A federal jury on Tuesday acquitted Minneapolis police officer Michael Griffin — accused of violating the civil rights of four men and later lying about it — of most of the charges against him.
Jurors deliberated 3½ days before reaching their decision. They cleared Griffin of the six criminal counts he faced stemming from a brawl outside the Loop Bar in late 2011. But they couldn't reach a verdict on three counts related to a 2010 incident in front of now-defunct Envy nightclub in which Griffin is accused of beating a man unconscious.
Griffin slipped out of the courthouse shortly after the verdict was read, accompanied by his wife and police partner. He has been on home assignment after being relieved of duty shortly after his indictment by a federal grand jury last May.
His attorney, Robert Richman, said Griffin, most recently a patrolman in the Fourth Precinct, was eager to return to the job.
"This is something that has dogged him now for six years," Richman said.
In a statement released shortly after the verdict, U.S. Attorney Andrew Luger said he "strongly believed that this case needed to be brought before a Court, publicly tried, and decided by a jury." He said he was reviewing options concerning the unresolved charges stemming from the Envy incident — one count each of deprivation of civil rights, perjury and falsification of documents. His office declined requests for further comment.
Richman said that the government could still charge his client in connection with the 2010 episode outside Envy, but that he's confident the outcome will be the same.
"They gave it their best shot (but) witnesses were already unable to remember huge portions" of the events, he said.