questioning from the state and also some of her language on the stand? she s unpolished to say the least. she is hard to understand. but i have to say, i think it lends a certain authenticity to her testimony. she doesn t sound like someone who s making stuff up. and the gist of what she s saying, i think, is actually very favorable for the prosecution. she s on the phone. they re talking about nothing in particular. and all of a sudden trayvon martin says this creepy guy, this cracker, he s following me around. is that something she just made up? it didn t sound like it was something she made up. it sounded like a credible story. and if the jury believes that, they believe that george zimmerman almost certainly is the agreser in the confrontation which is the key issue in the whole case. even though she s not a conventionally effective witness, i actually think, at least this far, before cross-examination, she s she could make a helpful impression on the jury for the prosecution.
zimmerman. mr. zimmerman, can you describe the two individuals? so as you sit and look at the man who is in this courtroom in sanford, florida, who is the fir person on trial for second degree murder, we re hearing his voice over the course of several years calling into police reporting some sort of what he deems suspicious activity. we ll talk about whether or not the fact this judge made this ruling of making these calls admissible if this is a win possibly for the state or not. also, we re awaiting what could be key testimony from the girlfriend of trayvon martin there in sanford, florida. do not miss a moment of this show. our panel will be right back. matt s brakes didn t sound right. .so i brought my car to mike at meineke.
between themselves. and he added that he hoped this would not damage what he called businesslike relationships between the u.s. and russia. particularly in the wake of the boston marathon bombing. so he s trying to sort of say on the one hand, hope this doesn t affect our relations. but right now i ve got no reason to send him back to you. is there anything the u.s. can, president of the united states specifically, to sweeten the pot to make it attractive for the russians to cooperate with the u.s. and hand over snowden? well, i m sure there must be. there must be sort of, you know, tit for tat kind of people the russians did want or whatever. but on a bigger scale, i think the u.s. and this is in the words of jane harmon. she thinks the administration doesn t have enough leverage with russia right now. and as you know, there is very, very bad blood really between the putin administration and the obama administration. a lot of it centers on the big
the house will do its own legislation. we re going to do our own plan, which is going to be far more methodical, we re going to take our time. reporter: getting back to edward snowden, a smokpokesman the national security council noted the u.s. does not have an extradition treaty with russia. vladimir putin noted today he has no legal authority to forcibly return edward snowden back to the united states, leaving put in in a comfortable legal position following national law and also telling the u.s. you re on your own. jim acosta, thanks very much. and let s dig a little bit deeper now, john king and fareed zakaria. the president didn t make the statement. it was released by a spokeswoman for the national security council. would it have been more effective if the president of the united states would have publicly made an appeal for
months later more than 30 people were arrested. and in that brussels heist, authorities received some of the diamonds and cash and luxury cars what a story. thank you. coming up here in the situation room , nsa agent on the run. we ll talk to the wikileaks owner who is helped snowden. matt s brakes didn t sound right. .so i brought my car to mike at meineke.