The Minnesota Court of Appeals will not intervene in the murder case against former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin and postpone his March trial in George Floyd's death to the summertime as prosecutors had requested.
The court issued a unanimous ruling Friday stating that prosecutors had not provided enough reasoning to merit its involvement, and dismissed appeals by prosecutors to delay Chauvin's March 8 trial and to hold one trial for Chauvin and three of his former colleagues who are also charged in the case.
"The state has not established a basis for our review of the district court's pretrial orders," wrote Court of Appeals Presiding Judge Tracy Smith. "Because we conclude that these appeals must be dismissed, we express no opinion on the merits of the district court's rulings."
Attorney General Keith Ellison's Office filed appeals in late January asking the Court of Appeals to review rulings issued by Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill that ordered Chauvin to be tried alone next month on charges of second-degree murder and manslaughter.
Prosecutors argued that the COVID-19 pandemic made it unsafe to hold Chauvin's trial in March. They asked the Court of Appeals to hold a hearing so they could argue their case orally, or, to skip a hearing and immediately issue a "writ of prohibition" to stop the trial.
The Court of Appeals rejected the appeals because prosecutors did not show that COVID-19 would have a "critical impact" on their ability to prosecute the case, the Court of Appeals has no "inherent authority" to intervene in the "interests of justice" and issuing a writ of prohibition is "an extreme remedy" limited to cases where the lower court has " 'exceeded its jurisdiction' " and no other options exist, Smith wrote.
Ellison's office could petition the Minnesota Supreme Court to review the Court of Appeals decision. Ellison declined to comment on the possibility.
"We filed the appeal two weeks ago because the State must and will always act in the best interests of justice and the people of Minnesota," Ellison said in a written statement. "Seeking a continuance to protect jurors, court personnel, attorneys and defendants from the lethal COVID-19 virus was the right thing to do and we stand by it. As we have said all along, we will be ready to start the trial whenever the court deems proper."