The four former Minneapolis police officers charged in George Floyd's killing will be tried together in Hennepin County instead of separately in suburban or outstate Minnesota, a judge ruled Thursday.
Hennepin County District Judge Peter Cahill rejected motions filed by each defense attorney for a change of venue, requests that activists and attorneys for Floyd's family had criticized as attempts to sidestep justice by trying the cases in rural, predominantly white counties. Floyd was Black.
Cahill granted a motion filed by Attorney General Keith Ellison's office to try the defendants — Derek Chauvin, J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao — in one trial.
Each defense attorney had argued for individual trials, citing antagonistic defenses that would complicate a joint trial as they blame co-defendants in order to protect their clients.
"Conducting four separate monthlong trials could potentially take a couple of years, delaying justice," Cahill wrote. " … Forcing the community and this State to endure four separate trials … is likely to compound and prolong the trauma to the community and the State."
Cahill issued a slew of other orders that shaped how the March 8 trial will unfold.
He granted defense attorneys' joint request to allow cameras at trial, an unprecedented move.
The judge also ruled that jurors' identities will remain anonymous to the public until after trial, that up to four alternate jurors will be seated instead of the typical one and that jurors will be sequestered during deliberations.