after being shot the way trayvon martin was shot, he would not be able to move at all. under cross-examination, he then indicated, yes, he could move. so there are and that was significant let me jump in. that was significant because we know we saw in the police tape, he has said that trayvon martin said to him basically you got me, and he said he held his hands down. we know trayvon martin s hands were found under his body. does anyone disagree with larry? does anyone think that dr. bao hit it out of the park as the state s final witness? no. crickets. no, faith? he didn t hit it out of the park. obviously, he was a very necessary witness for the pros cue ters because they needed to highlight several things with his testimony, where the injuries were on trayvon, the trajectory of the bullet, and also the lack of injuries on trayvon s hands, for example. so they are going to use several
and countered with the cross-examination of defense, but i think for jurors to hear that, there s no way that it would not have an impact. it was certainly delivered in a way that almost sent chills through you, brooke. let me talk about this, martin. thank you. mark nejame, let s bring mark back in and hln legal analyst, correspondent jean casarez, faith jenkins, and defense attorney danny cevallos and on the phone with me larry kobrinsk. you have testified in a number of dna cases and you said this dr. bao was the worst witness ever. why? well, it was an unmitigated disaster for the prosecution. to end with dr. bao, it couldn t be worse. for example, he prepared a script which he brought with him which would describe how he would answer potential questions.