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Apr 26, 2024
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and back with us now, our panel jon sale, jessica roth, and richard goodstein.rosecutors after the defense is done return to question david pecker again. where do you think they would head with that? >> depends on what they saw as any weaknesses that they hadn't anticipated, kind of trying to shore those up. i actually think that this notion that somehow he forgot some things, i actually don't think that goes to his value to the prosecution of painting this picture of this pretty substantial conspiracy. again, he can't speak to the records, but he can speak to the backdrop that the jury has to take into account, so i actually think that the redirect could be rather short, and i actually think, again, there would be some incentive for the prosecution, if they could, to get it. whoever the next witness might be, to do something before the weekend starts that lets the jury kind of mainate about something that, again, would help the prosecution's case. >> jessica, let's turn to the gag order because there's still no ruling on that. we had a hearing earlier this week
and back with us now, our panel jon sale, jessica roth, and richard goodstein.rosecutors after the defense is done return to question david pecker again. where do you think they would head with that? >> depends on what they saw as any weaknesses that they hadn't anticipated, kind of trying to shore those up. i actually think that this notion that somehow he forgot some things, i actually don't think that goes to his value to the prosecution of painting this picture of this pretty...
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Apr 19, 2024
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i'm joined now by former federal prosecutor jessica roth. to have you back on the program. a bit of a whiplash with this jury. it was up and then it was down and now there is a full jury seated. two issues came up with regards to these jurors being dismissed. one, a juror was worried that her identity was being revealed in the process. the second was concern over whether another juror was somehow hiding his or her true intentions about why they wanted to sit on the jury. were those just normal concerns, especially in a case like this? jessica: they raised two distinct concerns. the first juror who said she was concerned about her privacy, and implicitly her safety because she thought her identity was being found out, that is particular to this case. you usually don't see those kind of juror concerns in a case involving falsification of business records which of course is the charge here. you might see that in an organized crime case or a terrorism case. but of course this is a white-collar case involving the former president who has engaged
i'm joined now by former federal prosecutor jessica roth. to have you back on the program. a bit of a whiplash with this jury. it was up and then it was down and now there is a full jury seated. two issues came up with regards to these jurors being dismissed. one, a juror was worried that her identity was being revealed in the process. the second was concern over whether another juror was somehow hiding his or her true intentions about why they wanted to sit on the jury. were those just normal...
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Apr 4, 2024
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jessica roth, thank you so much. appreciate it. >> my pleasure. >>> up next, we'll go to a tennessee courtroom where a group of women share their experiences in hopes of changing the state's abortion ban. >>> plus, more of my conversation with miami voters about the 2024 election. how what is happening in haiti and latin america and the caribbean may very well influence how they vote in november. >> we're watching what happens in these countries because it is going to impact us. our funds, our stress levels, our health. here's to getting better with age. here's to beating these two every thursday. help fuel today with boost high protein, complete nutrition you need... ...without the stuff you don't. so, here's to now. boost. wealth-changing question -- are you keeping as much of your investment gains as possible? high taxes can erode returns quickly, so you need a tax-optimized portfolio. at creative planning, our money managers and specialists work together to make sure your portfolio and wealth are managed in a tax
jessica roth, thank you so much. appreciate it. >> my pleasure. >>> up next, we'll go to a tennessee courtroom where a group of women share their experiences in hopes of changing the state's abortion ban. >>> plus, more of my conversation with miami voters about the 2024 election. how what is happening in haiti and latin america and the caribbean may very well influence how they vote in november. >> we're watching what happens in these countries because it is going...
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Apr 9, 2024
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let's discuss all of this with lisa rubin and former federal prosecutor jessica roth. good to see you, so, lisa, the appeals court judge wasted no time at all, made it very clear that this was a bad argument in her mind that trump was making to try to delay this trial even further. walk us through trump's argument and what the judge had to say. >> first of all, the judge didn't say very much at all. all she said was she was denying the request to stay the trial while the court considers his argument that venue, meaning where the trial is situated, is inappropriate in manhattan because the pretrial publicity is so pervasive that he can't get a fair trial here in manhattan on a you and i and jessica and our viewers know that much of that pretrial publicity has been created by donald trump himself. and that was part of the argument yesterday. the other part of the argument, of course, is the fact that this is the former president, and wherever he goes, that publicity will follow him. part of the argument that the d.a.'s office was making was that in whatever county you're
let's discuss all of this with lisa rubin and former federal prosecutor jessica roth. good to see you, so, lisa, the appeals court judge wasted no time at all, made it very clear that this was a bad argument in her mind that trump was making to try to delay this trial even further. walk us through trump's argument and what the judge had to say. >> first of all, the judge didn't say very much at all. all she said was she was denying the request to stay the trial while the court considers...
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Apr 15, 2024
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jessica roth, professor of law co—director, at cardozo school of law, but first, quite a moment.that, first of all. it quite a moment. your reflection of that, first of all.— that, first of all. it is a historic moment. _ that, first of all. it is a historic moment. it — that, first of all. it is a historic moment, it is _ that, first of all. it is a historic moment, it is the _ that, first of all. it is a historic moment, it is the first - that, first of all. it is a historic moment, it is the first time i that, first of all. it is a historic. moment, it is the first time had that, first of all. it is a historic i moment, it is the first time had a criminal trial against a former president of the united states so that, in and of itself, is absolutely extraordinary and consistent with our system, he is going to be tried by a jury of his peers, 12 individuals who will be selected through the process beginning today who can be fair and impartial solely based off the arguments presented in court so it is an extraordinary and solemn day. you are a former prosecutor. in terms ofjury y
jessica roth, professor of law co—director, at cardozo school of law, but first, quite a moment.that, first of all. it quite a moment. your reflection of that, first of all.— that, first of all. it is a historic moment. _ that, first of all. it is a historic moment. it — that, first of all. it is a historic moment, it is _ that, first of all. it is a historic moment, it is the _ that, first of all. it is a historic moment, it is the first - that, first of all. it is a historic moment, it...
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Apr 12, 2024
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william: jessica roth teaches law at cardozo law school in new york city, with expertise in white-collarica: first, he's pled guilty to crimes that involve deception and deceit, including tax fraud, bank fraud, and lying to congress. and those crimes go to his truthfulness, as a witness. secondly, he's been inconsistent in terms of what he has said about trump's involvement in this scheme. he previously, before he decided to turn against the former president, said that trump was uninvolved in the payments to stormy daniels. and then finally, he is a biased witness in the sense that it's quite clear - and he's been quite explicit about the fact - that he harbors significant animosity toward the former president. they were once close, they are no longer. and so the defense, i think, will be able to point to that bias and suggest to the jury that it is coloring cohen's testimony. william: jury selection starts monday. potential jurors will be questioned about their political allegiances, knowledge of the case, and whether they're able to render fair judgment in this historic first-of-its ki
william: jessica roth teaches law at cardozo law school in new york city, with expertise in white-collarica: first, he's pled guilty to crimes that involve deception and deceit, including tax fraud, bank fraud, and lying to congress. and those crimes go to his truthfulness, as a witness. secondly, he's been inconsistent in terms of what he has said about trump's involvement in this scheme. he previously, before he decided to turn against the former president, said that trump was uninvolved in...
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Apr 5, 2024
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bush administration and another former federal prosecutor from the southern district, district, jessica rothe gertner, let me start with you. you've been critical of how judge cannon has handled the case so far, particularly how she's dealt with the presidential records act and proposed jury instructions which you called. and i quote, very, very troubling you also said in recent weeks that the judges giving credence to arguments that are are on their face absurd. so what do you make of her ruling today >> well, i want to step back for a second. so what she did today is to say that the presidential records act can't lead to the dismissal of all charges, right? and that to some degree is an easy decision to have made. you can't say, >> i'm >> leaving with the nuclear plan of attack because i want to, because so i've just decided to so she said it's not going to be the basis to dismiss. but she's keeping it in play for the trial. so either trump would be able to say or at least for now, she's keeping it in play i these were personal records even though i never told anyone in the white house tha
bush administration and another former federal prosecutor from the southern district, district, jessica rothe gertner, let me start with you. you've been critical of how judge cannon has handled the case so far, particularly how she's dealt with the presidential records act and proposed jury instructions which you called. and i quote, very, very troubling you also said in recent weeks that the judges giving credence to arguments that are are on their face absurd. so what do you make of her...
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Apr 17, 2024
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showing is now two former federal prosecutors, jeffrey toobin, jessica roth, also jury consultant. alan turkheimer. so jeff, you predicted last night that this trial would move along and typical fashion. and here we are tonight. seven jurors already seated. does the pace even exceed what you expected? >> it does. this is >> really fast and the judge suggested he didn't say commit, but he said today that he thought opening statements could happen monday. and remember there's no court tomorrow. he doesn't sit with a jury on wednesdays so he thinks the jury will be will be filled out and in two more days as i said last night, you know, people don't follow these cases as closely as we think they do. they're obviously aware of who donald trump is. but based on the answers they did seem like a group that could listen to the evidence and reach a verdict not based on prior feelings about the defendant. >> just go what do you make a potential jurors who who seemed to be trying extra hard to convince the attorneys that they can be fair. would that raise a red flag to you or should that appro
showing is now two former federal prosecutors, jeffrey toobin, jessica roth, also jury consultant. alan turkheimer. so jeff, you predicted last night that this trial would move along and typical fashion. and here we are tonight. seven jurors already seated. does the pace even exceed what you expected? >> it does. this is >> really fast and the judge suggested he didn't say commit, but he said today that he thought opening statements could happen monday. and remember there's no court...
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Apr 9, 2024
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i want to bring in >> two former federal prosecutors, elie honig and jessica roth, who's now a professor at the cardozo school of law here in new york >> i'm the >> jury questionnaire. good. does it is care i just talked about proud boys. q. and on bug lou boys and then tufa, it's a fascinating documents. so >> first of all, jury selection is so crucial when you're a prosecutor or defense lh are the stakes are so high, you let one bad juror through, you're going to regret that for a long time. what the judge in the court is trying to do with this document is sauce out any undue biases and really sort of breaks into a couple of parts. one of them is just basically the basics, the biographical basics. what type of job do you do? what's your family situation? but then it gets into without quite asking, how do you feel about donald trump? do you love him or hate him? asking a lot of proxy it's for that, for example, where do you get your news? are you a member of any organizations? and then as kara said, have you been to a trump rally? are you part of any trump email list? it also asks, have
i want to bring in >> two former federal prosecutors, elie honig and jessica roth, who's now a professor at the cardozo school of law here in new york >> i'm the >> jury questionnaire. good. does it is care i just talked about proud boys. q. and on bug lou boys and then tufa, it's a fascinating documents. so >> first of all, jury selection is so crucial when you're a prosecutor or defense lh are the stakes are so high, you let one bad juror through, you're going to...
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Apr 26, 2024
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criminal defense attorney or their eye dala, also former federal prosecutor, just jeffrey tube and jessica roth from her house january 6 select committee senior investigative counsel can be aganga-williams, cnn senior legal analyst, elie honig, and cnn's bring jin grass, who was in court today. a lot of billable hours right here at the tail. >> so bring let's talk more about what but the scene was like inside the courtroom. >> yeah, it was i found it interesting the contrast between the finishing up of the direct and the cross right. direct. we have seen over the last couple of days, it's very methodical. they go through every single detail, pulling back the curtain on those catch-and-kill schemes with pecker at bringing in the evidence text messages, how they discussed signal apps with michael well, cohen. and then once we got to the cross, it was rapid fire. right? the defense was basically walking him through exactly, poking holes into what the cross had just spent days and hours doing with pecker. so i found that very interesting. another thing i thought was so interesting and you just ment
criminal defense attorney or their eye dala, also former federal prosecutor, just jeffrey tube and jessica roth from her house january 6 select committee senior investigative counsel can be aganga-williams, cnn senior legal analyst, elie honig, and cnn's bring jin grass, who was in court today. a lot of billable hours right here at the tail. >> so bring let's talk more about what but the scene was like inside the courtroom. >> yeah, it was i found it interesting the contrast between...
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Apr 18, 2024
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and msnbc legal analyst, glenn kirschner is here, joining us former federal prosecutor for fdny jessica roth and tim ryan are in the check out, you can never leave seats. i'll start with you, we've turned to you on these facts for years now on this trial for days now. we were sitting here as a day that started as one of the jurors coming in today and saying can't do it, sorry. 12 have been selected and sworn in. >> right. and we thought there was -- you know, seven when we left last night. five this morning. >> yeah. >> this is how it works, and tomorrow morning we could have 12 and an alternate or we could lose a few overnight. we just don't know how it's going to play out. it does look like we're adding towards a jury with alternates by the end of the day tomorrow. >> you've sat in a courtroom when trump's been on trial in a civil manner. >> right. >> what do you detect just from being around -- we're going to monitor this to see if he attacks jurors. we're going to monitor this for news. we're not going to listen to him live on this show. we are monitoring that. we promise you won't miss
and msnbc legal analyst, glenn kirschner is here, joining us former federal prosecutor for fdny jessica roth and tim ryan are in the check out, you can never leave seats. i'll start with you, we've turned to you on these facts for years now on this trial for days now. we were sitting here as a day that started as one of the jurors coming in today and saying can't do it, sorry. 12 have been selected and sworn in. >> right. and we thought there was -- you know, seven when we left last...