i want him killed. subject to many interpretation. probation at worst. seriously he needs to get used to being incarcerated. the on thing that comes to mind when i hear this tape is plea bargain. this guy has been on this earth for 55 years. that s 20,000 days he lived. 28 million minutes on this earth and you cannot judge him by the 11 minutes reflected on that audiotape. megyn: it moms laughing matter. i have to tell you that unbiased, murder for hire was my specialty when i was a prosecutor. so i know this stuff. i would love that tape. are you kidding? megyn: can i say, lirks s, how obvious was the friend who was an undercover agent.
wants it obvious? soy would like how would you like to kill bob meredith. i did that with undercover. we we got guy and tony pepperoni. we miekd them up and got them on tape. that s how we did it. megyn: how did the defendant who managed to get out of your air-tight cases do it? let me explain to you, the affect was so unsophisticated will play to the defense s benefit. not to negate his guilt. there is nothing we can do. they need david copperfield. he s too expensive to afford him. you argue in mitigation this was an unsophisticated type of plan. they always are. this is what you do. you argue that he lived an exemplary life. this was an isolated incident and he showed extreme remorse. megyn: lirks s, he argued the
yesterday by filing lawsuit against the d.o.j., basically telling the federal government within mind your own business. joining me now, lis weihl and jonna spilbor. south carolina is fighting back saying butt out, feds. first and foremost, lirks s, what right does the federal government have to go into south carolina and say we don t like that voter i.d. law and you are not going to be able to enforce it. they have every right. south carolina is one of 16 states covered under the voters rights acts of 1965 that gave the justice department oversight. the department of justice on these 16 states, mostly southern states where there have been issues of disenfranchisement of minorities. the department can say yay or nay. and that s what happened here. megyn: therein lies the response to people who say this is an
your honor, at this time subject to receipt of exhibits, southbound their receipt, the people are prepared and would ask to rest at this time. megyn: prosecutors resting their case moments ago against a man accused of killing michael jackson. the people of the state of california calling their final witness in dr. conrad murray s manslaughter trial. today the defense tried to discredit the doctor s testimony and the prosecution appears to believe it has made its case. has it? joining me now lis weihl and defense attorney mark eiglarsh. lirks s, tell us what the prosecution did with this last witness. they put dr. shafer on. he is he knows everything about propofol.
on the parents. the mother in particular who admits that she was given a polygraph and says police told her she failed. police telling our fox affiliate that she failed miserably and started to sweat when she was told she failed miserably. she said i don t know how that could be. i was telling the truth. all i want is for my baby to be found. we don t know what they know. whether they have a lead or why they are searching this landfill. but we are told this is located near the highway near the i435 and they are searching a landify for searching a landfill for the baby. i have my court panel standing by. i want to bring them in to talk about reacross to this. then we ll get to michael jackson. they are doing something crucial in the courtroom in moment. but first, lirks s we ll and mark eiglarsh.