Texarkana Gazette

Question from jurors in Potter case suggests lack of consensus at day end

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MINNEAPOLI­S — Late in their second day of deliberati­ons Tuesday, the jurors in former Brooklyn Center police Officer Kim Potter’s manslaught­er trial issued a pair of questions in court, one suggesting that they’re having trouble reaching a consensus and a second asking to handle her gun outside of a box where it is secured with zip ties.

The jurors ended deliberati­ons for the day shortly after 6 p.m. They will resume Wednesday morning.

The written questions were read at 4 p.m. in open court in Potter’s trial in the shooting death of Daunte Wright. The first read: “If the jury cannot reach consensus, what is the guidance around how long and what steps should we take?”

Hennepin County District Judge Regina Chu responded by rereading the jury instructio­ns, which guided the jury to deliberate with a view toward mutual agreement “if you can do so without violating your individual judgment,” adding that jurors “should not hesitate to reexamine your views and change your opinion if you become convinced that they are erroneous, but you should not surrender your honest opinion” to reach a verdict.

In the second question, the jury asked: “Can the zip ties be removed from Exhibit 199, Potter’s gun, so it can be held out of the evidence box?”

Chu agreed that a deputy could remove the unloaded, secured gun from the box for the jury to examine.

The defense objected to Chu rereading the jury instructio­n and to her decision to unsecure the gun. Chu overruled both.

The questions were read over a livestream with prosecutor­s, Potter and her defense attorneys present. They came after an estimated 10-plus hours of deliberati­ons continued into the afternoon Tuesday.

When the questions were read, most of the jurors appeared impassive, not revealing much, according to a pool reporter. One juror, a white man in his 40s, appeared the most alert on the edge of his seat with his hands folded between his legs.

The jury’s question about a lack of consensus was similar to one asked during the 2017 manslaught­er trial of Jeronimo Yanez, the St. Anthony police officer who was ultimately acquitted in the shooting death of Philando Castile during a traffic stop in Falcon Heights.

After 2 ½ days of deliberati­ons in Yanez’s case, Ramsey County District Judge William H. Leary III gave a nearly identical direction that Chu gave the Potter jury Tuesday afternoon.

Two days later and after roughly 30 hours of deliberati­on in Yanez’s trial, the jury’s not guilty verdicts on all counts were read in court. One of the jurors, Dennis Ploussard, said the jury had been deadlocked 10 for acquittal and two for conviction.

After a morning of closing arguments, the jury received the case early Monday afternoon and stopped deliberati­ng at 6 p.m.

As previously ordered by Chu, the jurors will remain sequestere­d throughout deliberati­ons until they reach unanimous verdicts on two counts, first- and second-degree manslaught­er.

Six women and six men are on the jury. Nine are white, two are Asian women and one is a Black woman. Potter is white, Wright was Black.

Four jurors are in their 40s, three are in their 20s, two are in their 60s, two are in their 50s and one is in her 30s.

During the closing arguments, no one disputed Potter made a mistake, but prosecutor Matthew Frank said that’s not a legitimate defense. He and fellow prosecutor Erin Eldridge repeatedly cited Potter’s years of training as a 26-year veteran who should have known better than to grab her gun from her right hip when she meant to grab the Taser from her left.

“This was no little oopsie,” Eldridge said. “This was a colossal screw-up, a blunder of epic proportion­s. It was precisely the thing she had been warned about for years, and she was trained to prevent it. It was irreversib­le and fatal.”

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