The Guardian (USA)

Derek Chauvin trial: jury grows after $27m settlement to Floyd family

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Concern appears to be fading that a massive settlement for George Floyd’s family will derail the trial of a former police officer accused in his death, with most potential jurors saying they avoided news of the settlement or could set it aside.

Two jurors seated before news of the city’s $27m settlement broke last week were dismissed on Wednesday after being re-questioned by Hennepin county judge Peter Cahill, but five others were retained and two were added later in the day.

Both sides presented arguments on Thursday about whether the prosecutio­n can call a forensic psychiatri­st to tell the jury about Floyd’s behavior during the fatal encounter.

Prosecutor Jerry Blackwell said Dr Sarah Vinson, of Atlanta, should be allowed to testify how Floyd’s reactions to the officers’ attempts to put him into the squad car were consistent with any reasonable person’s anxiety or panic during a traumatic event. Police officers who confronted Floyd after he allegedly tried to pass a counterfei­t $20 bill at a convenienc­e store put a gun in his face, and he told police he had claustroph­obia.

The prosecutio­n wants to show that he might have been unable to comply with the officers’ orders, rather than resisting arrest. But defense attorney Eric Nelson argued that if the prosecutio­n gets to present that evidence to the jury, the defense should be able to tell the jury about Floyd’s drug arrest a year earlier, when he did not resist getting put into a squad car.

Nelson also has said there are striking similariti­es between the two encounters that could show a pattern of behavior from Floyd: both times, as officers drew their guns and struggled with Floyd, he called out for his mother, claimed he had been shot before and cried, and put what appeared to be pills in his mouth. Drugs were found in the first arrest, and an autopsy showed Floyd had drugs in his system when he died. Cahill said he will rule on Vinson’s testimony on Friday, when he plans to issue a broader ruling on the admissibil­ity of Floyd’s 2019 arrest and on defense motions for delaying or moving the trial.

Nine jurors have been selected through Wednesday. Five are men and four are women. According to the court, four are white, two are multiracia­l and three are Black, and their ages range from 20s to 50s.

Fourteen jurors, including two alternates, are needed for Chauvin’s trial on murder and manslaught­er charges in Floyd’s death.

A woman who was questioned early on Thursday was excused after she said she had been constantly exposed to news of Floyd’s death and that the announceme­nt of the city’s settlement pushed her to favor the state’s position, which she was already leaning toward.

Cahill has set 29 March for opening statements if the jury is complete by then.

Chauvin is charged with murder and manslaught­er in the 25 May death of Floyd, a Black man who was declared dead after Chauvin, who is white, pressed his knee against his neck for about nine minutes. Floyd’s death, captured on bystander video, set off weeks of sometimes violent protests across the country and led to a national reckoning on racial justice.

Three other former officers face an August trial in Floyd’s death on charges of aiding and abetting second-degree murder and manslaught­er.

 ?? Photograph: AP ?? Defense attorney Eric Nelson is seen in the front with his assistant, Amy Voss, and Derek Chauvin behind him on 17 March.
Photograph: AP Defense attorney Eric Nelson is seen in the front with his assistant, Amy Voss, and Derek Chauvin behind him on 17 March.

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