Magnificent lady -- loved her closing argument on October 29, 2024! From The New York Times:
How Will Harris Make a Last Plea to Voters? Here Are Clues From the Courtroom.
The New York Times unearthed transcripts from Kamala Harris’s years as a prosecutor. Her approach during trials offers hints about how she will make her final case to voters.
Soumya KarlamanglaTim Arango and
Soumya Karlamangla and Tim Arango reported from Oakland, Calif., and Alena Cerro from New York. Together, they read more than 6,000 pages of Kamala Harris’s trial transcripts.
With only a week left until the election, Vice President Kamala Harris plans to give a speech on Tuesday in Washington that she is billing as the closing argument of her presidential campaign.
Her courtroom approach decades ago could shed light on how she will make her final plea to voters. Long before Ms. Harris was vice president, she was a young lawyer in the San Francisco Bay Area, asking juries to convict people accused of murder and rape.
The New York Times unearthed transcripts from six felony trials that Ms. Harris prosecuted to review her closing statements. They come from a rare stretch in her professional life when few eyes were on her: She was assigned dozens of felony cases when she was an Alameda County prosecutor from 1990 to 1998, but only a fraction of them went to trial.
The transcripts offer one sense of how Ms. Harris thinks and tackles problems, revealing a persuasive and disciplined prosecutor who was able to minimize facts that didn’t help her case. She also positioned herself as a voice for women, a stance she has maintained throughout her rise in politics, and showed little patience for male defendants who acted with false bravado and preyed on the vulnerable.
Sharmin Bock, an attorney who worked closely with Ms. Harris in Alameda County, recalled sitting on the courthouse steps with Ms. Harris in the 1990s to discuss trial strategies. Ms. Bock says she sometimes sees glimmers of those days as she watches Ms. Harris on the campaign trail. “I see Kamala talking to her jury,” she said.
‘Showing the math’ to jurors
Malice equals murder. It’s fairly simple. If you don’t have malice, you do not have murder.
Source: The People v. John’el Marquis Bailey transcript, obtained from the California Court of Appeal for the First District
It was March 11, 1996, just after a lunch recess at the Hayward, Calif., courthouse, and Ms. Harris approached the jury box. “Who would have thought you’d be sitting paces away from a murderer,” she began her closing argument.
Ms. Harris was pushing for John’el Bailey, 17, to be convicted of first-degree murder for shooting and killing an acquaintance on the streets of Oakland. Ms. Harris, then 31, had just begun trying felony cases on her own. She would rehearse and rehearse beforehand, but “the stakes were so high, it never felt like enough,” Ms. Harris later said.
Her nerves were noticeable even to the young defendant. Mr. Bailey, recently reached by phone, recalled that Ms. Harris was tough in court but seemed shy and laughed often, perhaps from anxiety.
“I could tell that she was new, as nervous as I was,” said Mr. Bailey, now 46.
During her closing argument, Ms. Harris walked through each element of the relevant laws in Bailey’s case. She called it “showing the math,” a way to provide jurors with every fact so that they could decide on their own whether it all added up to a conviction.
Alone, this method ran the risk of boring juries. But Ms. Harris peppered in jokes and references to the detective show “Columbo” or the terrible traffic on the nearby interstate. She moved around the courtroom and sometimes delivered closing arguments without notes, “speaking to these 12 people like she was in a living room,” said Amy Resner, an attorney who met Ms. Harris early in her career.
Ms. Harris also coupled her methodical style with conclusions so blunt that they seemed crafted by a TV writers’ room, recalled William Kaufmann, a defense attorney who argued a felony robbery case against her in 1996. Mr. Kaufmann, now 80, says he still remembers the case because of how well his opponent eviscerated his closing argument.
“She annoyed me and impressed me at the same time,” he said.
Clues from
ReplyDeletethe court...
Trump dozens
of felonies.
They can't
charge people
for crimes
for nothing
Case closed