What are the odds Derek Chauvin is successful in appeal of guilty verdict in George Floyd murder?
By Eric Ferkenhoff, USA TODAY
Now that fired police officer Derek Chauvin has been convicted on all three counts against him, he can still file an appeal. But the odds are not good, considering some 90% of appeals are denied across the United States.
An appeal in the case is a virtual certainty. But what issues Chauvin’s lawyers raise to the appellate court are an open question, according to criminal defense experts.
The most likely avenue of appeal is the massive publicity given to the case and the judge’s denial of repeated requests by lead defense attorney Eric Nelson to move the case out of Minneapolis or sequester the jury throughout the trial to shield them from any and all news or mention of the case.
Judge Peter Cahill, known as a careful jurist, refused to grant Nelson’s requests — made at the beginning of the court case and throughout the trial, particularly after the fatal shooting in nearby Brooklyn Center of a 20-year-old Black motorist by white officer there. The killing of Daunte Wright just 10 miles from the Chauvin trial sparked ongoing protests and violence throughout the mostly blue-collar, diverse suburb of about 30,000 residents.
Nelson again asked to sequester the jury at the close of the trial after news that Democratic U.S. Rep Maxine Waters of California demanded a guilty verdict and urged more people to protest police violence against Black civilians.
Waters’ actions upset Cahill, who has on numerous occasions chastised public officials — including after news of the $27 million civil settlement with the city for the Floyd’s family during jury selection — for commenting on the trial or creating news off the case.
President Joe Biden also said Monday that the evidence at the trial was “overwhelming,” after calling the Floyd family once the jury had been isolated to deliberate.
“I’ve come to know George’s family,” the president told reporters, adding that the Floyd family is going through “pressure and anxiety.”
“They’re a good family,” he said. “And they’re calling for peace and tranquility.”
Biden said he’s praying the verdict the jury returns is “the right verdict, which is – I think it’s overwhelming in my view.” Biden would not clarify what he meant by “overwhelming” or “the right verdict.”
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After the verdict, Chauvin was quickly transferred from the custody of the Hennepin County Sheriff’s Department to the Minnesota Department of Corrections. The DOC booked Chauvin at 4:55 p.m. and put him in a segregated unit, called the administrative control unit, of the Minnesota Correctional Facility-Oak Park Heights.
“This type of restricted housing is not disciplinary in nature,” according to the DOC’s site. “Sometimes it is used during pending investigations or when continued presence in the general population could pose a particular safety concern.”
Chauvin will be assigned an orange jumpsuit with a white T-shirt, a corrections spokeswoman said.
MCF-Oak Park Heights houses about 475 inmates, all of whom are designated at either maximum or close custody levels, according to the DOC.
Cahill’s refusals to move or sequester the jury came as little surprise to Ted Sampsell-Jones, an criminal defense appeals attorney and professor in St. Paul, next door to Minneapolis.
“That would have been a huge imposition on the jurors to make them live away from their family for a month,” in addition to missing work, said Sampsell-Jones, who teaches at Mitchell Hamline School of Law in St. Paul. “I don’t think it would really have helped given they would have had to take away their cell phones…then it also would have made it much harder to get a jury,”
People simply wouldn’t have wanted to serve, he said, and there would have been many more hardship grants to potential jurors during voir dire, which began March 8 and ran through 300-plus men and women before settling on the jury of 14 including two alternates now dismissed.
“It was a totally normal ruling,” Sampsell-Jones said. “But that’s something where defense counsel made the request, probably knowing or anticipating the request would not be granted but giving the defense an issue to appeal.”
Jon J. Lee, also a law professor at the University of Minnesota Law School, agreed the inescapability from news and social media coverage — jurors were not barred from using social media during the trial — was a top target for appeal. Even television shows outside of immense news coverage, such as Saturday Night Live, have highlighted the trial and suggested there was no option but a guilty verdict.
“Part of the concern here,” Lee said, “is that the judge has instructed the jury not to listen to the news. But as Chauvin’s attorney has argued, the collective media coverage of this trial extends well beyond news coverage, and in particular in light of the shooting in Brooklyn Center. I think that was difficult to avoid hearing about for (juror) residents in the area.”
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Another route for appeal is Nelson’s claim after closings that state prosecutor Jerry Blackwell, in his rebuttal, crossed the line Monday and potentially committed prosecutorial misconduct for “belittling” Nelson’s case. Blackwell had referred to Nelson’s defense as creating “stories” and a “shading truth” to confuse the jury during his rebuttal of Nelson’s closing argument.
Nelson had called for a mistrial based on the statements — but Cahill denied the move.
Still another avenue for appeal that Lee foresees is the third-degree murder charge. Nelson, Lee said, “will challenge that Chauvin cannot be convicted on that count because of the statute and the way that some courts have interpreted it as covering a situation in which the defendant only presents a risk to one person and not multiple people. I think that legally that is an argument that could have merit.”
The problem here is that some attorneys and judges read the statute for third-degree murder as stating that it only applies to multiple people being at risk, not just one — or in this case, just Floyd from Chauvin’s restraint of him.
Cahill initially sided with those saying it only applied in cases where multiple people were endangered. But after the appellate court ruling, which came on the third day of Chauvin’s jury selection, Cahill said he agreed the case — that of another officer, Mohamed Noor, charged in the 2017 killing Australian-American Justine Ruszczyk — set immediate precedent and reinstated the third-degree murder charge against Chauvin.
I watched a programme every day of that trial. It was fixed from the start. The judge, aparently fair minded refused a dozen reasons for either a mistrial or a removal to a non threatening jurisdiction (as ifhe’d already received instructions to deny everything) The jury was chosen from 100, not 300. the last juror being #92=4 (?).
The video report, as the trial was ongoing,had someone inside the courtreoom who reported more than once that the riot mob could sometimes be heard in the court.
Jurors were not sequestered, allwd social media, went thome nightly, watched all the inflammatory “news”, and the violent appearances of such as Waters, and many others. The $27 mill settlement by the City Council almost before the jury had been settled in was a killer.
I have a strong feeling that from the judge down, every juror had been quietly contacted Mob style” and threatened with untold horror, if Chauvin was not found guilty on ALL three counts. It feels “right”…and I have strong vibes about it.
On TOP of all this, Floyd was a lifetime criminal, shown to have been a chronic drug user, findings of autopsy found was full of drugs , many ingested whilst being arrested, to do away wth “evidence”, had been saved from death the previous year under same sircumastances,
Police all over the world had declared that the neck-shoulder knee restraint was used by them with not ONE serious injury at any time. It was a part of the Minnesota Polce Training Manual. The evidence of the defence expert witnesses were direct to negate the prosecution’s case for causation, expecially the last witness, with a lifeitme and huge creentials in actual cases of police action himself. He was positive, sayingall the signs showed that atrial fibrillation was a major cause of death. Floyd’s Blood Pressure was 243/161 (?)
And the piece de resistance-for the defence- in my opinion was the Floyd’s heart attack, which is what lilled him, began whilst struggling against arrest in the car where he began saying I can’t breathe” repeated several times. He acked to be allowed to lie on the ground, And the fact that he could continue about not being able to brathe showed that he could get enough oxygen to be saying this over and over. \\
Videos showed that Chauvin’s knee was more across Flyd’s upper shoulders than neck.
A total disgrace to the US System of Justice.
@ peloni1986:
“kangaroo court”
I just heard those very words from one of my favorite commentator:
“If the Facts Don’t Fit You Must Convict: The Derek Chauvin Trial Farce”
— https://www.bitchute.com/video/Yc2YLVdF8CE/
@ Michael S:
Kangaroo Court indeed…I believe you have described it perfectly
@ peloni1986:
looks to me, like a kangaroo court.
@ Ted Belman:
The evidence did not support a conviction. A simple review of the police training manuals depict everything that was followed on that unfortunate day. Expert testimony support this conclusion. Such police procedures are routinely used when symptoms of an overdose are present as was exhibited by Floyd – for any who are unaware look up excited delirium syndrome. In addition to this, the courts have reviewed the police procedures employed against Floyd in previous reviews and given their support of it. But the political pressure and threats of violence in the streets including implied threats to jury left little surprise in the outcome of this very, very short review by the jury before deciding to find guilty on all charges.
As for the prospect of overturning the case, I wouldn’t bet much on it. The legal system is not entirely corrupted as of yet, but it is well on its way towards this end. Additionally, the threat of violence against any who would be so bold will always be present as well as the political pressure and the gift of further advancement should the judge in question act in the appropriate manner by our criminal cabal in Washington. It would take a man with the backbone and courage similar to Gov. Jack Stanton(he intervened in the Leo Frank case against a more localized version of these events) to stand up to these mobsters and face them down. I don’t expect that this is likely.
From what I understand of the evidence, it didn’t support a guilty verdict.
It may not be hard for a decent defense attorney to get the case thrown because of all the riots in the nearby town, Congresswoman basically threatening riots if Chauvin is not convicted. Pretty hard to think the environment did seriously impact the jurors.
Even the judge Cahill, said the following,
https://www.binnews.com/content/2021-04-20-chauvin-trial-judge-says-maxine-waters-remarks-could-be-grounds-for-appeal/