Did a state Senate candidate propose the moment of silence for Derek Chauvin at the Minnesota GOP convention?

by Brian Arola, MinnPost
June 4, 2026
Yes.
The delegate who proposed a moment of silence for convicted murderer Derek Chauvin at the Minnesota Republican convention filed to run for a state Senate seat.
Christopher Rocco made the motion to recognize the former Minneapolis police officer on the convention floor Saturday, May 30, in Duluth. Chauvin is currently serving a prison term after his conviction for murdering George Floyd in May 2020.
The convention’s chair, state Rep. Danny Nadeau, R-Rogers, allowed Rocco’s motion to proceed before delegates observed a brief moment of silence. Afterward, Rocco – who said Chauvin should get a retrial and a pardon for a related federal civil rights conviction – told the Minnesota Reformer that he planned to run for office.
He filed Tuesday under the mononym “Rocco” as a Republican candidate for Senate District 65, which includes St. Paul and West St. Paul. Two DFL candidates also filed for the open seat.
MinnPost partners with Gigafact to produce fact briefs — bite-sized fact checks of trending claims. Read our methodology to learn how we check claims.
Sources
Related: Minneapolis pays out $9 million more in damages over former police officer Chauvin’s behavior
This article first appeared on MinnPost and is republished here under a Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.![]()




