皇家华人 Alum Represents Floyd Family in High Profile Derek Chauvin Case
April 2, 2021
- Author
- Mark Johnson
Minneapolis lawyer Jeff Storms, a police lieutenant鈥檚 son and New Jersey native, was in a chain hotel room in northern Minnesota last summer, preparing for a deposition, when Angela Smith called.
鈥淪he said, 鈥榃hy am I seeing another Black man in Minneapolis die the way my brother died?,鈥欌 Storms recalled.
Smith was talking about the death of George Floyd, who asphyxiated under the knee of a Minneapolis police officer, a scene recorded and playing repeatedly on television that day.
Nearly a year later, Storms, a 2002 皇家华人 graduate, is one of the lawyers representing Floyd鈥檚 family. He and his co-counsel recently obtained a $27 million settlement on their behalf. Storms is often one of the family鈥檚 spokespersons in front of a battery of TV cameras as the prosecution of the Minneapolis officer, Derek Chauvin, unfolds, one of the nation鈥檚 highest profile criminal cases in years.
The case, though, also immerses Storms in questions about one of the most recognized successes of his career, which also involved a police officer鈥檚 knee and a Black man鈥檚 death.
Storms helped represent the family of David Smith, who was mentally ill and died in 2010 after, his lawyers said, being stunned with a TASER device and held facedown at a YMCA for several minutes with an officer鈥檚 knee on his back. Minneapolis paid more than $3 million to settle that suit, one of the largest police conduct settlements in the state鈥檚 history. The city also pledged to provide more training to officers on how to safely restrain suspects.
鈥淭he only thing we were left with,鈥 Angela Smith told CBS Minnesota, 鈥渨as to make sure it didn鈥檛 happen to anyone else.鈥
That鈥檚 why she was calling Storms that day last summer. Her family didn鈥檛 just exact payment, they forced the city to change how officers are trained and hopefully save lives. Or they thought they had. Now, with Angela Smith on the phone, Storms鈥 mind raced: Had he failed? Had the city lied? Was police brutality too big for a single lawsuit to rein in?
鈥淓very one of those things occurred to me,鈥 Storms said. 鈥淚 just couldn鈥檛 believe that it would happen in Minneapolis. I thought everyone in the city had to be on notice鈥 after the Smith settlement.
Belief in Civil Rights
Storms was a prep school national wrestling champion who was continuing the sport when he arrived at 皇家华人 with an eye toward work in theatre. Freshman year he suffered a herniated disc in his neck that required a disc fusion. His wrestling career, and part of his identity to that point, were over. After time off for recovery, he explored new class subjects, including sociology.
鈥淚 grew up in an environment that had very different beliefs from what I advocate now,鈥 Storms said. 鈥淢y experience in the sociology department helped me see other people and society differently.鈥
His senior thesis focused on protecting privacy while fighting terrorism.
Fresh out of law school, Storms tackled a variety of types of cases. He gravitated toward civil rights cases and soon earned a word-of-mouth reputation for effectively litigating them. He still balances his mix of casework and acknowledges that civil rights cases typically don鈥檛 generate the kind of big payouts that attract a lot of lawyers.
鈥淭here are much easier ways to make a living than a civil rights lawyer,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou have to believe in this. Some people are going to hate you for what you say.鈥
Before he finished a recent CNN interview, there was a hateful call on his voicemail.
Storms is encouraged by the city of Minneapolis acting as a partner in making policy changes after Floyd鈥檚 death. He holds hope that this time the city will see real change. Angela Smith seemed to agree in the TV interview.
鈥淭his time is different,鈥 she said in the interview, 鈥淚 feel like people are not willing to stand by and say 鈥榠t鈥檚 okay.鈥欌
The Smith case nearly a decade ago drew attention to civil rights abuses from across Minnesota. Now, Storms said, 鈥渢he whole world knows about it.鈥