could negotiate well. you know, weinstein and how many years went by before anybody cried for accountability for things he s been accused of. the we re in that mode of privilege. kennedy: every case is different, every jury is different. present facts to jury, it doesn t go to trial, basic point, takes one person to have doubt for people to get off there is that. in terms of accountability and fairness, there have been homeless women arrested for enrolling their children in a school outside of their district. when you talk about whether there should be consequences harris: what these people did was horrible. kennedy: she knew what she was doing was wrong and you have women who don t have the power of the media and the fame and the fancy lawyers to defend themselves, that is what i think the real injustice is there. juan: i agree. harris: i think what they did here was horrible. they lied about their children
the gun rights organization is the nra. right. if this case does go to trial, we ll know a lot more. the only way it doesn t go to trial is if she pleads guilty and she admits what she did was wrong, or if somehow there is some miraculous intervention on her behalf as there was in 2010 in the southern district when there was a different case involving russian spies and they were traded in essence. right, the trade, right. and, julia, harry mentions the nra. she s a gun enthusiast. all these pictures have her with guns. obviously that s how she tried to get to donald trump, jr. when you profiled her, you went to a gun shooting range with her, right? to me this was crazy. she first resurfaced on my radar when tim mac at the daily beast connected the dots showing her to be an agent of influence. i knew her as this kind of fringe figure who was had this tiny group, advocating for gun rights in russia where firearms are not legal.
ammunition into his suite. we talked to other police agencies to do profiling at airports and cities across the world. they have a list of things to look for. this guy exhibited none of those things. he was laid back, relaxed. not nervous. playing gambling games. then he goes upstairs and commits this atrocity. in the same similarity with this young man, he socialized, got friends, playing baseball. a few years later, he does what he doesn t he described himself as a psychopath. my friends in the psychiatry field will be working on this over the coming months and years. we ll a tribute some reason and meaning to what happened here. even if it doesn t go to trial, even if the police aren t interested in it because the suspects are dead. i think you will see
he s the virginia man who died in police custody after being repeatedly tased by police. msnbc chief legal correspondent broke the story, he joins us with the latest. yeah, basically, we had a hearing, first hearing since the tapes became public in our report yesterday, as you mentioned. and the main headline coming out of this hearing, these parties are not about to settle. we have seen cases of alleged police brutality, departments pay out arc ward it doesn t go to trial, it doesn t take as long. a hearing which had disagreements back and forth between the lawyers and a private sort of setting in the judge s chambers they came back out and they left. basically ready to continue going towards a trial date of next year. no indication from the new hearing after the video s out they are closer to any resolution. nothing new out of the police or the police union in. no. we ve reached out to the police department as well as lawyers that we spoke to as well as state police who conduct
before this has to go to trial. and, again, he is almost as though he was speaking to the prosecution urging them to drop the aggravated murder charge and to not pursue any more aggravated murder charges so castro doesn t face the death penalty. sounds like he doesn t want a trial at all. we ll see what happens. still ahead in newsroom the nsa under fire for spying on americans. i ll talk to one former employee who tried to blow the whistle on the agency years ago. you ll hear what his experience was like on being a whistleblower. goodnight.