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- Dec 14, 2007
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You are welcome! I usually do my exercise routine with JA trial on. Never get tired of watching Martinez do his magic and he makes my exercises pleasurable.
You are dedicated !

You are welcome! I usually do my exercise routine with JA trial on. Never get tired of watching Martinez do his magic and he makes my exercises pleasurable.
She might testify that JA was abused by her parents. She didn't have evidence of abuse last go around, so I think this might be what she'll testify to.
Well. Shoot. Everything I'm reading about today in court has the defense winning today and state's case took a big hit. The state rested today, and the question everyone asked was did the State do a good job of showing the new jury all of the evidence and facts that prove premeditation and cruelty and guilt and the answer from everyone is no, plus Nurmi did a good job of tearing down what the State "proved". I'm bummed.
Hi Everyone, Just peeking in quickly. I have no HLN (Dish) but managed to be in my car when Dr. Drew read my tweet last night. LOL I have been tweeting a bit on this trial getting some of my "issues" out in the interwebs. I was pretty nauseated to hear his whatever guest say she thought that mental health professionals might be more sympathetic to this mental health defense and I had to take issue. I worked inpatient Psychiatry for many years and THE WORST patients we ever got were the Borderlines. They generally DO NOT engender any kind of sympathy whatsoever from mental health workers. In fact, many won't even take them on. Their prognosis sucks, they wreak havoc on Psych units, are usually only there because of a failed suicide attempt or some other form of manipulation. I don't see ANY Psych professional familiar with this diagnosis sympathetic to her. Furthermore, as a sister of a schizophrenic I find her faux mental illness an afront to people with TRUE mental illness. It adds to the stigma of this already stigmatized population by linking them, inappropriately, with premeditated calculated homicide.
One more thought before I hit the hay: I had dinner with our prosecutor tonite who used to work side by side w/ Martinez before she retired. She let me know that a certain local reporter will never get a decent interview with the County Attorney's office as he's lost all respect there and no one likes him or respects him or trusts him. As it should be. Interesting position though for someone who covers THE COURTS. (duh)
Big layoffs at the local paper coming. Maybe this particular reporter can just seamlessly come out of the closet and move right in to the job he's been doing for some time: defense investigative work. At least with some outward integrity, for once.
Now I'm gonna wash my brain out with bleach to remove those thoughts and hope everyone out there has a good night.
I believe in this jury.
Thanks so much for chiming in KCL. We sure miss your calming presence around here
ETA: has this certain reporter been like this for a while, long before JA, that would cause the DA's office not to trust this reporter?
Well Jeff Gold kept saying that the defense is trying to put doubt in the juror's minds, and if they have doubts they can't vote for DP. I dunno. I'm just trying to follow this thing thru tweets and other people's opinions and so far the opinions I've read today all say the defense scored big today. I hate not being able to see for myself and judge for myself.
Well, Gold says some really weird things sometimes but I do not think he is stupid, per se. And the big mean dog blogger is obviously no dummy. So with that in mind, this is what I don't get:
Doubt about what? And exactly how did the defense shoot down what the state had "proved?"
The jury has to accept the guilty verdict and that the crime was cruel (death penalty eligible). Those are the two things the state has been informing the jury of. State is not really needing to "prove" anything, just inform--right? She's guilty. The crime was heinous and cruel. There is no doubting at this stage of the game--right???
I do not understand how reasonably intelligent people continue to spew nonsense like "if the jury has doubts they can't vote DP." Or, "Nurmi shot down everything the state proved." Am I out of the loop for seeing either notion as rubbish?
I thought this phase of the trial was for mitigation and if there are any mitigating factors, whether they outweigh the aggravating factors. I thought that's what the jury is to decide and if they decide no, then it should be Death. If they decide yes, then it should be Life.
I do not understand what it is that they could "doubt" at this point. It is a death penalty qualified case and the death penalty is not coming off the table unless the prosecutor says so--right?
Someone please tell me if I am wrong. (Go ahead--I can take it. I promise.)
Thanks Nali. I realize jurors sometimes do not know what they are supposed to be doing. What is most scary is how can we expect them to know what their job is when many seemingly intelligent citizens (reporters, bloggers) apparently do not know.
I hope the jury is properly instructed before deliberations of what this phase is about and what they are to decide--and how they are to decide it.
She was really good on the stand, very smart young lady or by Nurmis standards young girl. She was calm, steady and unshakable while testifying. Really gave the defense a run for there money. I would expect her to be the same this time.
That will be really interesting, seeing how she and the 'abusive' sister sat side by side and giggled together through the last trial. Awkward.
Where are you reading? These people sound like they're suffering from wrongitis.
BBMNot me.
This is how I picture it ...
Travis says Goodbye to Jodi.
He is going to have a shower after having sex, and believes Jodi is off to SLC to see RB and see/visit other Mormon members.
Jodi goes to her rental and comes back in the house and starts taking photos of Travis in the shower with his camera - to add to the collection of sex photos, to frame him with his Bishop/Mimi.
He sees her, she has the .25 caliber gun she "stole" from her grandparents.
She fires out of white rage - misfire.
Travis "leaps" towards her and she shoots again. This time, the small bullet goes straight down and misses his brain.
He is tough.
He stands in front of the sink, blood spattering from his sinus cavity trying to comprehend what is going on.
Jodi has culinary knife on hand and starts to stab him in the back.
He faces her - in a split second, a stab to the heart.
He is tough.
He turns around to face with his hands up, and tries to fight her off.
After 1 minute, he drops to the ground and starts to crawl towards the exit.
He makes it to the end of the tile hallway - throat slit. All in less than 2 minutes.
Right you are, and this is the fear a lot of us had. Even the jury is getting confused of their job. The defense is effectively retrying her guilt phase.
It would sure be great if the defense had to go by the same standards as the state. Sure hope this jury gets it, hope they remember the real victim is Travis Alexander. The jury questions have me a little worried.
I think you're clear on what they're supposed to do. But jurors don't always behave rationally. If they somehow feel that the previous jury made a mistake, even though they're not allowed to even entertain that thought, they might let it influence them. They might not utter the words out loud, but might let it influence their decisions.
The jurors are still learning about this case so they may have plenty of questions about the guilt/innocence phase. That's okay. However, I do hope that they realize that they are supposed to accept the first-degree (premeditated) especially cruel verdict. Juan will remind them again and again that their only job is to decide life or death.
I am always worried about what a jury will do. Someone asked me how I could not be confident in this jury considering the gruesome photos that will be shown to them. I am skeptical of jurors. Period. And we have a high-profile case which brings up the issue of stealth jurors. I didn't think it was possible for a juror to look at the Travis' autopsy photos, listen to Samantha and Steven's impact statements and still feel sorry for Arias but Zervakos proved me wrong.
I am really grateful for the jurors from last time around who were brave enough to vote for death. I am amazed at how brave jurors 6 and 17 have been to stand by the family inspite of Arias' bullying behaviour. However, I'm not going to trust this jury until they come back with the right verdict.