morris then allegedly drove the knife towards the mother, but missed her and stabbed the boy in the chest cavity, the complaint said.

Authorities say the mother previously filed for and received an Order of Protection against Morris on March 1 for both her and the boy. In the affidavit, she said Morris physically assaulted her multiple times and threatened to kill her and her son.

Houston Allen Morris has a past criminal conviction for domestic assault. If convicted on the murder charges, Morris could face up to 40 years in prison.

Tasha Tennin Gets 8 Years For Son’s Death

Tasha Tennin

Tasha Tennin was sentenced to eight years in prison for locking her son overnight in a garage which led to his death. According to court documents Tasha Tennin would phone 911 telling operators that there was something wrong with her eight year old son. When emergency personnel arrived at the scene they would find the eight year old boy very cold and not breathing. Tasha Tennin would tell authorities that her son was sick when he arrived home from school. However the investigation would take a turn when the school told authorities the eight year old boy was full of energy and bouncing on the trampolines at school. Also another child from the home would tell authorities when Tasha Tennin would get mad at him she would lock him overnight in the garage. Tasha Tennin would be arrested an initially charged with first degree murder however she would later plea down to manslaughter and be sentenced to eight years in prison

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A grand jury has indicted a Brooklyn Park woman with first-degree murder for the death of her eight-year-old son, according to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office.

When originally charged in September 2019, Tasha Tennin faced two counts of second-degree manslaughter, one for endangerment of a child and the other for culpable negligence.

Tennin is accused of locking her 8-year-old son in a frigid garage overnight, which led to his death in February of 2018, according to prosecutors.

According to the criminal complaint, Tennin called 911 on Feb. 1, 2018, to report her son was unresponsive and “staring into space.” First responders arrived and found the child was very cold, but not frozen. He was not breathing and had no pulse. The boy had urinated in his pants and first responders saw a puddle of frozen liquid in the garage.

First responders immediately began life saving efforts, but they were unsuccessful. The boy was pronounced dead 35 minutes after police arrived. 

Tennin, 36, has been charged by the grand jury with first-degree murder while committing child abuse with a past pattern of child abuse, and unintentional second-degree murder while committing a felony, according to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office.

Tennin is expected to make her first court appearance on Aug. 24

https://www.kare11.com/article/news/crime/brooklyn-park-woman-indicted-on-first-degree-murder/89-3b65e4cc-5f45-4da9-a789-726c7e627234

Tasha Tennin Other News

A Brooklyn Park woman has entered a guilty plea to manslaughter charges in the death of her eight-year-old son.

Thirty-nine-year-old Tasha Tennin was accused of locking the boy in a cold garage overnight three years ago.  The temperature was below zero and the child died.

A few months later, the victim’s brothers and sisters told a foster parent he had gotten into trouble with his mother and she ordered him to sit in the cold garage as punishment. They said she locked the door and left him there all night.

Tasha Tennin will be sentenced in March.

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 suburban Minneapolis woman has been sentenced to nearly nine years in prison in the death of her 8-year-old son who was locked in a garage overnight during the winter.

Thirty-nine-year-old Tasha Tennin, of Brooklyn Park, was sentenced this week in Hennepin County District Court after pleading guilty to first-degree manslaughter in the 2018 death of Tayvion Davis.

With credit for time already served, Tennin will likely spend nearly six years in prison and the balance on supervised release.

According to court documents, Tayvion’s siblings told their foster parents that the boy got into trouble and was told by Tennin to sit in the garage.

Prosecutors said she locked the garage, and left the child there overnight in sub-zero temperatures.

https://www.keyc.com/2022/03/11/mother-sentenced-prison-hypothermia-death-son/

Craig Bjork The Serial Killer You Have Never Heard Of

craig bjork craig jackson

Craig Bjork is a serial killer that most people have never heard of unless they are from Minnesota and have a long memory and the name Craig Jackson rings a bell. Craig Bjork started his criminal ways back in Minnesota when he would murder four people including two of his toddlers.

This mass murder crime is one of the worst in the history of Minnesota. See on that day back in 1982 would murder his girlfriend Ramona Yurkew, another woman, Gwendolyn Johnson, and his two sons Joseph and Jason, ages 3 and 1. Minneapolis Police would enter the home to conduct a wellness check and would find all four victims dead, each had been strangled and stuffed other beds. For that crime Craig Bjork would receive multiple life sentences however he was not done with his murderous ways

Craig Bjork would be sent to a maximum security prison in Minnesota called Stillwater where a few years later would beat to death a fellow prisoner and would receive yet another life sentence. Now the Minnesota Department Of Corrections did not want to deal with Craig Bjork any longer so they had him transferred to the Oregon Department of Corrections.

Craig Bjork would keep his head down for a number of years until 2013 when he would strangle to death his cellmate at the Oregon State Penitentiary. Now Oregon does have the death penalty however a Judge ordered the Minnesota Department Of Corrections to get Craig Bjork out of his State which changed the charges against him and a long story short made him ineligible for the death penalty. Craig Bjork would plead no contest to his sixth murder and would receive yet another life sentence

Craig Bjork 2022 Information

MNDOC Offender ID: 123611

Name: Craig Dennis Bjork

Birth Date: 09/14/1959

Current Status:Incarcerated as of 11/05/1982. Currently at a non-DOC facility.

Sentence Date:11/04/1982

Anticipated Release Date: Life without Parole

Expiration Date: Life

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After his latest murder conviction, this time for strangling his cellmate in Oregon, a Minneapolis man who in the 1980s said God and the devil beckoned him to kill two women and his children could be coming home.

In handing down Craig Bjork’s fifth life sentence, for committing his sixth murder, a judge has asked the Minnesota Department of Corrections to move the 60-year-old prisoner out of Oregon, where Bjork is serving time through an interstate compact that allows correctional systems to trade problem inmates

That means Bjork has escaped Oregon’s death penalty, the sentence prosecutors there sought for him.

“I think it’s disgusting,” said Matt Kemmy, deputy district attorney in Marion County, Ore. “The death penalty is supposed to be for the worst of the worst, and Craig Bjork is absolutely that. This is a man who has been convicted of killing men, women and children — plural of each. Frankly, he should be the poster child for why we have the death penalty.”

Thirty-eight years ago, Bjork, then known as Craig Jackson, committed a spree of four murders that Minneapolis police called the city’s worst of the 20th century. He achieved new notoriety years later as a problem inmate when he beat a man to death in Stillwater prison. In 2013, after Minnesota sent him to Oregon State Penitentiary, Bjork killed his cellmate, a convicted murderer named Joe Atkins.

After Bjork’s conviction for the latter killing, Judge Tracy Prall and Oregon corrections officials agreed that Bjork would stay in Oregon through April, while Minnesota finds new housing for him, according to court documents. Prison administrators here have not yet decided whether to place Bjork in Minnesota or send him to another state, said Department of Corrections spokesman Nicholas Kimball.

Bjork ranks among a tier of violent inmates who pose a dilemma for prisons. He is serving, at minimum, a 170-year prison sentence. With two more murder convictions under his belt, his outlook has hardly changed from when a Hennepin County judge first sentenced him to “never be permitted to walk the streets of any community for the remainder of his life.”

Brad Colbert, who runs a legal assistance clinic for prisoners at Mitchell-Hamline law school, said inmates like Bjork are “why supermax prisons were built,” referring to the long-term, high-security facilities with segregated cells.

“Bjork is really the .001 percent of the .001 percent of people who are incarcerated,” he said. “I think you put him in a place where he can’t hurt anyone else. But you don’t forget that he is not like the other people who are incarcerated.”

In 2017, after a Star Tribune report on Bjork facing the death penalty, he called from solitary confinement in Oregon and spoke at length about his life and murders. Bjork claimed that killing Atkins was an act of self-defense.

“It’s an old penitentiary at the end of the tier,” Bjork said. “It’s dark. We’re alone. Two convicted murderers in the cell in the middle of the night. There is no help, you know?”

Bjork doesn’t deny the six killings of which he’s been convicted over the years. He is adamant, however, that those acts do not alone define him — that he feels deep remorse and wants to be viewed with more nuance than simply a “monster.”

“I actually am a human being,” he said. “I actually have a conscience.”

Bjork grew up in Des Moines with an abusive father who ranted about his hatred for women and blacks, and taught his son to tell time by beating him when he got it wrong.

He lived mostly with his mother, a cocktail waitress named Shirley Fees, in small apartments crowded by cousins and grandparents.

As a kid, Bjork angrily stamped out all the flowers in his yard. Once he tied two cats together by the tails and watched them tear each other apart, a psychiatrist later testified at Bjork’s trial.

When he was 18, Bjork got his underage girlfriend, Terry, pregnant, and they moved to Minneapolis. Bjork proudly showed off his first son, Joey. “I ought to charge you a dollar to see this baby of mine,” he told people.

But trouble always followed him. Drugs were anesthesia to make it through the day. He carried a gun and ransacked one of his mom’s friend’s mobile homes. A month after Joey’s birth, he spent two weeks in jail. After their second son, Jason, was born, Bjork and Terry broke up. Bjork started dating a waitress at Dulono’s pizzeria, Ramona Yurkew. It was a brutal relationship and Yurkew left several times when she got sick of the beatings.

One day, in February 1982, Bjork decided to will his soul to the devil in exchange for “money, good physique, women, a good family,” according to the psychiatrist’s testimony.

A couple weeks later, Bjork dropped off his sons with a babysitter and spent the day popping speed, drinking whiskey and beer, smoking marijuana, then snorting PCP and amphetamines, according to testimony. He went downtown Minneapolis and drank on Hennepin Avenue, where he met Gwendolyn Johnson, a 20-year-old woman with a history of prostitution arrests. He brought her back to the house and strangled her during sex, then hid her body under the bed.

The babysitter dropped off Jason and Joey, ages 1 and 3, and Bjork choked them to death, too. Then he waited for Yurkew to come home from her shift, and strangled her.

By the time police found the bodies three days later, Bjork was gone. Detectives didn’t know whether he was hiding or dead.

Police tried to find Terry for questioning. She was missing, too.

In April, Bjork turned himself in to the brother of a Minneapolis homicide detective in a pancake house in Kansas. A month later, a father and son foraging for mushrooms in rural Iowa found Terry’s remains.

Bjork was charged with her murder but it never went to trial. He maintains he did not kill Terry.

Looking back on his first murders, Craig Bjork said he was locked into a drug-induced psychosis, disconnected from reality. “I believe that with every fiber of my being.”

He said he’s been sober now for 20 years and feels remorse deeper than he can express. “I literally totally destroyed myself,” he said. “Who could ever punish me more than my own mind would punish me for what I’d done? The law couldn’t come close to what I did to myself mentally.”

When he first entered prison, Craig Bjork fought other inmates. Prison staff caught him in several escape plots, and transferred him back and forth from different prisons to foil his plans. Bjork boasted that he was untouchable. He was already serving three life sentences, and Minnesota didn’t have the death penalty. One staffer recorded Bjork saying he had “nothing to lose by killing any inmate.”

One summer day in 1996, Craig Bjork wrote an internal communiqué to then-Stillwater prison Warden David Crist demanding he be moved back to Oak Park Heights prison. If Crist didn’t comply, Bjork threatened to kill again. “I’m very homicidal,” he wrote. “Trust me if I made a move I’d complete it. I’m very close to committing mass murder in Stillwater. Trust me minimum of 3 bodies, I’d go for 10 and come real close.”

On Thanksgiving Day 1997, a corrections officer found Bjork in the prison kitchen mopping up a dark red liquid. The officer followed drag marks to a garbage cart, where he found the body of inmate Edwin Curry.

Asked about this killing, Craig Bjork said the prison was playing a “punk game” with him, “and I gave them a body.”

“This is what prison is. This isn’t 3M and this isn’t the neighborhood and this isn’t Powderhorn Park,” he said in an interview. “It probably wasn’t the best choice, but it was the choice I made.”

In 2013, Craig Bjork was transferred to the Oregon prison. He killed Joe Atkins on Aug. 16, 2013. Two years later, a grand jury indicted him for the murders of Atkins, Curry, Johnson, Yurkew and his two children — each one enough to carry the death penalty.

As he prepared for the trial, Bjork told the Star Tribune that Atkins tried to kill him in his sleep because Bjork had confronted Atkins for hiding a knife and razor blades in their cell, and that he strangled him in self-defense.

Craig Bjork said he never intends to kill another person; he said he could be released from prison today and never harm another soul. But if faced with the same threat in prison, he said, he wouldn’t hesitate to act.

“If some dude up in here threatens my life next week and I think he’s serious, I’m going to do whatever I need to do to take care of myself and defend myself,” said Bjork. “That’s how it is.”

Facing death, Craig Bjork said he wanted a botched execution that sent flames shooting from his body. “We can all go to hell together,” he said. “I mean, you want to kill me? Then botch the execution, screw it up, I want it to be horrific.”

The opportunity for such a spectacle would never come. Last year, as Bjork awaited trial, Oregon’s governor signed a new death penalty law making Bjork ineligible for the punishment.

Asked what he thinks should be done with him, Bjork struggled to arrive at an answer.

“What’s fair? I don’t know,” he said. “It’s a difficult question. It’s almost like asking someone what’s the meaning of life.”

https://www.startribune.com/what-to-do-with-a-murderer-who-keeps-killing-in-prison/568439942/?refresh=true

Kim Potter Charged With 2nd Degree Manslaughter

kim potter mugshot photos

Former Police Officer Kim Potter has been charged with 2nd degree manslaughter in the death of Daunte Wright. According to reports Kim Potter during the attempted arrest of Daunte Wright would pull out a gun and fatally shoot the Minnesota man. Kim Potter who in body cam immediately reacted stating that she thought that she had pulled her taser. This recent police shooting in Minnesota has set off a series of riots that have taken place since the Daunte Wright shooting. Of course this is during the time that former police officer Derek Chauvin is on trial for the George Floyd murder. Kim Potter resigned from the police force the day after the Daunte Wright shooting

Kim Potter Body Cam Video

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Potter was arrested late Wednesday morning by agents with the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension, the bureau said. She was booked into the Hennepin County Jail, online records show.In Minnesota, second-degree manslaughter applies when authorities allege a person causes someone’s death by “culpable negligence whereby the person creates an unreasonable risk, and consciously takes chances of causing death or great bodily harm to another.”Someone convicted of this charge would face a sentence of up to 10 years in prison and/or a fine of up to $20,000. CNN has sought comment from Potter’s attorney, Earl Gray.Wright’s death Sunday in Brooklyn Center, which then-Police Chief Tim Gannon said appeared to be the result of Potter mistaking her gun for her Taser as Wright resisted arrest, has roiled a metropolitan area scarred by other police-involved deaths and reignited national conversations about policing and the use of force.

Protests, some violent, have taken place each night in and around Brooklyn Center. Wright’s family had called for charges against the officer.

https://www.cnn.com/2021/04/14/us/daunte-wright-minnesota-shooting-wednesday/index.html

Murder Of George Floyd

george floyd murder 1

On May 25 2020 the murder of George Floyd shocked the nation and the world as a clear case of police brutality was caught on film and immediately shared around the globe. The fallout from the murder of George Floyd would consume US cities with riots popping off across the United States. In this article we are going to take a closer look at the murder of George Floyd

George Floyd Murder Timeline

On May 25 2020 George Floyd went into a corner store in Minneapolis Minnesota in order to purchase a pack of cigarettes. George Floyd handed the store clerk a twenty dollar bill. The clerk believing that the twenty dollar bill was counterfeit asked George Floyd for the cigarettes back which Floyd refused to do. The store clerk would call police telling the dispatched that he suspected the twenty dollar bill was fake and that George Floyd appeared to be under the influence of drugs or alcohol

Minneapolis Officer Thomas Lane and Officer James Alexander Kueng arrived on the scene, 8:08 pm, and would find George Floyd sitting in a vehicle around the corner with three other men.

Officer Thomas Lane asked George Floyd to show his hands and when he did not he was asked to do so again. George Floyd would apologize and open the door of the vehicle. Officer Lane would order Floyd three more times to show him his hands before drawing his gun and pointed it at Floyd. George Floyd would comply and the Officer would holster his weapon.

A person in the car behind the vehicle that George Floyd was in started to tape the interaction with police at 8:10 am

George Floyd was removed from the vehicle and handcuffed. Officer Kueng would sit Floyd on the sidewalk and began to question him regarding the clerk’s suspicion that he was under the influence. George Floyd would admit to using earlier in the day.

At 8:12 George Floyd was told he was being put under arrest for using counterfeit currency. As Floyd was being led to the patrol car he would collapse on the street. The two Officers would pick George Floyd up and continued to lead him to the patrol car. George would tell the Officers that he was claustrophobic, recovering from Covid-19 and had anxiety and did not want to sit in the patrol car.

At 8:17 Officer Derek Chauvin and Officer Tou Thao arrived at the scene. Officer Chauvin would take control of the scene. George Floyd who was bleeding around his mouth was telling the Officers he was having trouble breathing.

At 8:18 George Floyd and Officer Kueng were struggling in the back seat of the police car with Kueng appearing to be attempting to drag Floyd to the driver side of the vehicle.

At 8:19 Officer Chauvin would pull George Floyd across the back seat of the vehicle and Floyd would exit the police vehicle. George Floyd who was still handcuffed at this time fell to the ground (it is unclear whether the Officer pulled him out or George Floyd exited willingly)

At 8:20 Officer Chauvin would put his knee between the head and shoulder of George Floyd. Two bystanders would start filming what would turn out to be a tragic event.

During the next few minutes George Floyd would tell the Officers sixteen times that he could not breathe. Witnesses could be heard telling the Officers to let Floyd breathe that he was not resisting.

At 8:22 Officer Lane called for an ambulance for a non emergency call as Floyd was bleeding at the mouth. A minute later the call was upgraded to an emergency call

At 8:25 George Floyd appeared to be unconscious. Many bystanders started to approach the police demanding they let George Floyd up. Officer Lane would pull out a pepper spray canister and demand the bystanders step away. Officer Kueng would try to find a pulse on George Floyd and failed to do so. The Officers did not attempt to perform and life saving procedures.

At 8:27 the ambulance would arrive on the scene. Officer Chauvin knee would remain on the neck of George Floyd for a minute and a half after the paramedics arrived.

The paramedics who would call for back up enroute to the scene would find George Floyd in cardiac arrest and would once again call for back up. The Minneapolis fire department would show up at 8:32. George Floyd was loaded onto a stretcher and brought to the hospital where he was pronounced dead at 9:25 pm

Minneapolis Police Reaction To George Floyd Death

The Minneapolis police would release a press statement on May 26, 2020

“After he got out, he physically resisted officers,” MPD said in a statement. “Officers were able to get the suspect into handcuffs and noted he appeared to be suffering medical distress. Officers called for an ambulance. He was transported to Hennepin County Medical Center by ambulance where he died a short time later.” 

As you can see from the above statement that no mention of the fact that Officer Chauvin had his knee on the neck of George Floyd and such action most likely caused the medical distress.

The four Officers were at first put on paid administration leave however after all of the videos came forward of the event the four Officers were fired later that day.

The Minneapolis Police Department would later make a statement that they had called in the FBI to perform an investigation on what took place.

On June 3, 2020 Officer Chauvin was charged with second degree murder and second degree manslaughter. The other three Officers were charged with aiding and abetting second degree murder

George Floyd Murder Officers Involved

Derek Chauvin george floyd

Derek Chauvin – Derek Chauvin is a former Minneapolis Police Officer who before the George Floyd event he was involved in three police shooting with one of them being fatal. At the time of his firing he had been with the police department for nineteen years.

Tou Thao george floyd

Tou Thao – Tou Thao is a former Minneapolis Police Officer who had a series of complaints made regarding his aggressiveness during arrests. Tou Thao had a lawsuit where he was named after the person was left with broken teeth and time spent in a hospital which was settled for $25,000. Tou Thao was with the police force since 2009 however he stopped working for two years and returned in 2012.

James Kueng george floyd

James Kueng – James Kueng is a former Minnapolis Police Officer who was still in his first year with the department at the time of the George Floyd event. An earlier incident of police brutality involved James Kueng, Thomas Lane and Derek Chauvin was caught on video on May 3, 2020 where a person being detained was roughly thrown to the ground.

thomas lane george floyd

Thomas Lane – Thomas Lane is a former Minneapolis Police Officer who was in his first year with the department at the time of the George Floyd Event. As mentioned before Thomas Lane was involved in another alleged police brutality event. Thomas Lane and James Kueng were training with Derek Chauvin at the time of the George Floyd murder.

George Floyd Murder Videos

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The fired Minneapolis police officer who held his knee to George Floyd’s neck agreed to plead guilty to third-degree murder days after Floyd’s death, but then-Attorney General William Barr rejected the deal.

Derek Chauvin and the three other officers involved were fired days after Floyd’s death on May 25 and later arrested. Chauvin faces second-degree murder charges and is scheduled for trial in March. The other three are charged with aiding and abetting and are to be tried together in the summer.

The details of the failed deal were first reported by The New York Times.

A former Justice Department official confirmed the failed deal to NBC News, saying that both politically appointed and career Department of Justice officials had rejected the idea.

“His lawyers were trying to rush us, and we didn’t want to be rushed,” the official said.

Chauvin’s lawyer, Eric Nelson, declined to comment Thursday

A spokesperson for Minnesota Attorney General Keith Ellison, who is leading the prosecution, said he could not comment because it covers a period before Ellison was assigned to the case.

Lacey Severins, a spokeswoman for the Hennepin County attorney’s office, which was handling the case at the time, said: “As is typical in many cases, early negotiations can occur between all relevant parties involved. Many times, a defendant will explore their options with a negotiation. It is also common for these types of discussions to happen in the beginning of a case and then have no agreed upon negotiations develop. This case was no different. Negotiations were discussed, nothing developed.”

Floyd’s death sparked nationwide protests and renewed calls for an end to police brutality and racial inequities.

“As part of the deal, officials now say, he was willing to go to prison for more than 10 years,” the Times reported. “Local officials, scrambling to end the community’s swelling anger, scheduled a news conference to announce the deal.”

But the deal fell apart, the Times reported, citing three law enforcement officials, because Barr worried that it was too early in the investigation and would be perceived as too lenient. Barr also wanted to allow state officials taking over the case time to make their own decisions, the Times reported.

Chauvin had asked to serve his time in a federal prison, and the deal was contingent on the federal government’s approval because Chauvin wanted assurance he would not face federal civil rights charges, the Times reported.

It would be highly unusual for the Justice Department to agree in advance to stop a civil rights investigation and forgo any possible federal prosecution before state proceedings have fully played out.

The incident involving Floyd was recorded by a bystander and widely shared on social media. Police were investigating whether he used a counterfeit $20 bill at a nearby store.

The video shows Floyd begging, “Please, please, please, I can’t breathe. My stomach hurts. My neck hurts. Please, please. I can’t breathe,” before he went silent.

https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/ag-barr-quashed-plea-deal-fired-officer-derek-chauvin-george-n1257457