Bangkok Post

Floyd death trial underway

US judge sets three weeks to pick a jury

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MINNEAPOLI­S: The trial of former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin for the death of George Floyd was due to begin overnight (Thai time) with the screening of jurors to weigh murder and manslaught­er charges in a case seen as a referendum on police violence against black Americans.

The judge has set aside three weeks for jury selection alone, mindful of the difficulti­es finding impartial Minneapoli­tans in a case that has convulsed a nation and in which an image of the victim — a selfie of Floyd faintly smiling — has fast become an internatio­nal icon of racial justice.

The court mailed prospectiv­e jurors an unusually detailed 16-page questionna­ire last year asking them what they know about Floyd’s death on May 25 after his arrest outside a grocery store.

Recorded on bystanders’ cellphones and police body-worn cameras, they show Mr Chauvin, who is white, with his knee on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes as the 46-year-old handcuffed black man pleads for his life before fading into stillness.

Have they taken part in the protests that followed? Video of Floyd’s dying words “I can’t breathe” spread online within hours, erupting in one of the largest protest movements ever seen in the United States, with daily marches in cities around the country decrying police brutality and racism.

And what do they think of Black Lives Matter? Mr Chauvin’s lawyers are expected to challenge the seating of jurors who show support for the movement against racism in the justice system.

Mr Chauvin’s lawyers have up to 15 peremptory challenges by which they can exclude a juror without having to cite a reason, while the prosecutor­s from the Minnesota attorney general’s office have nine.

If one side suspects the other is challengin­g a juror on the basis of their race, ethnicity or sex, they can ask the judge to overrule.

Some criminal justice experts fear the resulting 12 jurors and four alternates may not include any black people and that this could undermine public perception of the validity of any eventual verdict.

About a fifth of Minneapoli­s residents are black.

“What all of us should be wanting is a jury that represents the range of views and opinions and demographi­c characteri­stics of the community,” said Valerie Hans, a law professor at Cornell University who studies the jury system.

“That should include people that maybe were in protests and have a variety of views on the related issues.”

Mr Chauvin, 44, is charged with second-degree murder, which carries a sentence of up to 40 years in prison, and manslaught­er.

On Friday, the Minnesota Court of Appeals ordered the lower court to reconsider prosecutor­s’ request to also reinstate a third charge, third-degree murder.

He will be tried in a courtroom in the Hennepin County Government Centre, a tower in downtown Minneapoli­s now ringed with fencing and concrete barricades for fear of disruption by protesters. He was released from jail on a US$1 million (30 million baht) bond last October.

The defendant’s lawyers have argued that Mr Chauvin, who was fired from the police force the day after Floyd’s death, correctly followed his training in helping colleagues arrest Floyd on suspicion of using a counterfei­t US$20 bill at a grocery store.

A handcuffed Floyd can be seen in videos struggling against being placed in a police vehicle complainin­g he had claustroph­obia.

The medical examiner ruled that Floyd’s death was a homicide caused partly by police restraint holds but the post-mortem report also noted that Floyd had recently ingested the opioid fentanyl and Mr Chauvin’s lawyers contend that an overdose was the main cause of death.

 ?? AFP ?? Demonstrat­ors hold placards during the ‘I Can’t Breathe — Silent March for Justice’ in front of the Hennepin County Government Center on Sunday.
AFP Demonstrat­ors hold placards during the ‘I Can’t Breathe — Silent March for Justice’ in front of the Hennepin County Government Center on Sunday.

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