A sense of anxiety hanging over the city for months.
Its downtown boarded up and militarised in anticipation of this verdict.
When the moment came the crowd fell silent outside the courthouse and held each other.
The tense air broken with a shout, “guilty!”.
There were cheers, tears, people fell to their knees.
Collective relief from a city that has been carrying the weight of this trial on its shoulders.
They’d done it – justice for George Floyd.
A ruling that told black citizens they matter. That their own eyes weren’t wrong. This wasn’t policing.
What Derek Chauvin did was murder.
There was no one more anxious than George Floyd’s younger brother who’d been representing the family in court.
When I saw him he greeted me with a hug. “We did it,” he said with tears in his eyes.
“I can get some sleep now,” Philonise Floyd told Sky News.
“I paced back and forth before I went into the courtroom and I sat in one spot in the corner.
“The same spot by the trash can I always sat at and I prayed. And I prayed for like thirty minutes. And that verdict came back when the jurors came out ‘guilty, guilty and guilty’.
“And I just couldn’t believe it because African American people, we never get justice. We feel like it’s just us.”
But there was no “just us” about this story. This family thrust into the epicentre of a movement that spread around the world.
For Minneapolis this has been painful too. It’s felt personal.
A black mother in the crowds told me she had to come to see this in person.
Her 27-year-old son has been scared to leave home since George Floyd was killed by Derek Chauvin.
“When we get home and he hears the police was found guilty, maybe he’ll feel better to come outside,” she tells me.
People who’ve felt persecuted instead of protected by the police spilled into the streets.
Drivers stopping their cars to join the celebrations.
Among the crowds was George Floyd’s girlfriend who came to see the history made by her immense loss.
“I miss Floyd so much you know, it’s hard to think about how I feel,” Courteney Ross told Sky News.
“But I do know that I’m really hopeful for change right now.
I feel like this has just opened up a door for so many people to have their cases reopened, to have people get justice for their lost loved one.”
This verdict is an important step towards healing for this community. Towards racial equality.
It’s a verdict of what society will and won’t accept. It’s how change happens.
While there’s still much work to do.
This moment is owned by a family and a community who fought so hard for the justice they were owed.