versus the ncaa, down the case in a second. and we re still watching this standoff in los angeles. north hollywood, the suspect we re now told is a hispanic male, he has an assault rifle. he s considered armed and dangerous and they now believe they put a school on lockdown, oakwood school. and lapd says they believe the man may have gone into a home in the area of 11,600 hartsook. when we get more, we ll take you there live.
the drama begins in tyler s town square at the smith county courthouse, where every day, passions run high. in a courthouse, whether it s new york city or tyler, texas, that courthouse is full of emotion. especially in the courts of divorce and child custody. that day, february 24th, 2005, 43-year-old david arroyo is waiting outside for his ex-wife to arrive for a child support hearing. he had somehow blamed all the problems in life on his wife and his son. armed with a powerful semiautomatic rifle, he opens fire. we have shots fired on the square. we have someone down. appears to be a hispanic male. looks like he s in front of the old levine store. the shooting is all caught on a courthouse surveillance camera.
of the counts but not that one. i agree. or the other thing could have happened, janet, they needed a break just to let tempers cool down because there may be a real division in that jury room that they can t come to a verdict. let me ask you all about that and how this jury, with the zimmerman, trayon martint case, we talked about the makeup of the jury. in this case, four white males, an asian female and hispanic male. a very diverse jury. again, i get to this point of this was not a case guilty or innocent on the verdict that anybody thought would take this much time. never mind going to a weekend when you have jury who says they don t want to be doing this over the weekend and they re sequestered. en an its an valentine s day. it s a long weekend. monday is a holiday. i m surprised it has gone over into the weekend. i really am.
truth. i thought it was brilliant. it was masterful. i would be surprised if the jury isn t thinking about that rebuttal argument when they walked into that jury room. briefly before i go to mark, sunny, how diverse is the jury? we talked about this at the beginning of the trial, and what is the makeup of the jury in terms of race? it is quite diverse. it s very different from the zimmerman jury. we know there were only six in the zimmerman journey. two african-american women, about in their 20s or 30s, also an asian woman, there s also a hispanic male. all the rest are white. seven of them are women, five are men. mark, how do you think that plays? at the start of this you said a lot of this depends on jury selection and the makeup of the jury. that s one of the reasons i ve said i think the best the defense can hope for in this case is a hung jury. i don t think you re going to see an acquittal. we ll see. it s florida. but my guess is, my best guess is that the best thing th
also crying, and i did see several of the jury members put their notes down, put their pens down and look directly into the gallery, directly at the family. i think that was the big moment yesterday. strong reporting. important and inciteful and understanding where the jury s mind is. talk about the jury one more beat before we place sound of actual arguments. a diverse jury. two african-american females in their 20s, an asian female, hispanic male. the rest of white. seven women, five men. a complex makeup, as a former prosecutor, how does this jury play, do you think, in terms of the sympathies involved? reporter: this is the jury that you want for a case like this. i think if you re the prosecutor. i mean, certainly you have two african-american women. they re about in their late 20s, perhaps early 30s. there was a doctor, female doctor, on the jury. she is one of the alternates. i thought she would have been a very good juror for this jury, but the mix, nevertheless, is