Drake is speaking out after a lawyer hired to represent one the three ficers charged with aiding and abetting George Floyd’s murder attempted to drum up a perceived weak defense on live television.
Attorney Earl Gray, who’s representing Thomas Lane, appeared on CNN’s “Cuomo Prime Time” on Monday night (June 8) and suggested bystanders should’ve stepped in if Floyd’s predicament was so dire.
The OVO boss responded to Gray’s comments in one his Instagram Stories, writing, “Thomas Lane lawyer struggling through an ATTEMPT to justify this situation live on television…can’t even decided how to defend his client. this shit is foul to watch.”
During Gray’s appearance on CNN, Gray drew sharp criticism from Cuomo when he said, “If the public is there and they’re so in an uproar about this, they didn’t intercede either.”
Cuomo interrupted, saying, “Two things — one, you’re laying on a man’s legs, you’ve got a fine view what’s going on with that man. The other ficer is literally a foot in front you on his neck. Two, I understand that he has a senior ficer telling him what to do, but there’s also a duty to intervene. And if that ficer is doing something that is dangerous to a civilian, you have a duty to intervene, and he did not intervene.
“And the idea that the civilians should have rushed in to a policing situation in the inner city Minneapolis against four police ficers that have weapons and are kneeling on the neck a man — don’t you think that’s asking a little much civilians and a little too little your client?”
Gray then seemingly walked back his comments, saying, “Absolutely. I’m not, I just brought that up.”
Floyd died on May 25 after fired Minneapolis Police Department ficer Derek Chauvin placed his knee on his neck for nearly nine minutes. Chauvin was arrested four days later and charged with third-degree murder and manslaughter, while the other three ficers — including Lane — weren’t initially charged.
After Attorney General Keith Ellison took over the case earlier this month, Chauvin’s charge was upgraded to second-degree murder and Lane, J. Alexander Kueng and Tao Thao were charged with aiding and abetting second-degree murder.