where i come from steve: well, he comes from jersey. his name andrew napolitano. [laughter] judge: i didn t know that music was for me. god bless you, good morning. steve: let s go out to the commonwealth of virginia. yes. steve: paul manafort who was the president s campaign manager when he was running for president standing trial. not for collusion or not about russia or is it. couple things to look for. it is not about russia. and in fact the government suffered a rare set back. the judges never say this even though it s so obvious. the judge says to the prosecutors, look. this has nothing to do with what bob mueller is a. you just want to squeeze him. a princeton graduate this judge t.s. eliot. long before you and i were
november. rob: mandatory evacuations underway for a number of people in florida mostly in the keys, very vulnerable. live at an emergency management center coming up next. heather: the sitting us senator standing trial for major corruption charges. a former lawmaker who served with senator bob menendez. democrats, ceos and celebrities becoming unhinged over donald trump s decision to end daca. rob: share has the answer. carly shimkus is here, that is coming up next. i got flowers where the heart beats warm and true, that s texas.
this trial was never about guilt or innocence. the lawyers there to represent limb, to stand by him, have already told the jury you re probably not going to hear evidence from us, no witnesses. there s not a question of whether or not he did it. what is the right penalty for something like this? the state is also seeking the death penalty. the federal government doesn t usually do it unless it s a terrorism type case and many people can equate this case to terrorism because he had an agenda and killed people. personally i m not an opponent of the death penalty in every case, but this guy, obviously, has mental illness problems. the judge he was found capable of no question. of standing trial. competency is different for mental illness. competency requires only you have general idea of what s going on that you can help your lawyers. it doesn t mean you understand the consequences of your action. i think it s clear this guy was operating under some type of delusion. the way he
it is a justification, and anything that he tells the investigators is going to be bad. and even the behavior driving 50 mile, and hid and ambushed the people, and killed three people, and his own actions show that he knew what he was doing, and purposeful, and intended the result that he got. yes, a real uphill battle, and even again, we know scant facts at this stage, but they are bad factses. and danny and mel robinson, thank you both so much. back to the top story, freddie gray and the first of six police officers who are going to be standing trial successively in a row. in this type of an environment, how do you choose one jury? how do you choose all six juries, impartial juries? we will dig into that with a jury consultant next. e is the be for her she s agreed to give it up. that s today? we ll be with her all day to see how it goes. after the deliveries, i was ok. now the ciabatta is done and the pain is starting again. more pills? seriously? seriously.
trial. whether or not you re capable of standing trial. incompetent statement. but i guess something could have happened between then and now. absolutely. the prosecution is going to show us, maybe she was incompetent for a period of time but sane at the time this incident occurred. thank you. after bringing a clock to school, remember him? his family now wants $15 million for his trouble. staffers at his former high school in irving, texas, called the cops when now ham mad brought the clock to could. the teacher reported it could be a bomb. it was not a bomb. the only thing it blew up was twitter. the hash tag, eye stand with ahmed what every. he was instant sited to visit tech companies and so did the president who met the teen at the white house. now his family is threatening to school both the school string