| 
		Jury to hear opening arguments in Derek Chauvin trial for George Floyd's 
		death
		 Send a link to a friend 
		
		 [March 29, 2021] 
		By Jonathan Allen 
 MINNEAPOLIS (Reuters) - A jury will gather 
		on Monday to hear whether the deadly arrest of George Floyd, which 
		ignited a global protest movement ten months ago, amounts to murder as 
		opening arguments commence in the trial of former Minneapolis policeman 
		Derek Chauvin.
 
 Over two weeks of jury selection, many jurors told Hennepin County 
		District Judge Peter Cahill and the lawyers on each side that they 
		recognized the scrutiny their deliberations would come under, not least 
		by those who view the trial as a reckoning for how Black people are 
		policed in the United States.
 
 "It's been a long time coming," a gospel choir sang on Sunday evening at 
		a prayer service attended by Floyd's relatives. "But I know a change is 
		gonna come."
 
 The service was held in a church a few blocks east of where Chauvin, who 
		was white, was caught on a bystander's video, with his knee on the neck 
		of Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man.
 
 Philonise Floyd, a brother of George Floyd, said before the service 
		began that he had faith that prosecutors from the Minnesota attorney 
		general's office would see Chauvin convicted.
 
		
		 
		
 "The video is the proof," he said.
 
 Chauvin, 45, has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder, 
		third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter, with his lawyers 
		arguing that he followed his training and that the main cause of Floyd's 
		death, which the county examiner ruled a homicide, was a drug overdose. 
		He faces up to 40 years in prison if convicted on the most serious 
		charge.
 
 Jurors will head to a courtroom in a tower in downtown Minneapolis 
		ringed with concrete barriers, barbed wire and soldiers from the state's 
		National Guard. For blocks around, businesses are closed and windows 
		boarded up, fearing a repeat of the arson and other property damage that 
		occurred after Floyd's death.
 
 Less than three miles away, residents maintain a vigil at the 
		intersection where Chauvin kept his knee on a handcuffed Floyd's neck 
		for about 9 minutes as Floyd uses his final breaths to plead for his 
		life. Chauvin and three other officers were arresting Floyd on suspicion 
		of passing a fake $20 bill at the Cup Foods grocery store nearby.
 
 Four sets of barricades block police from coming to the intersection, 
		now called George Floyd Square, which is filled with flowers, posters, 
		murals and other tributes to Floyd.
 
 [to top of second column]
 | 
            
			 
            
			The George Floyd Square is seen the day before open statements in 
			the trial of former police officer Derek Chauvin, who is facing 
			murder charges in the death of George Floyd, in Minneapolis, 
			Minnesota, U.S., March 28, 2021. REUTERS/Nicholas Pfosi 
            
			 
            The jury, including three alternates, is made up of six white women, 
			three white men, three Black men, one Black woman and two 
			multiracial women, according to court records.
 "I'm thankful that it is a diverse jury," Paris Stevens, a cousin of 
			Floyd who works as a nurse in North Carolina, said in a telephone 
			interview. "I'm very anxious because you don't know what's going to 
			happen, but I'm just glad that this process is starting."
 
 She and other relatives have been told by the court they must take 
			turns in using a single chair reserved for Floyd's family in the 
			courtroom, which has been kitted out with plexiglass screens, 
			hand-sanitizer stations and other anti-coronavirus measures.
 
 Chauvin has also been allocated a single chair for his supporters, 
			which has not been used by anyone since the trial began with jury 
			selection on March 8 except for the occasional sheriff's deputy 
			overseeing security wanting to take the weight off his feet.
 
 Legal experts have noted that U.S. police officers have almost never 
			been found criminally liable for killing a citizen. Chauvin's 
			lawyers have said they will try to convince the jury that the 
			fentanyl, an opioid painkiller, found in Floyd's blood by the 
			medical examiner played a bigger role in killing Floyd than the 
			officer's restraint.
 
 Rev. Al Sharpton, the civil rights activist who joined the Floyd 
			family at Sunday's service, echoed prosecutors in calling this an 
			"attempt to smear his name."
 
 Tiffany Jeffers, a former Maryland prosecutor and a Georgetown law 
			professor, said she saw the defense's case as an uphill battle in 
			part because of the widely seen video of the arrest, which is due to 
			be shown to the jury, though all members have said they already saw 
			at least snippets of it.
 
            
			 
			"This video is just so powerful," Jeffers said.
 (Reporting by Jonathan Allen in Minneapolis; editing by Diane Craft)
 
			[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights 
				reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, 
			broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.  
			Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |