Courteney Ross, George Floyd's girlfriend, took the stand on Thursday in Derek Chauvin's murder trial and spoke at length about their relationship as well as their struggles to overcome opioid addiction. 

Ross spoke at length about how the two managed their opioid addiction that resulted from physical injuries, like many others across the country. The U.S. Department of Health estimated that in 2019, 10.1 million people ages 12 or older misused opioids. 

Ross had pain in her neck that she was prescribed opioids for and Floyd had spent decades playing organized sports. As Blavity previously reported, Floyd was a decorated high school basketball and football player in Texas before attending Texas A&M University–Kingsville on a sports scholarship. 

But he injured his back and struggled for years with pain in the lower section, Ross said.

"Floyd and I both suffered from an opioid addiction. Both Floyd and I, our story is a classic story of how many people get addicted to opioids. We both suffered from chronic pain, mine was in my neck and his was in his back. We both had prescriptions but after prescriptions that were filled, we got addicted. We tried really hard to break that addiction many times," she told the court through tears. 

Chauvin's lawyers have repeatedly honed in on Floyd's drug use and one of their main arguments is that Floyd died partially from the fentanyl and methamphetamine in his system as opposed to Chauvin's knee, which was pressed down on Floyd's neck for more than nine minutes.  


In recent years, she said Floyd struggled with grief over his mother's death and the two would at times relapse after recovering. After his mother died in 2018, he was “kind of a shell of himself, like he was kind of broken,” according to Ross. 

“He didn’t have the same bounce that he had. He was devastated. He loved his mom so much. He talked about her all the time. I knew how he felt. It’s so hard to lose a parent that you love like that,” Ross said. 

The two met in 2017 while Floyd worked as a security guard at the Salvation Army’s Harbor Light Center, a Minneapolis transitional housing facility. 

Ross was going through a difficult time in her life and was crying in the lobby of the Salvation Army’s Harbor Light Center. 

“Floyd had this great deep southern voice. Raspy. And he’s like, ‘Sis, you OK, sis?’ And I wasn't OK. I said, ‘No, I’m just waiting for my son’s father. Sorry.’ He said, ‘Well, can I pray with you?’ I was so tired. We had been through so much, my sons and I. And this kind person, just to come up to me and say can I pray with you, when I felt alone in this lobby. It was so sweet. I had lost a lot of faith in God,” she said. 

Because he was new to the city, she spent years showing him around Minneapolis and Minnesota, sharing a love of outdoor activities and food. Both also shared a love of children and she said he adored his children. 

“Floyd liked to work out every single day, lifting weights. He did sit-ups, push-ups, pull-ups, just within his house. He would go biking…he loved playing neighborhood sports with kids. He was the type of person who would run to the store,” the 45-year-old said. 

But even with how active the couple was, both struggled with chronic injuries that doctors told them should be dealt with through prescriptions for oxycontin and oxycodone.  

"Addiction in my opinion is a lifelong struggle, so it's something we dealt with every day. It's not just something that comes and goes, it's something I'll deal with forever," she added.  

Mary Moriarty, a former chief public defender in Hennepin County, told KHOU11 that Ross' testimony was key because until now, the public has not known why Floyd used drugs. 

“We haven’t really known anything about why George Floyd was addicted to drugs. We haven’t known that at all. Now we know he had some chronic injuries. He tried prescription pills, and then – like many Americans – he became addicted to the painkillers,” she said. 

“So the state is going to be arguing, yes, he had a high level of drugs in his system, but it didn’t kill him. It was Chauvin’s actions that did,” she said.

Civil rights attorney Ben Crump released a statement about Ross’ testimony, explaining that the attempts to use Floyd's drug addiction against him were an insult to millions of Americans struggling with the same issue. 

“As the defense attempts to construct the narrative that George Floyd’s cause of death was the Fentanyl in his system, we want to remind the world who witnessed his death on video that George was walking, talking, laughing, and breathing just fine before Derek Chauvin held his knee to George’s neck, blocking his ability to breathe and extinguishing his life for all to see,” Crump wrote.

NEWS ALERT: @AttorneyCrump and @TonyRomanucci issue statement on Courtney Ross’ witness testimony concerning George Floyd’s fentanyl tolerance. pic.twitter.com/qrbs2D3dAp

— Ben Crump Law, PLLC (@BenCrumpLaw) April 1, 2021

“Tens of thousands of Americans struggle with self-medication and opioid abuse and are treated with dignity, respect and support, not brutality. We fully expected the defense to put George’s character and struggles with addiction on trial because that is the go-to tactic when the facts are not on your side,” he added.

"We are confident that the jury will see past that to arrive at the truth – that George Floyd would have lived to see another day if Derek Chauvin hadn’t brutally ended his life in front of a crowd of witnesses pleading for his life,” Crump explained. 

The next witness the state brought on to the stand was Hennepin County paramedic Seth Bravinder, who said that when he arrived, Chauvin's knee was still on Floyd's neck and he was not breathing or moving. 

Bravinder and another paramedic checked Floyd's eyes and pulse even as Chauvin continued to kneel on Floyd's neck. 

Bravinder is the one who told Chauvin to remove his knee from Floyd's neck so they could move him to a stretcher. The two drove the ambulance a few blocks away from the crowd that had formed and checked Floyd, noting that his heart showed no activity and their chest compressions did not revive him.