Chauvin and three other officers were fired. Chauvin is charged with second-degree murder, third-degree murder and manslaughter; Lane, J. Kueng and Tou Thao are charged with aiding and abetting second-degree murder and manslaughter.
Cahill said attorney filings aren't considered official until the court reviews and accepts them. He said that had not yet happened with the filing from Lane's attorney, Earl Gray, before the state requested the delay.
Prosecutors argued that the body-camera video from the 2019 arrest could taint the pool of potential jurors, adding to pressure to move the former officers' trial from Minneapolis.
Cahill said the video simply shows Floyd had been arrested before — information "basically everybody already knows," he said — and that it might even help the state's case.
Cahill wrote that he believed Gray's filing was "in good faith," but ordered that going forward, only written motions will be accepted and no audio, video and photographic attachments will be allowed to be submitted with motions.
The court made the body-camera video publicly available shortly after the hearing.
Gray's filing this week also included transcripts of the 2019 arrest of Floyd, which he said shows Floyd was not the law-abiding citizen he has been portrayed to be.
Presiding judge in Floyd case to take up key motions on evidence, charges
In seeking the 48-hour delay on filings being made public, prosecutors had argued that the state "anticipates that filings in this case will involve protected or inadmissible evidence" and that if evidence becomes public it could unfairly influence public opinion.
"The proposed temporary protective order strikes the appropriate balance between the need for public disclosure and the need to avoid the disclosure of confidential or inadmissible information," prosecutor Matthew Frank wrote. "Where no party objects to public disclosure, any restriction on the public right of access would be short and temporary."
Frank said the public does not have an "absolute" right to access court documents.
Media organizations including The Associated Press had opposed the state's request.
In his documents, Gray said Floyd's behavior on the night he died was "almost an exact replica" of how he acted during the arrest a year earlier. Floyd swallowed drugs, resisted police officers, ignored commands, acted erratically and cried and called out for his mother, Gray said. It should be admissible at trial because it shows Floyd's modus operandi and counters prosecutors' portrayal of Floyd as being scared, he said.
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