those positions. some of our right, and you re describing the court of public opinion and that most of the court of public opinion has no place inside the court of law because the court of public opinion is not fact-based. it s politics based. it s misinformation based. i m wondering how many of those people sat and watch this trial. i know judge schroeder may not want to have another televised trial in this courtroom again for a million different reasons but we need more of this. not last. all of us who got inside that courtroom, we got to see the facts for ourselves much the same way that this jury didn t only if you do that john, only if you observe facts and process facts can you have an opinion that his sound had not one that s full of misinformation and just full of public furor.
this is that moment of anticipatory silence. we don t want to miss a moment in the courtroom. sandra, the city in the nation right now are on tender hooks just waiting to see what the jury has come down with. there is no indication one way or the other how they might have decided. sandra: kyle rittenhouse just reentered the courtroom a short time ago. the jury did have lunch earlier, as we mentioned. there was then some indication we were going to get this verdict and now we await the jury to be brought back in. andy, if you could, knowing that we are going to jump right back in. john: here we go. the audience portion. no, it doesn t need to be. there can t be any reaction at all, no matter how strongly you may feel. it s understood that many people do have strong feelings. but we can t permit any kind of
prosecutor, that s exactly what she was suggesting. if she was gonna try and play that card, i was gonna make her spell it out. is ebonics a term that is commonly associated with african-americans in this country? i don t know where ebonics is commonly associated with. i associate it with a certain type of speech that i would associate with the word ghetto. reporter: but if she was hoping to play to some random juror s racial bias, she guessed wrong. the jury didn t believe it. not for a second. they found her guilty in less than two hours. as for david mallory, his attorneys argued he had nothing to do with the murder. he was involved with carter, yes, but not with any killing. that jury didn t buy that either rendering a guilty verdict in no time at all. the verdicts were some consolation for those who loved ashlea harris. i still miss her. she saw the best in everybody.
music and arts and bingo. it was our mother/daughter bonding time and she d get all giddy and excited. by the time she got to high school she-lots of friends and even a boyfriend. and she was devoted to her two dads. her father, tommy and her step dad, chuck, both retired police officers. didn t she talk at one point about getting into your line of work? she auz interested in policing. but after high school she ended up work withing for a short time at blockbuster video and that s where she meat customer named laura love. i walked around the store for a little bit and just kept looking at her because she s so beautiful. laura wanted to meet the girl behind the counter. they came friends and then something more. we hung out for like eight
wrong. the jury didn t believe it. not for a second. they found her guilty in less than two hours. as for david mallory, his attorneys argued he had nothing to do with the murder. he was involved with carter, yes, but not with any killing. that jury didn t buy that either rendering a guilty verdict in no time at all. the verdicts were some consolation for those who loved ashlea harris. i still miss her. she saw the best in everybody. even when you couldn t see it, she could see it. she had such a big heart. and this world is worse off, at least, mine is. reporter: both david mallory and carter cervantez received