slappy said:
aggiehawg said:
*This thread is very long and people may not know that the few, if any actual state employed attorneys are prosecuting this case. Mostly from private practice offering their services allegedly pro bono. IOW, Chauvin is being prosecuted by lawyers in private practice. How the hell is that allowed?
I've heard of a few in private practice that have been appointed as a special prosecutor. Maybe they did the same?
I honestly don't know how this came about. The only actual member of the AG's office that I have seen at the lectern (twice or so) is the Black guy and I don't mean Ellison. Ellison just sits there in the courtroom like a bump on a log.
Ellison has something like 130 attorneys on his staff but he had to outsource this prosecution?
I do think there's an optics problem with the state having all of these people sitting there (including a jury consultant who wrote that execrable questionnaire) on behalf of the state and then just Nelson, Chauvin and one assistant for the defense. Very David and Goliath appearance. Jurors don't always react well to the prosecution appearing heavy handed like that, IMO. Could easily backfire.
And if they wind up with a hung jury? Already cherry picked who they considered "the best" how can the state come and retry him? Or worse from Ellison's perspective, that of an acquittal? Blame the white guys he hired (again supposedly for free) to prosecute a case he took away from the Hennepin County DA???
Just SMDH trying to understand the reasoning process for the state here. They could always just be incredibly stupid and shortsighted though. Bubbles tend to limit one's ability to take a 30,000 foot view of the situation overall. Reminds me of the failures of Marcia Clark and Chris Darden in the OJ trial. Massive miscalculation from the start and then they were dealt a crap judge in Ito.
Cahill has had a mixed performance so far, in my view. And I understand the immense challenges he is facing so I'm not equating him to Ito by any means. He's a good judge who knows the law well and is trying to navigate his way through the legal equivalent of reversible error minefield. But he is willing to revisit his earlier decisions in this case* so he is open to changing the rules to avoid those landmines as they present themselves. Giving the defense 3 more peremptory strikes and state one more is a sign of that.
*He originally refused to separate trials for Chauvin and the other three officers charged. Reversed that and separated them. He denied the early motion for a change of venue. That motion is now under advisement and he will issue a new decision on Friday. My gut tells me if he goes 0-for seated jurors tomorrow, he'll be much more inclined to agree that Chauvin can't receive a fair trial in Hennepin County right now so either grant the continuance and dismiss the jury as seated now and start over. Or grant the change in venue and start over in the new location. (Not sure of Minnesota law but Cahill could in theory remain the presiding judge, just in another location. I might be wrong about that though.)