Derek Chauvin: ex-officer convicted in George
Floyd’s murder asks for new trial
Attorney Eric Nelson alleges prosecutorial and jury
misconduct and errors of law at trial and says the verdict was contrary to law
Guardian
staff and agency
Wed 5 May
2021 00.49 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/may/04/derek-chauvin-george-floyd-new-trial
Derek
Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer convicted of murdering George
Floyd, has asked a judge for a new trial, according to a court document filed Tuesday.
Chauvin’s
attorney, Eric Nelson, said his client had been deprived of a fair trial,
adding that there had been prosecutorial and jury misconduct and errors of law
at trial and that the verdict was contrary to law.
Nelson
cited many reasons in his request for a new trial, including allegations of
prosecutorial and jury misconduct.
Nelson also
said judge Peter Cahill, who presided over the trial, had abused his discretion
when he denied an earlier request for a new trial based on publicity during the
proceedings, which Nelson said threatened the fairness of the trial.
Nelson also
took issue with Cahill’s refusal to sequester the jury for the trial or
admonish them to avoid all media, and with his refusal to allow a man who was
with Floyd at the time of his arrest to testify.
The move
comes two weeks after Chauvin was found guilty of second- and third-degree
murder and manslaughter in Floyd’s killing.
A 12-member
jury swiftly and unanimously found Chauvin, 45, guilty on all three counts he
faced, following three weeks of testimony from 45 witnesses, including
bystanders, police officials and medical experts.
The rare
verdict against a police officer is considered a milestone in the fraught
racial history of the United States and a rebuke of law enforcement’s treatment
of Black Americans.
Ben Crump,
an attorney for the Floyd family, called the verdict “a turning point in
American history for accountability of law enforcement” at the time.
In a
confrontation captured on video, Chauvin, a white veteran of the police force,
pushed his knee into the neck of Floyd, a 46-year-old Black man, for more than
nine minutes on 25 May 2020. Chauvin and three fellow officers were attempting
to arrest Floyd, accused of using a fake $20 bill to buy cigarettes at a
grocery store.
Nelson also
asked the judge for a hearing to impeach the verdict on the grounds that the
jury committed misconduct, felt race-based pressure, felt intimidated or
threatened, and/or failed to adhere to jury instructions, though the filing did
not include details about that assertion. To impeach a verdict is to question
its validity.
The brief
did not mention recent reports that one of the jurors participated in a 28
August march in Washington DC to honor Martin Luther King Jr.
That juror,
Brandon Mitchell, has defended his actions, saying the event was to commemorate
the 1963 March on Washington and was not a protest over Floyd’s death. Floyd’s
brother and sister, Philonise and Bridgett Floyd, and relatives of others who
had been shot by police addressed the crowd at the march last summer.
A request
for a new trial is routine following a guilty verdict and often mirrors issues
that will be raised on appeal, said Mike Brandt, a Minneapolis defense attorney
who has been closely following the case. If this request is denied, it can add another
layer of decisions for Nelson to appeal. Brandt and others have said Chauvin’s
convictions are unlikely to be overturned.
Brandt said
Nelson will likely file more detailed written arguments on these issues. The
purpose of holding a hearing to impeach the verdict would be to develop a
factual record and present evidence that could determine whether the verdict
was compromised. If a hearing is granted, it’s likely Mitchell would be called
in to answer questions, Brandt said.


Sem comentários:
Enviar um comentário