A Ramsey County jury was sequestered for three days last week before acquitting Nicholas J. Kruse on two counts of aiding and abetting the murder of Dekoda Galtney in St. Paul in 2011.
Prosecutors are to decide in coming days whether to recharge Kruse, 26, on a third count -- aiding an offender -- that ended in a mistrial, County Attorney John Choi said Friday.
Kruse's trial was capped by what his attorney, Murad Mohammad, and some court officials said was one of the longest, most thoughtful jury deliberations they've seen.
The jurors faced difficulties that can arise in considering the fate of someone accused of helping another to commit a crime, rather than acting as the main participant. And their conclusion, after multiple votes, was an unusual split verdict that leaves open the door to a possible retrial on the lesser count.
Mohammad said it's rare for jurors to acquit on two counts and deadlock on another.
"In trying over 60 cases, I've never had a jury out nearly that long, deliberating constantly for three days straight while sequestered," he said Friday. "It just shows that these cases are awfully close and that the jury struggled in making a just and fair decision."
Kruse was charged with aiding and abetting second-degree murder while committing a drive-by shooting, aiding and abetting unintentional murder and the lesser count of aiding an offender.
Prosecutors alleged that he positioned a car for the shooting and that he was the getaway driver. The third count alleged that he lied to police and concealed evidence.