Chauvin did not perform CPR because the environment was becoming hostile, defense says
Chauvin was occupied with a hostile crowd when Floyd took his last breath, making it difficult to perform CPR, Nelson said.
It is written in the Minneapolis Police Department to stop CPR when it is no longer safe to perform it, Nelson said, citing the testimony by Minneapolis Police Officer Nicole Mackenzie, the department's medical support officer, who discussed the difficulty of performing CPR in hostile environments.
"She described how it's incredibly difficult to perform EMS efforts in a loud crowd, difficult to focus when you don't feel safe, makes it more difficult to assess a patient and makes it more likely you can miss signs that a patient is experiencing something," Nelson said. "So the distraction, she said, can actually do harm to a patient."