their legs out from under them. martha: all right. let s go to judge andrew napolitano from the newsroom. your reaction to this very quick decision as we wait? well, some of us have been arguing all along, the judge in this case is another prosecutor in the courtroom and has established an atmosphere in that courtroom in which it would be fair to conclude that casey is probably guilty. and as even arthur pointed out a few moments ago, the judge permitted the first two weeks of this trial to be evidence generated by the government which was intended only to induce hatred by the jury of casey. who would want to be tried by a jury in which the jury martha: judge, hold on one second. this is a live shot, casey anthony entering the courtroom. everybody s there now, basically. and we are ready to hear this verdict. we were told it was going to be 2:15. is it hard to imagine, judge, that they re going to have everyone sit there for 12 more minutes as they wait for this? i would think he
with delta. that s right they have a better deal. they don t need the union. they are going to keep on going. the national mediation board, where there are two owe pointies. one was an obama a pointy and another appointee, foamer union officials, they out vote the nonunion person 2-1 so they get to make up the rules as they go along. they chained a law that was 75 years sitting there on the books 75 years to make it easier for unions to organize. martha: there is an end run effort around this card check thing that didn t work as you pointed out. going back to a really good point you made earlier obviously there is a difference between the union leadership and membership. you saw biden going right after what he call the new republican party. they are concerned that the tea party and others are reaching out to some of the union membership, blue collar workers who may very much identify with this new republican party. i think they could identify, but also keep in mind there is
geraldo said, martha is conventional wisdom around the courthouse is a swift verdict when charges are this serious is usually a positive thing for a defense, because you d like to think if 12 people are going to condemn someone to possible death they are going to take a little bit more type. they haven t even deliberated 12 hours. martha: anyone you discuss this with outside the courtroom. as geraldo points out these are the only people who matter these 12. i was surveying people all weekend. people are all over the map on this. that is why i m surprised this is happening so quickly. they ve been held a longtime. i think juries do an excellent job of taking their job very seriously from my personal experience, but i just it s hard to imagine how they were able to wrap this up so quickly, honestly. i think to arthur s point i think they have taken the murder one and taken it off the table. i think they took an acquittal off the table and took the murder one off the table. they threw
always struck in this story by the missing father, you know? i mean, who is this child s father? the one element in this poor little baby s life that we will never know is who was the father of this little girl? judge napolitano, one of the questions that s been raised here is whether or not judge belle vin perry at this point, would he have been told by a court officer what the verdict is? does he know? you know, that s a very good question. in some states it s impermissible for court officers to tell anyone, even the judge. in other states the judges want to know what the verdict is, they want to see it in writing to make sure it is announced to the world correctly because sometimes the people doing the announcement in the courtroom are not familiar with this. my guess is he does know, he has his own copy, he ll read it silently to himself as the clerk reads it aloud for all of us to hear. martha: you look at casey anthony, back to the panel now.
we ll stretch your loan over 15 years if it s a ten year. i don t know the answer to the question. martha: it would make sense. it would be in the better interest of the banks to say, let s do a deal, you can afford x, pay us x. martha: that s what they did in the 80s last time around. i can t understand why it s not happening this time around. i don t know why, martha. martha: we have to figure that out. we ll talk about that next time. thank you, sir as always. this story has clearly got the attention of this nation right now. and right now at this moment behind closed doors there is a jury of 12 men and women who are continuing to debate what they have now been listening to for weeks. they are trying to decide the fate of casey anthony. this is a live look right now at where the jury will speak to the press. this is an even usual sort of set up here. after they have reached this verdict they will file inch know the room and sit this those chairs and tell us how they reached th