
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


The jury in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is noteworthy for its diversity. About 13.5 percent of Hennepin County, Minnesota is African American and, of the 15 jurors (including the three alternates), nine are White, four are Black and two are mixed race, according to the court.
Still, many experts, including Andrew Gordon, a Deputy Director at The Legal Rights Center in Minnesota, have noted that the process of seating the jury in the Chauvin case, as well as many other cases, often leaves African Americans out because it fails to seat jurors with "a diversity of lived experiences."
Gordon is our guest on this episode of [Un]Common Law.
By Bloomberg Industry Group4.8
173173 ratings
The jury in the trial of former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is noteworthy for its diversity. About 13.5 percent of Hennepin County, Minnesota is African American and, of the 15 jurors (including the three alternates), nine are White, four are Black and two are mixed race, according to the court.
Still, many experts, including Andrew Gordon, a Deputy Director at The Legal Rights Center in Minnesota, have noted that the process of seating the jury in the Chauvin case, as well as many other cases, often leaves African Americans out because it fails to seat jurors with "a diversity of lived experiences."
Gordon is our guest on this episode of [Un]Common Law.

32,230 Listeners

30,656 Listeners

26,043 Listeners

1,718 Listeners

4,421 Listeners

1,171 Listeners

2,170 Listeners

1,999 Listeners

380 Listeners

1,109 Listeners

33 Listeners

155 Listeners

6,312 Listeners

113,450 Listeners

114 Listeners

6,100 Listeners

16,536 Listeners

154 Listeners