For six months, the federal courts in the Twin Cities conducted no trials, hamstrung by a COVID-19 threat that could make any face-to-face encounter perilous.
But this week, with retrofitted courtrooms in Minneapolis and St. Paul, trials resumed, with a bench trial in St. Paul in which Judge Susan Richard Nelson is presiding, and a full-scale jury criminal trial in Minneapolis, overseen by Judge Nancy E. Brasel, who gaveled it into session Tuesday.
The Minneapolis courtroom was equipped with plexiglass surrounding most of the jurors, shielding the witness stand, separating the defendant from his defense attorney and the prosecutor from an agent from the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives (ATF), who was overseeing the investigation. Everyone wore masks.
Brasel provided a short tour of the new setup on Monday before the trial began, and she quipped that the jury box looks like a hockey penalty box.
She showed off the headsets that she and the attorneys on both sides were to use so they can talk to each other without the jury listening in, replacing those occasional sidebars in which the judge and attorneys huddle in the front of the courtroom.
There were headsets for the defense attorney and defendant, and for the prosecutor and the ATF agent.
Every time a new witness testified, a new cloth covering was put over the microphone by a court assistant, and surfaces in front of the witness stand were wiped down.
"We have spent an extraordinary amount of time and energy and court talent to develop everything we can that minimizes the risk to the jurors," Brasel said.