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Hawk: In your experience, do you believe potential jurors are completely honest during voir dire? I have set on 6-8 jury's (the must like me). On one, during deliberations, one of the members tried to talk people out of the sentencing because he "knew the family". I have seen others that just want to be selected. Just asking what you think.
I was never counsel on a highly publicized case such as this one. So my experiences were much more straightforward with regular jury panels that included broad swaths across socio economic and occupational metrics.
That is not the case with people who live and work in Manhattan, not the Bronx, not Queens, not Staten Island, not Brooklyn. And as this jury has shown, you can't swing a dead cat in a big group of Manhattanites and not hit a lawyer or banker or government employee of some sort such as a teacher.
But removing the political ramifications from the calculus the jury will have to employ and any inherent bias for or against Trump, the prosecution has been a mess. And it is sounding as if the jury instructions will be a mess as well. This jury will not be sure exactly what they are supposed to decide. With little to clear cut guidance coming from the court, that is when a jury's personal biases or general observations of demeanor play a larger role than they would ordinarily would have.
I have seen reports that the jurors stopped taking as copious of notes midway through Cohen's testimony. The defense getting him to admit he embezzled sixty thou from the Revocable Trust and Trump himself likely did not sit well with them. Stormy's lawyer Davidson was pretty smarmy with doing nothing but shakedowns for and against celebrities, shopping stories around. And it's not as if Stormy was a very savory character either.
So on which rationale will the jurors hang their hat in reaching a decision on guilt or innocence? They will be out and alone in the woods for that one.