Former Brooklyn Center police officer Kimberly Potter's second-degree manslaughter trial in the death of Daunte Wright won't be broadcast, a Hennepin County judge said Thursday.
Judge Regina Chu's ruling sided with Potter, who doesn't want the proceedings to be broadcast. The judge's order also moved up the trial's start date to Nov. 30 from Dec. 6.
State Attorney General Keith Ellison, whose office is prosecuting Potter, had requested that cameras and audio equipment be allowed in the courtroom for the trial.
Potter fatally shot Wright during a traffic stop on April 11 in the final days of the heavily publicized and livestreamed trial of former Minneapolis officer Derek Chauvin for the murder of George Floyd. Like Chauvin, Potter will be tried in the Hennepin County Government Center in downtown Minneapolis, but Chu's order makes it clear that the two trials will be significantly different.
Police said Potter, a 26-year veteran of the Brooklyn Center Police Department, mistook her gun for her Taser when she shot Wright, a 20-year-old Black man, during a traffic stop The shooting led to days of turbulent protests during the Chauvin trial.
Chu's five-page memorandum cited differences in the circumstances of the two trials.
In Chauvin's case, the defendant didn't object to cameras in the courtroom. Prosecutors objected, but Judge Peter Cahill overruled them, allowing cameras because of the global interest in the case, space limitations in the courtroom and the need for social distancing because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Change may be coming. Extensive praise for the broadcasting operation and the access provided to a global audience during the Chauvin trial prompted the state Supreme Court to order another look into widespread use of cameras in Minnesota courtrooms. But the study group isn't expected to report back to the high court until July 1, 2022.