The prosecution and defense will make their opening arguments in the murder trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin on Monday morning. The trial is starting in earnest 10 months after George Floyd’s killing triggered outrage and protests against racial inequality across the United States.
Chauvin, who is white, is charged with second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of Floyd, who was Black. Video recordings show that Floyd was handcuffed and held facedown on the asphalt — and that Chauvin kept his knee on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes.
The court will convene at 10 a.m. ET for the trial, which is expected to last around four weeks. You can follow the proceedings on NPR and at member station Minnesota Public Radio, which is livestreaming video coverage from the courtroom.
The Hennepin County medical examiner ruled last June that Floyd’s death was a homicide, saying his heart and lungs stopped functioning “while being restrained.”
The autopsy report cited neck compression, but it also noted “other significant conditions,” including fentanyl intoxication, recent methamphetamine use and signs of heart disease.
Several legal questions will likely determine the outcome of the case:
If Chauvin is found to have directly caused Floyd’s death, which of the three charges would jurors agree on?
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The highly anticipated trial is being watched closely, as Floyd’s family and their supporters call for justice in what they say was an excessive use of force. Chauvin’s supporters say the officer used force only after Floyd resisted being put in a police car.
To reach the courtroom hosting the trial, jurors and attorneys will have to pass through an elaborate set of security measures — including barricades, fencing and concertina wire — that surround the building.
Hennepin County Judge Peter Cahill is overseeing the trial. In recent weeks, he has denied defense motions to move the trial outside Minneapolis or to delay the proceedings until publicity about the case eases.
“I do not think that that would give the defendant any kind of a fair trial beyond what we are doing here today,” Cahill said as he issued his ruling. “I don’t think there’s any place in the state of Minnesota that has not been subjected to extreme amounts of publicity on this case.”
Public awareness of the trial also became a concern after the city of Minneapolis reached a $27 million settlement with Floyd’s family.
After that news broke, two jurors told the court that they could no longer promise to be impartial, and they were struck from the panel. In one juror’s words, the payout made him believe the city was admitting that “something was wrong,” according to Minnesota Public Radio.
The 12-member jury includes one Black woman, three Black men (two of whom are immigrants) and two women who identify as multiracial — making the panel more diverse than Minneapolis. The remainder of the jurors and three alternates are white, including six women.
Evidence presented during the trial will include recordings from the day Floyd died, including the dramatic video in which Chauvin is seen pinning Floyd to the asphalt.
“Please, please. I can’t breathe,” Floyd repeatedly said before he died.
Chauvin and the other three police officers who were at the scene — Tou Thao, J. Alexander Kueng and Thomas K. Lane — were fired one day after Floyd was killed. They were arrested several days later. Thao, Kueng and Lane are facing charges of aiding and abetting murder.
After his death last Memorial Day, Floyd’s name quickly became a rallying call for the Black Lives Matter movement and its allies. His death, along with other high-profile police killings of Black people, from Breonna Taylor in Louisville, Ky., to Jonathan Price in Wolfe City, Texas, brought new scrutiny to long-entrenched racism in the U.S., particularly the decades of deadly violence Black Americans have endured since slavery was outlawed.
In the past year, communities around the U.S. have been reexamining the historical figures and monuments they honor, resulting in the removal of nearly 100 Confederate monuments in 2020. Hundreds more of the monuments remain in place, according to an annual survey by the Southern Poverty Law Center.