In a rare move, the judge presiding over the trial of officer Jeronimo Yanez wrote a letter to jurors who acquitted him in the fatal shooting of Philando Castile, saying he supports them despite widespread public criticism based on what he called "a failure to understand what you were asked to do."
Ramsey County District Judge William H. Leary III wrote that he wanted to thank the jurors "for the profound public service you provided to this country and the State of Minnesota," and continued, "I write to re-assure you that you faithfully fulfilled the difficult task you were asked to undertake."
Leary wrote that he was not providing his own opinion of Yanez's actions, merely that he wanted to convey to jurors that their verdict "was fully supported by a fair interpretation of the evidence and the law you were obligated to apply."
The judge's letter to the jury of five women and seven men, including two people of color, was dated June 23 and filed with the courts on June 28. Although judges regularly address jurors in chambers following the resolution of a case, it's not common for them to follow up several days later with a letter.
Reached for comment Monday, Leary issued a short statement that said, "I appreciate your interest, but I don't believe any discussion would be of any additional value."
Jurors said they were deadlocked in the case 10-2, with two holdouts against acquittal, until the afternoon of their fifth day of deliberations. They eventually acquitted Yanez, 29, on June 16 of second-degree manslaughter and two counts of reckless discharge of a firearm for killing Castile, 32, during a traffic stop in Falcon Heights on July 6.
Castile's girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds, and her daughter, then 4, were also in the car. Reynolds broadcast the aftermath live on Facebook, bringing worldwide attention to Castile's death.
In his letter, Leary broke down the multiple elements of the law prosecutors were required to prove beyond a reasonable doubt, including whether Yanez acted with gross negligence and recklessness.