of an appearance before the verdict is read, but of course that means they haven t ruled it in either. right? and there s not much time? no likely. all right. thank carol. thank you. and thanks so much to all of you, anderson starts now don t trump s fate is in the hands of 12 manhattan jurors, and they have questions. good evening. thanks for joining us day one, a jury deliberations in the first ever trial of a former president began with the judge reading 55 pages of instructions on what to consider as the jurors way 34 we re felony charges. now, the day ended with the buzzer, which signals the jury wants to communicate going off once then again, the first time to say they wanted four pieces of testimony read back to them. the second to ask the judge to reread them his instructions unclear so far whether that means the whole thing or selected portions of it. the testimony they wanted it s from david pecker, the former national enquirer publisher and former trump lawyer
send you a free book to answer questions you may have call now and we ll come to you 808 to 14000 welcome to inside politics. i m dana bash, a manhattan courtroom it s again, setting the agenda for the 2024 campaign, right now. or jury is deliberating, weighing, and measuring the facts presented by the prosecutors and whether they ve made a convincing singh enough case to convict donald trump. the 12 jurors spent the morning listening to a court reporter read pivotal excerpts from testimony of michael cohen when and former tabloid publisher david pecker, donald trump is inside the courthouse. he s not allowed to leave the building until there is a verdict or the jury breaks for the day. so what s going through his mind? well, you might call it the freddie mercury strategy. he s convinced that nothing really matters and he actually believes that he will likely be found guilty. now, this is all reporting from our very own, kristen holmes, who starts us off outside the c
crime is that s what the problem is we ended immediately the judge ended and save his reputation for the part about not naming the crime isn t true and we ll talk about that tonight is for the late mother teresa, she was judged by the nobel committee, which awarded her the 1979 peace prize for her service to the orphans leprosy patients, and terminally ill of calcutta. with us tonight, your criminal defense attorney, arthur aidala hello, cnn legal analyst norm eisen, who was in court today along with cnn s kara scannell, also with this johnny jones, the third former chief judge for the us middle district of pennsylvania, is currently president of dickinson college. so care we just learned the sections of pecker and cohen s testimony that the courts decided to read back? yes. so we learned from the lip parties that they both agreed to and two of the requests that came from the drain, these questions they wanted david pecker at michael cohen s testimony as it related to the
trial of a former president began with the judge reading 55 ages of instructions on what to consider as the jurors way, 34 felony charges. now, the day ended with the buzzer, which signals the jury wants to communicate going off once then again, the first time to say they wanted four pieces of testimony read back to them. the second to ask the judge to reread them his instructions unclear so far whether that means the whole thing or selected portions of it. the testimony they want us from david pecker, the former national enquirer publisher and former trump lawyer and fixer, michael cohen. some of it dealing with the arrangement for pecker to act as the campaigns, eyes and ears for potentially damaging stories they ll hear that tomorrow morning. the judge dismissing them, then staying with attorneys for both sides to try to hammer out exactly what will be said. as for the defendant here some of what he said coming and going mother teresa could not be discharges. these charges
every turn can t stand mike job address for free, if you ve written a book page, publishing can help you through the process. we cut through the confusion of the publishing world let s make it easy for you. call 805, 630741 while the jury and trump s criminal trial asked to rewind all the way back to day number one, the questions are asking and what it might mean for the deliberations. plus there s new reporting on why the trump team thinks there might be or on their side. and there s new trouble for diddy. what investigators are now doing that could lead to an indictment. cassius, former makeup artist, is with me in just a moment. what she he says she saw tonight and laura coates live while the legal drama that is ben donald trump s criminal hush, money trial is nearing its long awaited finale. but before the jury can write the final script, it appears that they want to rewind and re-watch episode number one. today, the 12 jurors ended their first day of deliberations