The third day of jury deliberations in downtown Minneapolis ended without verdicts Wednesday in Kimberly Potter's manslaughter trial for shooting Daunte Wright last spring.
The jurors had no questions and gave no communication to the court Wednesday as they ended a total of 24 hours in deliberations since being handed the case early Monday afternoon.
Potter, a former Brooklyn Center police officer, is charged with first- and second-degree manslaughter for shooting Wright, 20, with her handgun as he resisted arrest during an April 11 traffic stop. She has maintained that she meant to deploy her Taser.
The sequestered jurors reconvened Wednesday at 8:25 a.m. and finished their deliberations at 6 p.m. It's unknown whether they have been deliberating through their lunch break. Judge Regina Chu has said that if the case continues into the holiday weekend, she will give jurors Friday and the weekend off.
Outside the Hennepin County Government Center, where the trial is being held, activist Brandyn Tulloch said to a crowd of 50 protesters, "What is taking so long? We all saw the video. We all saw her reaction to what she did."
Tulloch said Potter wasn't crying in the body cam footage because she killed a young Black man. "She was crying because she knew, mistake or not, she knew what she did and the consequences she should face," Tulloch said.
Jonathan McClellan, an activist with the Minnesota Justice Coalition, acknowledged being "a little anxious" about the lack of a verdict on either count. He said he was concerned that the bias of the largely white jury might be preventing Potter from being convicted.
"It's a no-brainer," he said. "There should be a conviction on both counts."