Any normal person that didn't have a lethal amount of fentanyl would've survived.
He had a
potentially lethal amount. You hurt your argument by doing that lightweight stuff RaRa.
The families medical report reads very differently and this will have to be reconciled. From an NBC article.
"A separate autopsy commissioned for Floyd’s family also called his death a homicide. It concluded that that he died of asphyxiation due to neck and back compression, said the family’s attorney, Ben Crump, who called for the charge against Chauvin to be upgraded to first-degree murder and for three other officers to be charged. He didn't say what the charges against the other officers should be.
That autopsy, by a forensic pathologist who also examined Eric Garner’s body, found the compression cut off blood to Floyd’s brain, and that the pressure of other officers' knees on his back made it impossible for him to breathe, Crump said."
The female dispatcher who saw the surveillance camera footage feed made the comment to the effect call me a snitch if you like.. and expressed concern that the use of force seemed excessive to her and the others. We may well have a situation where process (dangerous process) was followed but a problem is the cover story the police usually issue have people not believing them anymore.
There is a similar issue in medicine, honesty seems rarely the policy.
A lot hinges on the actual and immediate reason he became unconscious, if it is a cartiod compression deal then it will come down to whether there was a provable motive for murder or not.