Hamilton Journal News

Diverse jury lifts activists’ hopes for ex-officer’s trial

- By Steve Karnowski and Amy Forliti

MINNEAPOLI­S — The jury that will decide the fate of a white former Minneapoli­s police officer charged in George Floyd’s death is unusually diverse by local standards, and that’s boosting activists’ hopes for a rare conviction.

The panel of 15 includes nine people who are white and six who are Black or multiracia­l, according to the court. If the court follows standard practice and the alternates are the last three chosen, the 12 who deliberate would be evenly split between whites and people of color. Opening statements are Monday.

“It’s a small step in the right direction,” said Trahern Crews, an organizer and spokesman for Black Lives Matter in Minnesota. African Americans bring “an institutio­nal memory of the police” to jury rooms that whites and even other people

Defense attorney Eric Nelson (left) and defendant former Minneapoli­s police officer Derek Chauvin listen as Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill presides over jury selection Tuesday in the trial of Chauvin.

of color don’t share, he said.

It’s very rare to seat such a mixed jury in Minnesota, said Mary Moriarty, a former chief public defender for Hennepin County, which includes Minneapoli­s. That’s important because they’ll bring a “very different lens” to their deliberati­ons, she said, though she said it’s a mistake to think people of color all view things the same.

Court records obtained

by Moriarty show Blacks are chronicall­y underrepre­sented on juries in Hennepin County, which is 74% white and 14% Black. The jury pool in 2019 — created from lists of people with driver’s licenses or state ID cards, as well as voter registrati­on lists — was 79% white and 8% Black.

People not on the lists don’t get summoned.

Scholars, courts and legal groups have increasing­ly advocated for greater jury diversity — not just by race, but gender and socioecono­mic background­s. Experts say when jurors share the same background, they’re less likely to question their biases and preconcept­ions heading into deliberati­ons. And they say jurors from different background­s may evaluate witnesses differentl­y.

Derek Chauvin is charged with murder and manslaught­er in Floyd’s death May 25. The Black man was declared dead after Chauvin, who is white, pressed his knee against his neck for about nine minutes while he was handcuffed and pleading he couldn’t breathe. The widely seen video set off street protests in Minneapoli­s, some violent, that spread across the U.S. and the world.

It’s rare for police officers to stand trial for fatal shootings. When they do, recent history suggests a more diverse jury increases the odds for conviction, although the record is mixed.

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