Attorneys probe jurors’ racial attitudes in ex-cop’s trial
MINNEAPOLIS — Attorneys in the trial of a Minneapolis police officer charged in George Floyd’s death questioned potential jurors Wednesday about their attitudes toward both law enforcement and the Black Lives Matter movement, with one man who was chosen for the panel saying he views the racial justice movement more favourably than he does police.
The man, who works in sales management and grew up in a mostly white part of central Minnesota, acknowledged saying on his written questionnaire that he had a “very favourable” opinion of Black Lives Matter and a “somewhat unfavourable” impression of the Blue Lives Matter countermovement in favour of police, yet “somewhat agreed” that police don’t get the respect they deserve.
“Are there bad police officers? Yes. Are there good ones? Yes. I don’t think it’s right to blame the entire organization,” he told the court.
The man joined three others who were selected for the panel on Tuesday, the first day of jury selection in Derek Chauvin’s trial on second-degree murder and manslaughter charges It’s a grinding process during which attorneys ask the prospective jurors one by one whether they could keep an open mind, what they think of the criminal justice system, how they resolve conflicts and much more.