discrimination in their housing projects in brooklyn. public prosecutors don t really care about donald trump s you know, putting a lawsuit into his quiver and seeing what happens. they will stay the course. he can continue to complain there s bias in the nature of the suit. he s done this anytime anyone s taken him to task. whether he s been impeached or brought before the law. but the reality is there s a fact pattern here that is very damning and the same one that the manhattan da is following. you can find a lawyer to opine almost any direction you want, especially in this town. but i can t find anybody who doesn t agree with you. the notion this is a garbage lawsuit. i also point out new york
disbelief because i had i had nothing bad to say about him. this wasn t jamere. yes. i mean, that s exactly, more or less, how i felt. it was just like a nightmare. like, this wasn t reality. denita had trusted jamere. the man investigating her death did not. now, the man who once made denita so happy was in the cross hairs of a murder investigation that was quickly ramping up. and though jamere stroud seemed genuinely devastated by denita s death, openly crying throughout his interview with detectives, he wasn t getting much sympathy. when i first spoke with him, i thought i had my man. jamere? jamere. coming up. what does shannon know? and what is she hiding? as we re leaving, getting ready to finish up the interview with her, someone hands me a note.
republican attempts to tell us what we saw wasn t correct, what we saw wasn t reality. why not make this as big as they can get as much public attention as they can? how about one or two sessions in prime time to get the largest audience given that we re in the middle of the summer that they can possibly get? what do you think the american people need to hear from this committee? i don t really think you need to hear anything. i think we re focusing on the wrong sense. we saw it all on 1/6. all i would do is play the footage. perhaps you can play the voice-overs from officer michael i m sorry. i forget his last name. but the gentleman so articulate in telling his story in what it felt to defend his country that
and i was hurt. and i was in shock. just disbelief because i had i had nothing bad to say about him. this wasn t jamere. yes. i mean, that s exactly, more or less, how i felt. it was just like a nightmare. like, this wasn t reality. denita had trusted jamere. the man investigating her death did not. now, the man who once made denita so happy was in the cross hairs of a murder investigation that was quickly ramping up. and though jamere stroud seemed genuinely devastated by denita s death, openly crying throughout his interview with detectives, he wasn t getting much sympathy. when i first spoke with him, i thought i had my man. jamere? jamere. coming up. what does shannon know? and what is she hiding? as we re leaving, getting
you know, why you felt you had to step out, don t understand. you don t hurt the ones you love. reporter: the divorce rate in this country would suggest that we hurt the ones we love all the time. that s true. but it s kind of bad when you going into the marriage being foul. not saying that it s okay once you re in it. but you would just like to think, you know, you re starting things off right. reporter: edythe kearns was barely beginning to process the loss of her close friend, and now had to cope with something else she had never imagined. i was just sad. and i was hurt. and i was in shock. just disbelief. because i had nothing bad to say about him. reporter: this wasn t jermeir? yes, i mean, that s exactly more or less how i felt. it was just like a nightmare, like this wasn t reality. reporter: denita had trusted jermeir.