More than six months after fired Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin was found guilty of murder in the death of George Floyd, the names of the jurors who heard the case were officially released Monday by the court they served last spring.
Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill also released the partly redacted questionnaires that 109 prospective jurors filled out in preparation for face-to-face scrutinizing by Chauvin's defense and the prosecution.
The Star Tribune, which earlier this year identified and interviewed two jurors who deliberated, along with one alternate, is awaiting permission from the others to identify them. They have not returned messages seeking comment.
Three days after the trial, Cahill ordered the 14 jurors' names and background information sealed. He said concern for their safety and privacy was paramount given the unrest that erupted in the Twin Cities in the aftermath of Floyd's killing.
Cahill's move was unusual. In most trials, juror information is publicly available after a verdict.
But the Chauvin case was the highest profile trial in state history and was watched around the world. A teen bystander's unvarnished video went viral the day after Floyd's death on May 25, 2020, fueling global interest in the case. It showed Chauvin on top of a prone and pleading Floyd for more than nine minutes as the 46-year-old man went motionless on a south Minneapolis street corner.
In most cases, jurors work in anonymity due to a lack of public interest in their cases. In the Chauvin trial, which was livestreamed, the faces of the jurors were kept off-camera. Their names were never spoken, and the judge and attorneys on both sides reminded them to be careful about disclosing too much personal information as they were being questioned as prospective jurors to avoid being identified.
Last week, when Cahill announced that the seal would be lifted, he encouraged reporters to make "respectful inquiry and scrutiny of jurors so that the public can better understand their verdict and the workings of the criminal justice system."