 The defence and prosecution both rested their cases on Thursday in the murder trial of former Minneapolis policeman Derek Chauvin, sent in the case to the closing argument phase scheduled for Monday. The defence stood Hinnepin County District Judge Peter Cahill and wrote cold no more witnesses after two days of testimony and rested its case, which has focused on raising doubt about what caused Floyd's death. After a short appearance by a reporter witness, prosecutors from the Minnesota Attorney General's Office also rested their case. Members of the jury, the evidence is now complete for this case. Next step for you is to listen to closing arguments and then retire for deliberations. That'll occur on Monday. The attorneys and I will still be working. We have a few administrative matters and legal matters to take care of, most importantly, going over the law that I will give you and my instructions. And that takes quite a while and so we are not going to change our schedule. We're not going to close tomorrow. We're going to close on Monday. And so with that, remember you will be sequestered. We have some of your questions and we're going to try and answer as many of those as we can. I think the one thing that you need to know today as you leave is how much do I pack? If I were you, I would plan for long and hope for short. Basically, it's up to the jury how long you deliberate, how long you need to come to unanimous decision on any account.