Aaron Dean, 38, resigned from the Fort Worth Police Department and was charged with murder two days after killing 28-year-old Jefferson through a window in October 2019 while responding to a call about an open door.

Dean’s trial has been repeatedly postponed, but begins on Monday after attorneys and the judge agreed on the final selection of 12 jurors and two alternates on Friday, the Fort Worth Star-Telegram reported.

The jury—made up of eight men and six women—includes no Black jurors, according to the newspaper. The majority appear to be white and a few are people of color.

Dean’s trial has once again put a focus on race and policing, and the make-up of the jury drew a swift reaction on social media.

Lee Merritt, an attorney for the Jefferson family, tweeted that Jefferson’s family is “relieved a jury has been selected after over 3 years of waiting but disappointed that not a single black juror was selected to serve.” He has been contacted for further comment.

John Shjarback, an associate professor in the Department of Law and Justice Studies at Rowan University, tweeted that there “are no Black people on the jury despite Tarrant County being 16.99% Black in 2020.”

“This is Jim Crow-level jury selection,” Shjarback wrote on Twitter.

“I get it that the jury selection process is complicated and both legal teams need to find impartial parties. There are peremptory challenges and those for cause used to strike jurors, but this doesn’t sit right with me.”

James Whitfield, a former high school principal in Texas, tweeted: “In Fort Worth, TX, where Black folks account for nearly 20% of the population…and not a SINGLE BLACK JUROR. What year is it, again?”

On the night she was killed, Jefferson had been playing video games with her nephew, then eight. The boy later told authorities that she had pulled out a gun after hearing suspicious noises behind the house.

Bodycam video showed Dean approached the door of the home, then walked around the side of the house, pushed through a gate into the fenced-off backyard and fired through the glass a split-second after shouting at Jefferson, who was inside, to show her hands. He was not heard identifying himself as police on the video and it is unclear if he knew Jefferson was armed.

Ed Kraus, then Fort Worth Police’s chief, said at the time that there was “absolutely no excuse” for the killing and that Jefferson had behaved as any Texas homeowner would have on hearing a prowler.