the courtroom, more color from the courtroom and details of the verdicts, most of them guilty, at the stevens hayes trial. jenna: and 17 counts, there is a not guilty verdict on the arson part. but the rest of the counts, 16 counts, guilty, for steven hayes. lisa weile is on the phone with us, a fox news legal analyst for us, and you ve been following this case closely. what do you think so far from what you ve heard? i m so grateful, really, that they came back with a guilty verdict. you know, if we re going to have a death penalty, if we re going to go all the way with the death penalty in this country, these two people, i mean, can you imagine the scene where they go in, home invasion, they bring out the mother, they goes she goes to the bank, we have her visiting the bank, pulling out the $15,000, then they go back and they set fire to the house, meanwhile, the father, the doctor, is bound
will announce that okay, we have a verdict, the verdict is to be read in 60 minutes or # on minutes or something like that, they usually want to set up extraordinary amounts of security. have you heard anything like that? reporter: yes. we ve heard that the marshals came in, there were six of them, now there are seven, i m hearing nine, one producer is telling me the jury is being brought into the courtroom, so we could be hearing a verdict being read in court in the next few minutes, they could take a break and collect themselves or this could be it. we ll have to wait and see. jenna: you ve been there watching this case and inside the courtroom. right now we re looking at the two pictures of the gentlemen involved, steven hayes is there now and joshua kamisarjevsky will go on trial we believe sometime next year. talk to us about what it was like inside the courtroom and what you ve been able to sue, just as someone covering this case on a daily basis. i ve covered a lot of murder
been an extremely difficult one to get through because of the young age of the victims, especially of makayla petit and the images of the burned out bed and hearing how the fire was set and what happened in that home on the night of july 7, 2007. i m being told in my ear, the judge has said to them, the members who are in the courtroom right now, not to express any emotion. that sounds like we could be hearing a verdict being read any time now. we ll let you know as we continue to monitor these messages coming in. the jury is taking their seats, i m being told. jon: we should point out that this guy who is on trial, steven hayes, steven hayes basically tried to sell out the accused accomplice in this crime, tried to say it s really kam arsavesky s fought, it was not supposed to be a murder, is was possessed to be simply a robbery. that s correct.
been following closely, the connecticut home invasion, rape and murder of an innocent family. we could get a verdict in this trial at any moment. we have details ahead on that. plus, what on earth is this guy doing? he s standing just feet away from hrafrba. why is he doing that? stay tuned. because we re taking you inside an active volcano, just ahead.
deliberations room. yesterday they did send out a couple of notes, they had some questions for the judge. one of them was to ask if they could see a transcript of the coconfession that steven hayes reportedly gave to a police detective about his deadly role in the crime in 2007. they said the judge said there was not a transcript but the court reporter could read back the testimony from the detective about it. they declined because they learned it would take 45 minutes. there was also questions about the fire that killed the two daughters. jurors asked whether pouring gasoline was considered starting a fire. the judge said no. during the trial you might remember a state corrections officer testified that he over heard steven petit in jail tell an inch math that he poured the gasoline in the house but didn t light the match that started the deadly inferno. there has been a debate over which suspect ignited the blaze.