Five jurors are now seated in the trial of Derek Chauvin for the death late last spring of George Floyd, while a Minnesota Supreme Court ruling could allow prosecutors to revive a charge of third-degree murder.
Jury selection was well into its second day when the state's high court said without elaboration that it would not hear Chauvin's argument to review an appeals court ruling that said a third-degree murder charge against Chauvin was improperly dismissed by District Judge Peter Cahill.
The judge announced the development in court Wednesday afternoon and said he would address the matter Thursday morning, when proceedings move toward seating 12 jurors and two alternates.
"The Supreme Court was right to decline Mr. Chauvin's petition for review," Attorney General Keith Ellison said in a statement. "The Court of Appeals ruled correctly; therefore, there was no need for the Supreme Court to intervene. We believe the charge of third-degree murder is fair and appropriate."
Prosecutors had argued Monday that the entire trial should be suspended because Chauvin's attorney Eric Nelson has asked the Supreme Court to intervene. Ellison's office called the Court of Appeals on Monday and filed a motion asking it to postpone the trial until there was a resolution, but no guidance was given and selection began Tuesday morning.
The two newest members of the jury bring the number of white men on the panel to three, along with a woman of color and a Black man for a trial that promises to proceed with in a racial subcontext, given the white police officer's detention of a Black suspect who died later that evening.
While more jury candidates are being brought in to the courtroom one by one for questioning, the Court of Appeals could intervene at any moment and halt a murder trial that is being livestreamed and televised around the world from downtown Minneapolis.
Wednesday's first selected juror said he was not so worried about the obligation during a pandemic or troubled by all the security in place around the Hennepin County Government Center, but how a trial poised to eat up most of April might impact the timing of his wedding, set for May 1 in Florida.