A member of the Hennepin County jury that convicted Jamal Lindsey Smith in the road-rage murder of a youth baseball coach said the crux of their deliberations wasn't deciding whether Smith was the shooter. Rather, the three-day debate was over if he intended beyond a reasonable doubt to kill him.
"How can you ever know what someone was thinking in their mind when they did something? We really struggled with that. Everyone did," said the juror, who spoke with the Star Tribune under the condition of anonymity out of concerns for their safety.
The juror also said that Smith's testimony in his own defense "didn't make any sense." He contradicted himself when he said that at first he didn't know there was a shooting and thought the loud noise was thunder. Then Smith said it wasn't him but a fellow passenger who fired the shot that killed Jay Boughton, who was driving his teenage son home from a ballgame.
Smith, 34, of Chicago, was found guilty of first- and second-degree murder. The court announced Tuesday that he will be sentenced Oct. 4. A first-degree murder conviction carries an automatic life sentence.
The jury was instructed to not consider the penalty, but after the verdict was announced and the group learned that he faced life in prison, one juror burst into tears, the juror said in a recent phone interview.

Several key pieces of evidence convinced the jury that intention was at play in Boughton's shooting, but there was conflict in reaching a unanimous agreement. The juror said that it took only a couple hours of deliberating for the majority to find Smith guilty of second-degree murder and a third count of unlawful possession of a firearm, but four were on the fence for first-degree murder.
They turned to Judge Nicole Engisch after eight hours of deliberating to share that they could not arrive at a consensus. But Engisch sent them back to the deliberation room, where they remained for another eight hours.
Jurors replayed a video of Smith the day after the shooting showing him and a passenger without remorse, seemingly in a celebratory mood despite Smith having read news reports of the fatal shooting and the frantic search for the suspect vehicle.