george was spanish or puerto rican, i don t think it had anything to do. but people are looking for race to be part of this trial. back with my panel. i should point out, there have been a lot of attention that yesterday this woman and her husband had a book agent and were shopping around the idea of writing a book. today, she put out a statement staying they are not proceeding with that. she has no intent to proceed with trying to get a book deal. can i just say, every question you asked her, she answered with the defense version. every question, yes, i believed the cartoon. yes, i believed no, he was not profiling. cartoon? she liked that. i don t know if that s because she actually did feel that way, or once you vote not guilty, you have to you bought into it. it just underscores the importance of finding your advocate on each jury that will fight for you, because if it s 3-3. it s not 3-3 if three of them are wall flowers and three are bombastic individuals. paul, y
his zimmerman s intent, zimmerman s back ground, zimmerman s intent, that s what the case was about. and trayvon martin, there really was not much of an opportunity to present a human face on him, or was there or should there have been? i don t know. if you were the prosecutor in this case, and you had not been used to putting away young black men for the last 20, 30 years, you might have painted a picture where they would resonate with trayvon as opposed to zimmerman. what was masterful by the defense is, the defense made this about george zimmerman. they made those jurors want to help george, and they i thought that one witness, besides the detective, the one witness who talked about the black males trying to get into her house, that resonated with this jury, and that plays into the archetype of, i hate to say it, the kind of racial archetype
Transcripts for CNN Erin Burnett OutFront 20130717 06:00:15 archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
i mean, i m not really scared, but i want to be cautious, if that makes any sense. it s understandable. yeah. but you want people to know. why did you want to speak? i want people to know that we put everything into everything to get this verdict. we didn t just go in there and say, we re going to come in here and do guilty or not guilty. we thought about it for hours and cried over it afterwards. i don t think any of us could ever do anything like that ever again. in facthe says she never wants to serve on a jury again. our legal panel has listening to everything b-37 has to say. jeff, let me start with you. it was breathtaking, it s so interesting. we ve been speaking for weeks what did the jury think?
and cried over it afterwards. i don t think any of us could ever do anything like that ever again. in fact she says she never wants to serve on a jury again. our legal panel has listening to everything b-37 has to say. jeff, let me start with you. it was breathtaking, it s so interesting. we ve been speaking for weeks what did the jury think? now we know what the jury thought. how about when they went in for deliberations, it was three for acquittal, two for manslaughter, one for second degree murder. i don t know if that s surprising or not, it s very interesting. she was a very pro prosecution jury. i think the thing that surprised me most about that interview was how sympathetic she was to george zimmerman. you asked at the end, do you