you aught to know the last minute document dumps are wrong. you aught to know the people responsible for providing discovery don t get to give 10% of it or 12% of it and keep the rest. and he aught to be sending a signal as somebody who is supposed to represent justice on the court. look, i m not putting up with this. this is being done for my benefit, i m blowing a whistle on it. so the fact he s come police it in this way is going to be a lasting tag on him. sam stein. senator, if there s no committee confidential and you believe this is illegitimate, why not put out the 42,000 documents yourself? you can post them online. doesn t the public deserve to see the same documents? that s one way we could proceed. i think that so far the decision has been made to not release it all at this point. but we may very well do that. so i don t understand, i m hearing from a lot of frustrated progressives who do follow this
reporter: she says don t expect any yelling in this jury room but don t expect a quick verdict, either. randi kaye, cnn, new york. as you saw in randi s report sunny hostin has been in the courtroom and is back along with jeffrey toobin, danny cevallos and-maker geragos. sunny, you ve been observing them every day. we ve seen them ask for a list of all the evidence. what do you think is going on? how do you see their deliberations going, how methodical based on the behavior and the trial that you ve watched? based on their behavior and first question two minutes into the deliberations, they re asking for an inventory list of all of the evidence. this is going to be a jury that is going to methodically look through all of the evidence. i don t know that i ve ever seen a jury take notes the way this jury took notes. and it s also clear to me that they ve gelled. they have been sequestered together. remember, there was no jury, no
one, two, three, but six motions for sanctions for playing hide the ball with discovery. i think in a case like this, that s unforgivable. the problem is, we don t know the nature of these discovery disputes. right. so for us to make a judgment about who s right and who s wrong. it is true prosecutors get used to a certain level, it s not passivity, but sort of overworked defense lawyers. when you run into guys like this, who will push everything to the max, you know, the prosecutors sometimes don t know how to react and sometimes they don t react well. when it comes to discovery disputes, this debate is old, it s the montagues and the caplets and the sharks and the jets. defense attorneys and prosecutors are always arguing, and the basic gist is the defense feels like they re entitled to see everything, and the prosecution feels like after a while you re asking for the sun, the moon and the stars.
not thrice, but way more than that. he talks to them several times. we heard many of those. then he says if this was some conspiracy or plan of his, some mastermind plan and if he is a guy that learned about law enforcement and criminal justice, why didn t he know about one of the fundamental bed rocks which is miranda? don t talk to the police. that made him credible. because he was too smart for them. that s part of the master plan. oh, gosh, sunny. one minute he s not smart. the master plan to go hunt down a kid in your neighborhood included being on the phone with 911 while you do it. that s part of the master plan and then talking to the police five times with your substantial education of criminal justice. i don t know about that, sunny. it just doesn t work, sunny. we ve got a lot more to talk about. ahead of a decisive weekend.
happenstance. were they just playing hardball or were they really out to sabotage your case? we know there was stuff out concerning information on the phone. this is trayvon martin s cell phone? his cell phone. the only way we really found out about the intensity of the failure to give us the information was when a person from their own office, a whistleblower, came forward and said, i gave them that information in the middle to end of january, and we didn t get it until june 4th. when those prosecutors say, don t worry about it, we re going to get somebody else involved to take care of it, we ll take care of it, and four months, four and a half months pass by? that s not happenstance. how much of this was politics? it s guesswork on my behalf, but if i enter into this formula an element or ingredient of politics, a lot more makes sense. a lot more about the way the