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Chauvin trial juror says guilty verdicts could have come even more quickly

Paying her respects, a woman presses her head against a mural of George Floyd at George Floyd Square in Minneapolis
Damarra Atkins pays her respects to George Floyd at a mural in Minneapolis’ George Floyd Square on Friday.
(Julio Cortez / Associated Press)
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A juror who cast one of the unanimous votes to convict former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin of murdering George Floyd said most of the panel’s deliberation time was spent trying to convince one member who was uncertain about part of the jury instructions.

Brandon Mitchell is the first juror who participated in the deliberations to talk publicly about his experience. An alternate juror who was dismissed before deliberations, Lisa Christensen, spoke to reporters last week, saying she would have voted to convict Chauvin.

“I felt like it should have been 20 minutes,” Mitchell, 31, said of the deliberations, which led to Chauvin’s conviction April 20 on all counts: second-degree murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter.

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Floyd died May 26 after Chauvin pinned him down on the pavement outside a convenience store in Minneapolis for nearly nine and a half minutes. The death of Floyd, a Black man, at the hands of a white officer triggered worldwide protests, violence and a furious reexamination of racism and policing in the U.S.

Mitchell, who is Black, told ABC’s “Good Morning America” on Wednesday that much of the time in deliberations was spent going over terminology and “making sure we understood what exactly was being asked.” The identities of jurors and alternates are protected under a judge’s order.

“I think the one juror that was kind of — I wouldn’t say slowing us down — but was being delicate with the process, more so, was just kind of hung up with a few words in the instructions. They wanted to make sure they got it right,” Mitchell said.

Derek Chauvin is already in Minnesota’s only maximum-security prison, but it will be two months before he is sentenced in George Floyd’s death.

April 23, 2021

Mitchell, who first shared his story with gospel artist Erica Campbell on her podcast, wrote in his jury questionnaire that he wanted to serve as a juror “because of all the protests and everything that happened after the event. This is the most historic case of my lifetime, and I would love to be a part of it.”

Mitchell speculated that he was picked for the jury because he was mild-mannered. He said the images during the trial trouble him.

“It was just dark. It felt like every day was a funeral and watching someone die every day,” Mitchell told CNN. “It was tense every day. I wasn’t nervous, but it was stressful. It was a lot of pressure.”

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Prosecutors played a wide range of videos for the jury, which captured bystanders shouting at Chauvin and the other officers to get off Floyd, warning that they were cutting off his breathing and asking them to check for a pulse.

With Derek Chauvin convicted of murder in George Floyd’s death, attention turns to the trial for the other three former officers involved in the arrest.

April 26, 2021

Three other former police officers, who were on the scene with Chauvin, face trial in August.

Mitchell told “Good Morning America” that he didn’t think the jury was affected by tensions in Minneapolis or concerns about what effect their verdicts would have.

“We weren’t watching the news, so we don’t know what was going on. We were really just locked in on the case. There was so much stress coming through the case. Those things are so secondary because you’re literally, throughout the trial you’re watching someone die on a daily basis. That stress alone is enough to take your mind away from whatever’s going on outside of the four walls of the courtroom,” he said.

Mitchell also said he thought Chauvin hurt himself by choosing not to testify.

Aside from a vague news release from the San Diego Police Department after Angel Zapata Hernandez died, few people knew the circumstances of his death.

April 25, 2021

“It probably was to his detriment that he didn’t take the stand because people were curious on what his thoughts were throughout the entire incident,” he said.

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In the wake of the attention and weighty deliberations, Mitchell said he has been decompressing.

“I’m starting to feel like the weight is lifted off my shoulders now,” Mitchell told Campbell.

Mitchell also said he isn’t worried about his safety after breaking his silence.

“I’m a person that kind of thrives in the positives. So I’m not too much concerned about that. Nor do I dwell on negativity,” he told “CBS This Morning.”

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