The same day Minnesota Court of Appeals judges questioned arguments that Derek Chauvin shouldn't be charged with third-degree murder, the state Supreme Court agreed to review the conviction of another ex-Minneapolis police officer that could potentially affect next week's trial in the death of George Floyd.
Shortly after prosecutors asked the state Court of Appeals to reinstate the charge against Chauvin, the state Supreme Court agreed to hear Mohamed Noor's appeal of his third-degree murder conviction in the 2017 shooting death of Justine Ruszczyk Damond. Oral arguments are scheduled for June.
In Chauvin's case, prosecutors are racing the clock to reinstate the third-degree murder charge against the ex-officer, who already faces second-degree murder and manslaughter charges. In Noor's case, he is seeking to have the conviction dismissed and be sentenced on the lesser conviction of manslaughter.
At issue is whether third-degree murder can be applied to someone whose actions were directed at a specific individual and whether the Court of Appeals' ruling in Noor's case set a precedent that should be followed in Chauvin's case. Historically, the charge has been applied to drug dealers in overdose deaths.
Chauvin is accused of killing Floyd by kneeling on his neck for more than nine minutes last May. His trial is set to begin Monday before Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill. Noor was convicted in Hennepin County in 2019 of fatally shooting Damond, an Australian woman who had called 911 about a possible sexual assault behind her home. The cases of the two former Minneapolis police officers are not otherwise connected.
At midday Monday, a three-judge panel of the state Court of Appeals heard arguments from Special Attorney for the State Neal Katyal and Chauvin's attorney, Eric Nelson regarding the murder charge. Prosecutors want the appellate court to reinstate the charge that Cahill tossed out then declined to reinstate last month.
Met with skepticism
The appellate judges seemed skeptical of Nelson's position. In a virtual hearing watched by more than 500 people, Judge Michelle Larkin told the lawyers to focus on the question of whether Cahill was bound by the Feb. 1 appellate ruling on Noor. Larkin wrote the 2-1 decision that upheld Noor's third-degree murder conviction.
Katyal argued for reinstatement, saying the Noor decision became precedent as soon as it became public.