results for that report, a very disturbing report indeed, you can go to cnn.com for much more on this story and thank you for watching news night. laura coates live starts right now donald trump just violate the gag order and the hush money trial will tell you what he posted about the jurors. as raising serious concerns plus maggie haberman is here to answer your questions about the trial and justin, a new twist and the shocking idaho student murders bryan kohberger s defense haim, revealing his long awaited alibi, plus the nba does something it hasn t done in 70 years. they ve banned a player for life over a gambling scandal. the story and the fallout tonight. and laura coates live all right, just in
of the actual crew so how is trump going to look at them as potential customers of his sales? so there were a couple of jurors who were excused. let s say there was one juror, a man who was a civilian photographer for law enforcement agency he knew some of the so-called central park five. the men who were exonerated after her having their conditions confessions, coerced, who trump took out a full-page ads saying that they should face the death penalty after they were arrested. he said that he had been an alternate and civil trial involving trump and merv griffin. i mean, he was fascinating. he was someone i think that the trumpeter trump legal team would have really liked he s, not, on the jury of the people who are on the jury. look the news reading habits of a lot of these jurors definitely is something that defense team is aware of. a lot of them are new york times readers. a lot of them are cnn readers. they would rather have people who are fox, news
way before, nor do i listen, maggie, stick around, please. i have a lot of questions at home. i m sure you all do about this trial and maggie is going to help answer some of them right now, if you of course, want to participate, just go to cnn.com slash trump trial questions, fill out the form, typing your question there that will reach out to you. have you qualify as the trial? unfolds. let s go to our first caller tonight. we ve got boom from toronto. hey, boom, what s your question well, the delay tactics of the trump legal team has failed to prevent the hush money trial from being before the 2024 election. do you think now at some 0.2 quick trial or really attempt to harp on every the detail which would have the consequence of keeping mostly unflattering topics discussed every day until the trial is over. that s a great question. i think ultimately he didn t want this to happen at all as a trial. and now that it s here, i think it probably be prudent politically to have the tri
knowing exactly where somebody is based upon cell phone towers. this is critical because there s a lot of circumstantial evidence in this case. and if the defense can keep him away from the crime scene on the 13th of november 2022? that is critical. but at the same time, you re going to see a battle of the experts. there isn t a ton of forensics in these cases. this is one of those and making it that very notion. i mean, you ve got prosecutors arguing that cell phone data did ping at the scene of the crime the night of the murders, but they all say they found his dna on a knife sheath near one of the victims. i do wonder in terms of how people are going to view the data. and again, this trial is not begun. we don t have all what they re going to be able to provide. and i ve ultimately approved. but how do you weigh these two things in front of a jury? the notion of dna or the cell tower data again, this is all that forensics in the middle of a trial right now.
against him so i don t think his sales abilities work so well there i do think you re going to see him try to do something similar to your point about he could go down rabbit hole after rabbit hole. i m confident his lawyers have told him that, but at the end of the day, he is ultimately the person who is on trial. and as you know, a lot of defenses since not just him want to defend themselves and they want to they want to argue in their favor. and i think that his lawyers are going to be hard pressed to stop and if he really decides that s what he s interests, they want their body language to speak for them. they don t want to be this stoic figure because people might attribute that to guilt or innocence. you never really know it s like you want to try to, you use his body and his weight to try to expression why i say things. but also being a salesman, i m really intrigued on this because we know a little bit about the seven that have already been seated. they gotta have a total of 18