State clemency board formally rejected a petition asking governor to erase a drug conviction against police brutality victim
A Texas clemency panel has formally rejected a petition for a posthumous pardon of George Floyd, whose death sparked massive protests against police brutality after he was killed by a Minnesota police officer in 2020. The panel had initially recommended clearing his slate, but reversed the decision late last year.
The Texas Board of Pardons and Paroles voted unanimously against calling on Governor Greg Abbott to grant a rare revision of a person’s criminal record after their death, the Texas Tribune reported on Thursday.
The letter sent to Floyd’s attorney Allison Mathis, to notify her about the decision was first published by a reporter for the Marshall Project, a non-profit outlet covering criminal justice news. It did not explain the board’s reasoning for rejecting the petition.
Mathis, a Houston public defender, petitioned the board to pardon Floyd over a 2004 drug conviction in April 2021. That came after a police officer whose testimony helped build the case against Floyd, was accused of using false evidence in multiple cases.
The officer, Gerald Goines, is now also facing murder charges after a botched drugs raid in 2019. During the investigation, he was accused of inventing confidential informants and otherwise lying to smear defendants.
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The board had recommended pardoning Floyd in October last year, but rescinded the decision two months later. The governor’s office said at the time that the clemency body would review the case to “resolve procedural errors and issues”. Abbott could not consider the pardon without a proper recommendation, his press secretary explained.