Alex Jones Obliterated on Cross Because His Lawyer Sent His Cell Phone to Opposing Counsel
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- Опубликовано: 8 авг 2022
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The thing is, if Jones hadn't disregarded all discovery obligations, the judge probably would have accepted "Please disregard" and allowed the clawback...But he didn't.
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Please skip ahead to the “Find Out” portion of your handouts
Will you be doing a video about the FBI raid on trump
I thought Morning Brew was a website for making coffee in the morning lol
@@mlouden03 nothing of particular interest there, pretty basic and common stuff.
The Trial should've become a mistrial after it was revealed that the opposing lawyer accidentally got evidence from Jone's lawyer.
IMAGINE Being reminded by the OPPOSING COUNCEL that you can assert the 5th because he is screwing you so bad 😭
"at least do something, it's not fun to beat your ass if you're not even going to raise your hands"
Savage.
Reminds me of that guy who was caught being in the same house as his abuse victim during their courtcase on zoom. The judge started advising him to keep his mouth shut
Imagine believing that
Jeeze Louise! The EXACT same thought crossed my mind after watching this hilarious cross examination! Alex Jones shot himself in the foot and then seemingly decided to empty the clip into it!
@@doitf3525 Wow, a month late and I spot this gold retort.
Are you suggesting that you have you use your imagination in order to believe reality, that has been videotaped and presented? 😄
The actual footage of the court room was amazing.
The best part was when the opposing counsel literally just said "Hm Hm Hmm. Yes Mr. Jones. Indeed."
The opposing counsel is literally living the Ace Attorney dream.
He's even in the blue suit.
You could tell he was just barely holding in his laughter.
My man was just looooooooooooooooooooving this...
Normally, I'd consider that unprofessional, but with a man as awful as jones... yeah, enjoying taking him town is very warranted.
He reminded my of someone playing chess whose opponent had just missed the fact he was about to take his queen.
just needed a little more desk slapping
His coughing is gone once he heard about the cellphone.
It's a miracle!
It's the 5G brain waves!
Actually, I think it’s medically possible. Adrenaline has peculiar effects on the body, including “focusing” one or making aches and pains disappear. I imagine he has a kilo of adrenaline circulating in his blood at that moment.
@@roberto8650 adrenaline doesn’t make pain go away, that is endorphins and endocannabinoids. It’s a complex process but part of the flight or fight so maybe that’s why you thought it was adrenaline
@@thecosmicxx Thanks!
Nervous cough.
The biggest oh shit moment of this entire video was said right at the end of it. "The January 6 committee wants these documents, and I'm going to give the documents to them."
It's like a teaser for the next season of a show
The biggest possible hype up for a season of all time.
I would be vibrating across the courtroom floor with barely repressed excitement if I wound up on jury duty for that.
Same, that stuck out to me as well. The attorney basically said “oh by the way, you’re going to federal prison over this error”
It just says Alex Jones Will Return
@@mr.weirdness5970
Next time of Alex Jones continues on make a fool of himself in legal court
Defending counsel- "But your honor, I said 'sike'."
Lawyer- "Yes but you see your honor, there's no takesies backsies after 10 days"
Defending counsel- "Damn he's good..."
Who has time to read EVERY rule, you honor, I mean, cut us some slack here!
"Too long, didn't read. My client's innocent your honor."
*counsel. Council is like a city council. Counsel is advice (or the person providing it). The more you know!
sike, not psych
This is perfectly explained, and exceptionally funny. Well done, sir. Well done.
I feel bad because for the REST of his LIFE that opposing counsel will forever chase the high of this day.
Had me in the first half ngl💀
Nah he got the immortalized treatment
Damn junkie. Always chasing the Alex dragon.
I think it probably sent his career to new heights.
The fuckin anime "ohoho" laugh right before Alex Jones spikes the camera like a deer in the headlights... guy really did get to live every lawyer's dream right there lmao
I have NEVER heard a court stenographer typing so frantically as during that bomb drop, it literally sounded like one of those automated typewriters they’d attach to telegraph machines!
When was that?
@@PhoenixCheetah from 7:12 onwards I'm pretty sure
@@brentos-the-mentos I thought that was cameras or something lol that's crazy
I like the idea of them typing like Johnny from airplane!
A lot of extra typing to put "Stenographers note: OHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!"
That lawyer has been waiting all his career to say the word "indeed" in the court of law
And he pulled it off absolutely perfectly. God that was awesome.
I bet he's a fan of Stargate character Teal'c
i could NOT be a juror in this courtroom, i'd be yelling in the stands like a dad who thinks the TV can hear him
100% ^
@@mk177 I wouldn't even get that fare I would have no issue saying yes I'm going to side with the defended when being interviewed
I think I'd have been thrown out for laughing too much.
@@mesothelimoa341 “you’ve got it upside down” would have destroyed me. I would have had to be removed
"You're a dumbass if you don't plead the fif... I mean throw the ball"
Legal Eagle: "Crazy gotchas only happen in movies."
Alex Jones' lawyers: "And we took that personally."
Lmao
Wouldn’t: “Hold my nutritional supplements” be more appropriate
As Legal Eagle himself has said in previous videos, the whole process of Discovery is designed to avoid crazy gotchas.
The only reason why it happened in this case is because Jones and his lawyers went out of their way to circumvent the Discovery process earlier on.
The funny thing is that if Jones' lawyers had just complied with Discovery, they would have had the chance to face the facts head on and try to spin them to Jones' advantage. Maybe even get some of them thrown out of the case on a technicality.
Now all they can do is stand there and take the kick to the nuts.
@@andrewb1921 Well at least it's appropriate that Mr. Jones managed to find lawyers who share his utter lack of competence and of responsibility while also acting fatally allergic to actual facts then. What a match made in Hell.
There’s more to this. I wonder if they are simply avoiding later criminal charges by taking a financial hit here regarding the hiding of documents.
Jones’ income far far exceeds any legal liability he’s likely to face. We have no idea if he gets his money from the NRA and Russia.
"You got it upside down" I salute all those people in the court keeping it professional and not facepalming in unison.
to be fair, the spectators aren't mic'd.
i remember reading that the spectators at the jan six hearings from a couple years ago all laughed at that clip of senator josh "no, they were totally peaceful demonstrators" holley literally running away from them. but it was silent on the stream.
(was a relief to find out about the laughter after the fact. i was amazed at their self control when i watched the stream.)
I laughed so hard I cried
When the lawyer asked “do you know what perjury is” jones looked terrified!!!!
Time stamp?
@@LightStorm. 11:31
"You know what perjury is, right?"
It was in that moment that Alex Jones knew he had f*cked up.
AJ should have answered: "sure, it's my way of life and business model"
I'm not one for conspiracy theories, but this whole thing screams "I hate my client" from the defense attorney.
I have no personal knowledge but, from what I have heard, he goes through lawyers quick because he is extremely hard to work with.
I would agree, but this is so damaging to the lawyer’s career that I don’t think they would’ve done it intentionally. Not to mention the ethics of it all.
@@goldenageofdinosaurs7192 look at the circumstances surrounding the proceedings though - if there WAS somebody to sandbag at a time in your career THIS WOULD BE IT. lol
@@goldenageofdinosaurs7192 I don't think lawyers can even say the word "ethics" without bursting into flames.
That’s my theory as well.
Judge: "Prosecution, it's time for cross."
Prosecution: *(crucifies opposing counsel)*
Lendri, *😅For Democrats, why do your majority cities and states FOR DECADES have THE HIGHEST DRUG AND CRIME RATES?????????? Atlanta, Los Angeles, Detroit, Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, etc., and now San Francisco!!! What's your answer for that?????????? Trump-obsession?????? And why is it mostly DEMOCRATS (leftist BLM and Antifa) that burn cities, taunt and attack cops ON VIDEO, loot stores, destroy businesses, while claiming to be "peaceful protesters" and causing over an estimated 2 BILLION IN PROPERTY DAMAGES in 2020, alone??????* 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Lendri, *Alex Jones is, of course, still on air, and he has an Amazon best-seller. 😅MUCH of what Alex says on his show is technically accurate. The dangers of the clot shot isn't fake news. The "Great Reset" that the World Economic Forum is pushing isn't fake news. The digital ID isn't fake news. The food shortages aren't fake news. The woke agenda isn't fake news. The fascist behavior of the Democratic Party isn't fake news. These are things that are in our faces, more and more each day, that even leftist mainstream media cannot hide forever.*
It's like Farrar and Ball brought the cross but Alex nailed himself to it.
This is a GROSSLY underrated comment.
Quick reminder its plaintiff guys, prosecution are state servitor lawyers that work only on criminal cases, to essentially put criminals away or other penal measures. A civil case like this has a plaintiff, usually from a private law firm, who essentially wants (usually pecuniary) compensation for damages alex may have caused his client.
the best part of the whole thing to me is that the Platiff's lawyers probably just searched "sandy hook" after they finished downloading.
This made me laugh so hard I started coughing like Alex Jones
And presumably took a screenshot of the first thing that came up, without even looking at it, and said to *their* legal assistant; "Print this.".
@@ZT1ST
Yeah sounds like basically as soon as the lawyers realized what they had they grabbed all of it and had it all printed out
@@artsyscrub3226think this was a joke about chatGPT. Bc “the plaintiffs lawyers… finished downloading”
@@VultureSkins Huh? What does that have to do with ChatGPT?
I loved the “see, I did give it to you/I was cooperating” from Jones after the lawyer inadvertently sent the phone records. That is like a murderer dumping the gun in a lake, then in a strange chance a diver finds it and hands it too police, and upon hearing this, the murderer declares “see, I gave the police my gun…I am cooperating fully.”
He literally tried to gaslight the prosecution.
@@elizabethsmith7224 When all you do is recycle your bag of tricks onto an easy to please audience again and again, you really don't have much else to fall back on. As shown perfectly by Alex Jones.
That’s funny but it’s not the same, if he did give his phone to the lawyer it is in fact given. What the lawyer does with that information doesn’t impact the client like we clearly see happen here. Maybe he did lie and never searched himself but he did give the evidence up.
When Alex’s attorney tried to argue for a mistrial, it reminded me of the scene in “Liar Liar”
“I object”
“On what grounds?”
“This is devastating to my case!”
Liar Liar had the gift of foresight!!
Hahahaha, perfect.
"I move for a bad court thingy"
I watched this lawyer's opening statement and could not imagine how the jury could listen to it with a straight face, and that 100% superfluous "Don't lie to the Jury" was like something out of bad tv - it felt like it was challenging fate.
In my wildest dreams I wouldn't have thought fate would take him up on it like this.
"Overruled."
"Good call!"
when that lawyer said "INDEED" you know it justified all the loans and time to become a lawyer for this serve
The little chuckle before that he sounded like he just ate something extremely delicous.
@@MeonLightsyea, jones' credibility
@@stellaleicht4035LMAO
You could almost HEAR his fingers tenting
@@kaileymo He was giving full Count Ratigan levels of malicious glee
Don't you just hate it when the defendant sends you so much incriminating evidence you have to by a new server.
"Hmhmhmhm, yes Mr. Jones. Indeed." God, that was straight up theatrical 😂 that attorney was having a ball
This isn't even a Perry Mason moment, this is a Phoenix Wright moment. You present evidence that you absolutely should not have to point out a contradiction in the witness' statement and prove they're lying (and also prove that their lawyer was deliberately hiding incriminating info). It's too perfect
My god, you’re right. Someone needs to edit that clip with Phoenix Wright music and sound effects
It's more of a Curb moment.......just needs Directed by Robert B. Weide over the clip.
Lesson learned: never hire Winston Payne to be your défense attorney
This is wo on point! Remember when Devin styled himself on Phoneix haha those were the days. A RUclips lawyer based on a video game one...amazing. I wonder if for charity he would reenact The First Turnabout!
But in Japan you can do that if you submit it to the police you don't need to give it to the opposition
That judge just RADIATED "i'm surrounded by idiots" energy.
Love her.
I'm betting part of her brain was busy reciting
"Don't cheer for the prosecution... Don't cheer for the prosecution..."
Just trying to be patient with it all lol
Reminds me of the time when my stupid dad got arrested for having a handgun in his car when we were crossing the border to visit Canada. As both the border guards and I were at the stands testifying about the arrest, the guard claimed they had photographed and confiscated the box of bullets that was with the gun. I then said to the judge that they hadn't actually confiscated the bullets but left the bullets sitting on the passenger seat. The look of disgust on the judges face at their incompetence was priceless! It was my favorite part of a really crappy situation.
It reminds me of it’s always sunny in Philadelphia
Based on other clips I have seen of her talking to Alex Jones... I am inclined to agree.
No one in the world felt better at that moment than that lawyer did when he said "Yes, Mr. Jones. Indeed "
That is the largest dopamine rush any human has ever recieved with out overdosing fatally on meth
I’d watch an interview with the world’s most fired legal assistant.
"You're holding it upside down" Jones would have figured that out in about half a second but the absolute open, unwavering contempt the plaintiff's attorney has for Jones to blast him for that, I love.
Don't forget the prep work. He HANDED it to him upside down.
Premeditation... cold, calculated premeditated murder.
@@Dewydidit Watch again. Jones turned it upside down the moment he got it. 2:52
that was hilarious
@@SarahSmith-cq2ke This just gets better and better :)
I had a good chuckle from that one
I can't believe that lawyer got away with straight up murder in front of a judge like that.
Not to mention an arson. So many lives were burned badly by that heat!
The judge wanted to murder Jones... Nobody liked the guy, not even his lawyer. I think his lawyer was legit just done with him and was like, to the prosecutor, "Dude, you want an easy win? I'm tired of this fat f'er." lol
Fatality! Phoenix Wright WINS!
All I could think of was Chuck D's and Cypress how you just kill a man in my head.
@@TheEDFLegacy double arson, Jones' pants were clearly on fire after that exchange.
I'm no expert, but I think if you're being cross examined, and the attorney actually LAUGHS at your testimony, that's probably one of the worst positions you can be in short of exposing yourself to the entire courtroom.
I love how the judge sounds like she’s talking to preschoolers whenever she addresses Jones or his attorneys. It’s just so perfect!
I don’t care how much you hate Jones, she is to close to be the judge for this trial. Similar to how you are not allowed to be on a jury if you are close, she is biased clearly and should have never even been considered for this trial. What’s worse, is every single one of you in the comments is far to the ignorant to know that yet you clearly know so much. Ironic.
@@frodejotnar9899 Why's that, exactly? Genuinely curious.
Jones is an adult child tho
@@frodejotnar9899educate us. What’s your scoop?
@@frodejotnar9899close in what way and close to who? If you want to actually prove a point, maybe you should. I don't know provide actual evidence instead of meaningless words. I could say every single person on this planet is related and that would be true just as true as saying every life form on this planet is related but that doesn't mean much, It means about as much as your statement though
That "Yes Mr. Jones, indeed" was said just like a super villain. Epic
@@henryhammond7393 well, most Bond villains have the charisma to pull that off. Then again, how often do you have the chance to sound like a Bond villain? Charisma or not, you are taking that opportunity and _running_ with it.
Oh god yes, it sounded like one of those crazy rich villains that will hunt humans for sport in their private forest.
Jace, *😅For Democrats, why do your majority cities and states FOR DECADES have THE HIGHEST DRUG AND CRIME RATES?????????? Atlanta, Los Angeles, Detroit, Chicago, New York, Philadelphia, etc., and now San Francisco!!! What's your answer for that?????????? Trump-obsession?????? And why is it mostly DEMOCRATS (leftist BLM and Antifa) that burn cities, taunt and attack cops ON VIDEO, loot stores, destroy businesses, while claiming to be "peaceful protesters" and causing over an estimated 2 BILLION IN PROPERTY DAMAGES in 2020, alone??????* 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Jace, *Alex Jones is, of course, still on air, and he has an Amazon best-seller. 😅MUCH of what Alex says on his show is technically accurate. The dangers of the clot shot isn't fake news. The "Great Reset" that the World Economic Forum is pushing isn't fake news. The digital ID isn't fake news. The food shortages aren't fake news. The woke agenda isn't fake news. The fascist behavior of the Democratic Party isn't fake news. These are things that are in our faces, more and more each day, that even leftist mainstream media cannot hide forever.*
@@JutlandAngel Or in this case, a lawyer who is hunting the rare but prized "Absolute Buffoon".
Every time Alex Jones goes to court, it makes me nervous. I'm afraid that some clever lawyer is going to get Jones to say "Everything I say is a lie" and then the universe will eat itself because it can't handle that level of paradox.
Same
That isn’t a paradox; it would be consistent if some things he says are lies, but some aren’t, and that was one of the lies.
“This statement is false” is a paradox, “This statement and statement X are both false” isn’t, because it's consistent if that statement is false and X is true.
OMG I love this comment so much. You were able to verbalize precisely what I have been feeling this whole time.
You could really lose some weight. Maybe work out a little, kit.
Hyperbole
IDK how on EARTH they find ppl unbiased enough to sit on a jury for his trials. He’s just so disgusting.
Huh?
I mean, who in their right mind would defend this jerk?
They probably can’t- however they can find people who can focus just on the facts given and put their own opinion aside
@@davidmaitland3238 That's not what he got prosecuted for. You're an excellent example of what would make one a biased juror. You're ignoring the facts of the case and claiming something else entirely. He was found guilty of defamation and that's not an easy bar to clear in the US. Free speech doesn't mean you can go around lying about people.
Defamation requires four things according to Cornell Law School:
1) a false statement purporting to be fact;
2) publication or communication of that statement to a third person;
3) fault amounting to at least negligence;
4) damages, or some harm caused to the reputation of the person or entity who is the subject of the statement.
He was found to have done all four of these things. The fact is he did write untrue statements about the parents of people whose kids died during Sandy Hook and those lies did result in the loonies who believed him harassing and ruining their lives further when they're trying to mourn their dead children. Publishing something so blatantly false to people he knew would believe it is negligence at best.
I'd also point out a good chunk of that information he was trying to withhold he lied about existing and was actually pertinent to the case.
@@davidmaitland3238aside from the fact that he didn't get prosecuted for free speech like the person above me explained ... why do you think he isn't liked? Because he's a disgusting pos who perverts the right of freedom of speech constantly to spread lies and unfounded conspiracy theories. Freedom of speech is supposed to be for political discourse, not publicly lie in the worst way about mourning parents.
my favorite part is when he reminds alex jones that he can invoke his fifth amendment right before asking a question. absolutely ruthless. i love it.
The 5th Amendment is only a shield in criminal prosecution. Pleading the 5th cam be taken in a civil case as an admission of liability.
Legal assistant here. Abject fear of committing exactly this kind of error has literally woken me up at night in a cold sweat multiple times. On the bright side, I have not actually made such an error to date. So far so good (:
The email exchange is just... smh... sounds like the assistant probably didn't even tell the rest of the team about the mistake.
That you know of.
Go knock on wood
Fellow legal assistant! I will go to my grave thinking this was no mistake and this assistant deliberately pulled an Edward Snowden.
@@juliav.mcclelland2415 I like this! I’m with you on this belief. Because I want to believe. 😃
"You've got it upside down."
That might be the single most symbolic moment from the whole trial.
DuetJay, *Alex Jones is, of course, still on air, and he has an Amazon best-seller. 😅MUCH of what Alex says on his show is technically accurate. The dangers of the clot shot isn't fake news. The "Great Reset" that the World Economic Forum is pushing isn't fake news. The digital ID isn't fake news. The food shortages aren't fake news. The woke agenda isn't fake news. The fascist behavior of the Democratic Party isn't fake news. These are things that are in our faces, more and more each day, that even leftist mainstream media cannot hide forever...*
It was a trick by the lawyers, purposely give him the papers upside down and before Alex can say anything, point out that it's upside down. Just a seasoned attorney's trick.
I’m all for seeing Alex jones being shown like this, but I found that part sorta petty lol
@@snaeshaads8203 but he was holding it upside down.
He ain’t gonna pay them a dime.. lol The fact you think this was an actual real trial.. lol
The judge's reply at the end was the most civil way I've ever seen someone be completely eviscerated
one thing that doesn't show in the comments that I am living for is the Judge's expressions. She just looks so done with Jones and his counsel. _She_ knows how screwed they are. It's great.
God the Poor judge looks so 150% _done_ with all of this. Her face screams "Once this is over, I will get blackout drunk and hopefully forget these last few days..."
Well considering the fact that Jones has made claims on his show during the trial that the judge is linked to a pedophilia ring because she previously worked with Child Protective Services….. yea, I would imagine that she is so ready to be done with this trial and Jones in particular.
are you kidding" she is a left wing activist that absolutely hates people like jones. she is loving this.
@@godw1ll99 Oh, she'll love the _sentence_ that comes out of it. but that won't make listening to this Puffed up Bullfrog any more pleasant.
Earlier in the trial, the plantifes attoneys presented evidance from Infowars that acuses that while working for the CPS, the presiding judge helped protect and enable peadphiles.
It was not a good look.
I think that's a same assumption after anyone who had to sit in close proximity of Alex Jones for days on end lol.
When the opposing attorney is telling you that you have the right to shut your mouth and plead the fifth, you know it's bad.
Several youtube lawyers (real ones) have said this is very improper. And what the judge said, too.
@@AndreAngelantoni you going after our LegalEagle now?
@@AndreAngelantoni 💩
🤡 🍆
@@AndreAngelantoni It probably is. It's prejudicial-suggesting a witness should plead the fifth is tantamount to turning directly to the jury and telling them this person is guilty, which isn't how you're supposed to address the court.
Got any examples of these real youtube lawyers?
I feel bad for that judge you can see her rethinking her life decisions
Someone else described her as yelling In lower case
Nah, OP, she's just annoyed with him, but keeping it professional to make sure he doesn't have any grounds for appeal based on her. She's well aware of the cameras and is getting justice done.
as someone with adhd its so nice to see myself represented in the legal profession by alex jones lawyer
he’s already dead 😭😭
YOU'RE KILLING HIM 😂😂
Yeah id like to report this comment for a vicious murder
that's not ADHD.
You don't want to be him. You want to be Emily D. Baker
You know you are screwed when the writers of Law and Order think it is too stupid to be believed.
Agreed, this would be more like an Ally McBeal or Boston Legal type case
“The only difference between reality and fiction is that fiction needs to be credible.”
@@charliemason4355 that’s an interesting qoute, where did it come from?
@@magimariJY Dad said you can't make this up
I don't believe that part I know TV series and F me they are a lot dumber than this case
Imagine how tense the plaintiff's attorney was 9 days after receiving those files, counting down the minutes until they can light Alex Jones' ass on fire
@Nicholas Scott Hahahahhhhh..delicious Perry Mason moment!!! 😂😂👏👏
Of course even if the attorney had responded in time, the judge would get to see all the messages and decide if the privilege was warranted. And she would have correctly ruled much as she did here that these documents should have been given over anyway.
I know, right?! This is like a john Grisham moment, for real. Totally bananas but those awful POSs deserve every single thing that’s coming toward them, especially the defendant
Well said!!
Even if they were the pessimistic type expecting Jones' lawyer to ask them to disregard, they must have counted down and already prepared their next move like... if you are handed gold like that.
Not only was he completely demolished in this trial, but there's a chance he can get screwed AGAIN if any of those text messages have to do with the Jan. 6th riots??? This is just too unbelievable. 🤣🤣🤣
This comment didn't age well...
@@C4RP3_N0CT3M
This comment aged very well.
Honestly, the judge's face is an entire mood
Home girl was checked out
She is all of us who are so sick of lying pundits and conspiracist morons who break the law.
I love how the judge is essentially screaming at them in lower case
Patrick, *Alex Jones is, of course, still on air, and he has an Amazon best-seller. 😅MUCH of what Alex says on his show is technically accurate. The dangers of the clot shot isn't fake news. The "Great Reset" that the World Economic Forum is pushing isn't fake news. The digital ID isn't fake news. The food shortages aren't fake news. The woke agenda isn't fake news. The fascist behavior of the Democratic Party isn't fake news. These are things that are in our faces, more and more each day, that even leftist mainstream media cannot hide forever...*
@@SourceAwareness ok boomer
She seems so DONE with this shit. I feel sorry for her having to sit there and not just blow up at any time.
Lmao best comment
that is what I like about judges and legalise because they can be very pissed at you to the point where they are spitting hellfire and cursing but they can do in a perfectly proper and polite fashion. for me that is just hilarious especially when you have the legal know h ow to understand what the judge is actually saying
I like how the judge is just staring at the defense attorney like, "Are you for real bro?"
FullMetal, *Alex Jones is, of course, still on air, and he has an Amazon best-seller. 😅MUCH of what Alex says on his show is technically accurate. The dangers of the clot shot isn't fake news. The "Great Reset" that the World Economic Forum is pushing isn't fake news. The digital ID isn't fake news. The food shortages aren't fake news. The woke agenda isn't fake news. The fascist behavior of the Democratic Party isn't fake news. These are things that are in our faces, more and more each day, that even leftist mainstream media cannot hide forever...*
It's looking like a "Phoenix Wright level" trial, but the decisive witness is also the defendant and Payne (the prosecutor tutorial that always lose) was assigned as his lawyer lol
😂 yessssssss
Alex Jones on the stand could be described as a child who got caught after the fact.
Mother: Why didn't you cooperate with telling me about what happened?
Alex: I knew you'd find out anyways, so I am cooperating.
Then the mom counters with: "If you knew I'd find out, then why didn't you tell me earlier anyways."
The best part of this is how LegalEagle is showing his love of lawyering by geeking out about another lawyer getting a cinematic moment.
I'm guessing most lawyers go their entire careers just dreaming of a moment like that.
@@ejonp And transcribers of court proceedings live for this as well. We sit there just hoping for these moments of glory. We don't usually get ones as dramatic as this, though, so some transcriber just had a very good day.
I think its the giddiest I've ever seen him in a video. This is an absolutely hilarious display of incompetence to anyone who knows even the most basic made-for-tv aspects of court. I can just imagine how much real lawyers with a full understanding are rolling around on the floor.
In general this whole rundown should not have happened, another channel talked about it. I want to say Lehto but the families lawyer went on TYT right after the trial for an interview so it may have been there. Both sides should be armed and ready but thanks to Alex side of being difficult in general and his legal teams screw ups what is normally tv drama happened in real life. I do agree watching Legaleagle getting psyched up for this is awesome, he does what he loves and it is clear in the video and his passion on this. He is watching a train wreck in motion and giving us a play by play as the mechanics fail and everything falls apart.
@@jbone665 It should not have, but its hardly uncommon. The only truly uncommon thing here is the "leak" of the documents.
But snubbing discovery is not a particularly uncommon tactic whenever "rich guy privilege" is involved. There's a lot of these folks who believe some combination of:
a) The jury will trust me because I have money.
b) And if that doesn't work, I have more money than the prosecution so I'll just drag it out until they can't afford to continue and are forced to settle if not outright drop the case.
And the worst part is, they're not wrong. This is especially true in criminal court where the burden of proof is "beyond a reasonable doubt" (Jones was only facing civil charges, which have a much lower standard.)
That higher burden means both that the jury needs to trust you even less in order to convict, and that the prosecution needs to spend even more time and resources to present their case (while the defense can often get away with a weaker argument since they only have to sow doubt of guilt, rather than trying to "prove" innocence).
If Jones' lawyers hadn't screwed up so badly he would have likely gotten off with a slap on the wrist rather than the $49 million he was ultimately fined. It was just a civil case as noted, and he'd already been found liable, so that much wouldn't have changed. But I suspect the damages would have been drastically lower if the prosecution hadn't had such explicit evidence that Jones had been caught lying his ass off.
"Do you know what Perjury is" and "I need you to know you can assert your 5th amendment right" are priceless lines.
All these jokes float around "pleading the fifth" but when it's actually relevant everyone forgets
@@JoaoPessoa86 People want to defend themselves. Taking the fifth can be a lot harder than people think. It's like 'Not talking to the police.' You think you know it, right up until the police actually try and get you to talk.
My personal favorite was, "Indeed, Mr. Jones," simply because of how happy he sounded saying that.
@@jacob5169 Acting like a proper villain (except you know, being the good guy here) and I absolutely love him for it 😂
The people saying he deserves any fines or jail time are just straight up wrong. Dehumanizing this man is seen as okay because he's Opponent Scum to you guys? Or do you just try to not think to hard about anything that the Allies have already thought for you?
This is the equivalent of sending your entire playbook, starting lineup, signals, and strategy to your opponent two days before the super bowl. Alex Jones deserved this, and I'm glad he went out in such a comedic fashion.
I'm a Texas litigator, and I must say you explained the snapback rule very well. Nice video.
The judge's expressions are priceless. It's like she's listening to a law student make some excuses about why they can't turn in their paper.
She was so done with that shit.
Back when I was doing my Master of Divinity one of my professors made this comment about late papers: something ornate and Byzantine. He turned to the person teaching the person with him "Does beheading sound appropriate?" From the look on the judge's face, I am pretty certain Her Honour would have taken that as an option.
Unfortunately, "the dog ate my phone" is not a valid defense.
But apparently these lawyers think that "The dog ate my phone after I accidentally left it outside next to the dog kennel for ten days without doing anything about it" is a valid defense.
And this is after Alex called her a lesbian goblin pedophile on his show.
You left out one of the best parts. The plaintiff's attorney asking Jones "You have an iPhone, right? What does it mean when the messages are blue?" Right before he makes the Big Reveal. The look of horror on Jones' face as he realized what was going on? Exquisite.
Why does them being blue(iMessege instead of SMS) matter exactly?
@@bobafettjr85 I'm no techie, but I think blue means the texts went thru iMessage so are automatically uploaded (and saved/accessible?) in the cloud
@@bobafettjr85 He claimed he had multiple phones and those texts weren't on the phones he searched. They were iMessages. They were automatically downloaded to every phone.
@@bobafettjr85 It means that he sent them from that phone
And the brief look of shock on the judge's face. Priceless!
Alex Jones may actually be able to appeal on the basis of inadequate council, his lawyers were so bad.
I don't think he'd be nearly smart enough to figure that out lol
Alas, recent SC rulings nixed that option even if it had been an option. That said, fairly sure that inadequate council appeals primarily work for appeals on Criminal cases (where this was a Civil case) in which council was assigned, not personally hired such as Reynauld was by Jones. As for the Supreme Court bit, they recently ruled that Federal Courts are not obligated to supersede and overturn the verdict of a State court for a state level crime during appeal (even though that is in fact one of the original duties of the Supreme Court)
He will not be able to appeal because this was a post trial hearing. Jones already lost the original case by refusing to attend and attempting to ignore it. If at any point you hear him talking about being denied his rights, remember that he had 4 years before this hearing to present his case and defend himself, he simply chose not to.
Sometimes I come back and rewatch this video just to remind myself that there is justice in the world.
same❤️
At the beginning, you can tell the Plaintiffs lawyer is just so happy knowing that the trial is being live-streamed, and that he’s about to deliver one of the most famous trial moments in American history lol.
American history? Really? Alex jones? Lol you’re crazy my friend.
That’s way too much credit
Your assessment may end up being true because what becomes famous America is often just people being downright stupid, but it really goes to show how gullible people are. ANY lawyer worth his degree would have slaughtered the plaintiff counsel's words and actions.
This is basically a 3rd rate ambulance chasing attorney, who was lucky enough to against some major idiot (OR CORRUPT) defense, and not blow it too badly. However the plaintiff counsel may have hung himself and the jury, guaranteeing Jones an appeal, as even the plaintiff admitted gleefully in excitement, "You'd attorney made a HUGE MISTAKE", meaning he knows good and well, Jones' attorney was selling Jones down the river.
The fight for civil rights had say more famous court moments.
Honestly I would probably be a terrible lawyer, but I'll still say the lawyer did not in my opinion do a good job making it such a big moment. Felt not that big af a deal to me.
That lawyer's name should make history. How the hell you manage to make sure your client lose so bad that they now face criminal charges in a civil trial.
F. Andino Reynal, Esq. is the defense attorney.
No, Jones is the one committing perjury that's not the lawyers fault it just might be the lawyers fault he got caught
another funny moment was when AJ's attorney literally flipped off the plantif's attorney...
Yep. It's so delightful, there really should be a reward for that sort of thing. Legal procedure version of "Darwin Award".
@@ladygeneveve3805 Lawyers have ethic rules they must follow and the his Lawyer knew he was lying. The lawyer sent the text and still let Jones lie on the stand
You can really pinpoint the moment Jones realizes he is absolutely screwed.
"Yes, Mr Jones. Indeed." God I felt that from the bottom of my gut lmao
"So you did get my text messages? You said you didn't. Nice trick."
"Oh yes Mr. Jones. Indeed."
The pure look of horror in Alex Jones' eyes
Alex: "Why did boss music just start playing?"
The attorney chuckling and saying "indeed" is so hilarious
I love Mark Bankston’s “yes, Mr Jones” and “ok, Mr Jones” said with that chuckle throughout the trial and in the earlier proceedings. Check out the Knowledge Fight podcast’s coverage, including multiple interviews with the plaintiff’s attorneys in the year or so leading up to this.
I wonder if the attorney had visions of Sherlock Holmes while saying it. I did lol
Was literally the best part. "Hmmmhmmmhmm...yes, Mr. Jones" lmao
It was so ominous lmao
That's one of those moments in Anime where you fix your glasses with your middle finger. "Indeed. Ha ha ha! You fool!"
One would think Jones’s lawyer would at least warn him that the opposing counsel had all of his texts.
I still think it wasn't an accident that they sent all those things. I imagine them hitting send and going "oops, my finger slipped"
I was watching it live and couldn't believe what I was hearing. When opposing council reminds you that you can invoke the 5th amendment, you've done something horribly horribly wrong
If you don't take them on their advice to invoke the 5th, you're horribly, horribly dimwitted.
I can't help but feel the plaintiff attorney was testing Jones, seeing just how out of touch with reality he was, and probably did so many, many times previously and afterward, just to see the limits to this guy's stupidity. Even if you have a 200 IQ, when the OPPOSING council makes sure you know how to legally protect yourself but your ego prevents you from reading between the lines that you're in a hole and you should STOP digging downward, then you are, effectively, judgementally disabled. One of his kids, or his ex-wife, should request conservatorship over him.
It couldn't have happened to a nicer guy.
The legal assistant I bet was fired! 😂
@@panchogonzales6409 my guy imagine their face when they found out their mistake
"Your Honor, that is a tremendous amount of information go through." "Yes, but the problem is, these documents should have been gone through a year ago or longer--and then, there would have been _plenty_ of time to go through."
This was after he had asked for a 10 day trial delay before the punitive damages portion of the trial to go though the data... She gave him the rest of THAT day.
He also asked plaintiff's counsel to wait until they actually received the subpoena from the J6 committee to send it to them. She responded "They're GOING to subpoena it... They know it exists now..."
That whole hearing was gold. Bankston just destroyed them.
The judge kicked his ball in with that lol. And she's pretty cute
That was so much shade, it sucked the vitamin D out of the lawyer.
@@benwillems8584 I don't think it would be a misstatement to say that Jones' lawyer was sitting there in court realizing that his entire career was ending right there before him, and there was virtually nothing that he could do to stop it.
"Your Honor, this is a tremendous amount of incriminating evidence against my client. Please help me." LOL
Alright, so…never mind the $1B, how is Jones not on criminal trial for perjury now? Like it’s been proven beyond a doubt that he did lie under oath, no?
That last bit, knowing that not only did he shoot himself in the foot for this trial, but ALSO that the messages got handed off to law enforcement, including the January 6th committee ... **chef's kiss** truly a thing of beauty!
"You know what perjury is, right?" I couldn't help but laugh at this, the prosecutor was having an absolute field day.
People who go to law school DREAM about getting a chance to do this in court, for a high-profile case.
The man was quite literally living the dream.
I'm picturing him giggling to himself on his commute into court that day.
Law grad here. This was insane, literally geeked out at this cross
WHEN HE REMINDED HIM OF HIS FIFTH AMENDMENT RIGHTS
AMAZING
You mean the plaintiff's lawyers?
The Defense attorney whines, "It's an incredibly large amount of documents, your honor." Yeah dude...that's why your client pays you the big bucks. You should have had a large enough legal team to go through the documents. Otherwise, don't take the damned case!
🔼 so much this!
What's wild to me is he (the defense attorney) was presented the evidence when the prosecutor asked to submit it (around 3:30 timestamp), HAD NO OBJECTIONS, and then didn't object when it was announced where the document actually came from. Did he even look at the evidence? Of texts saying "Sandy Hook" and not think "huh, this could be bad for us" ???
Can't count how many times I've watched this video. Well done Mr Eagle, well done!
20:38 This response is so good 😂 It's like a teacher rejecting your request to redo your shitty homework because you handed it in late in the first place.
"Your honor, we move for a mistrial on the grounds that our client looks way too guilty."
If I was the judge I'd be more interested in pressing charges against alex jones for perjury before I decide to do anything with the case itself.
This court isn´t for guilt.
Itś for damages.
His prior guilty verdict was "Defaulted" because Alex refused to accept a supena....the 5th? Mind you they fufilled the prior 4. They already had everything. Its legal harassment. To "Slay the Dragon!".
But Alex can just go into a store and buy a camera for 200 dollars....And start uploading on Rumble.
Believe me, when and if this reaches the supreme court, the judge will be reprimanded and Alex will receive a mistrial.
They are going to Bill Cosby away ANY guilt Alex actually has.
Bloody morons.
And this TV show theyre shooting DURING this? will only go on to support Alex´s Appeal
It should be a mistrial on the grounds the judge is MASSIVELY biassed against the defendant and is actively doing everything she can to silence him despite his rights.
@@elyrienvalkyr lmao
@@elyrienvalkyr Silence him? His own testimony on the stand was contradictory to the evidence given by his attorney. He's done nothing but talk and it's gotten him in nothing but trouble. When directly offered the opportunity to plead the fifth in the context of a perjury accusation, he waived it and kept on talking.
It's very peculiar how, as the lawyer who just screwed Jones springs the trap, that Jones' cough - which has been an intended annoyance through his entire testimony - just disappeared. Like magic. Jones should bottle his testimony, being caught in a lie, amd sell it as a cough suppressant.
Excellent point. I hadn't really caught that particular detail, as I was engrossed in the explanation, but in retrospect, I find your assertion absolutely compelling.
Jones has been digging this grave for TEN YEARS, he's got a LOOOOOOOT of height to fall down from before he hits the bottom. He better hope not to reach down into magma.
I was thinking the same thing...and pretty certain that water glass had been completely empty for some time.
Its fight or flight response to adrenaline we use Beta agonist as bronchodilators to relieve asthma and COPD exacerbation
Adrenaline act on beta and alpha u can see his congested nose get better due to adrenaline vasoconstricting his nose blood vessels and his cough get better due to the bronchodilatation
Wow we found a cure for coughing.
I love the lawyer's sinister chuckle around 6:45. 😂😂
As others here have said ... DID Jones's lawyer actually screw up? Because not only did he not claw back the "accidental" disclosure, he just sat there calmly in court, saying nothing, when the prosecutor told of this.
I mean, this probably ruined his career too...
I think he knew or assumed (rightly based on the judges reaction to his attempt at calling a mistrial) any objections would be met with: "well we have rules and procedures for you to follow in situations like this. You didn't do that so sit down."
I also think if he did object it would just look worse for him and his client. Consider the documents in question unambiguously should have been turned over a year prior as the judge said. There was no question the prosecution _should have had those documents_ objecting to their inclusion in open court could be seen as the defense intentionally trying to hide and suppress evidence the prosecution rightly should have. Regardless of what you might think this is in my opinion a worse look for the defense than simple incompetence. Doing what he did means he can at least plausibly say: "look we are idiots, but we aren't malicious idiots" so at the time given what he knew not objecting was the best option. Not to say it was a _good_ option but it was marginally better than objecting and removing all doubts they tried to cover up evidence.
LegalEagle: "Crazy gotchas only happen in movies"
Law & Order Producers: "This is too unrealistic to put into a movie"
Weird that this is "too unrealistic" for the people who made MULTIPLE episodes that all say "video games are the spawn of Satan", a claim based on half-truths and outright lies.
@@troyjardine5850- As I recall, those claims were made by defense attorneys. The one that attempted to use Gamergate was just stupid.
Yep, that's where the term 'stranger than fiction' comes from. There are things that happen in real life that would be considered 'bad writing' because they come across as implausible. They do tend to work when the story is indicated as being 'based on true events' though.
@@troyjardine5850 You realize those episodes were drawn from real life politicians in the 90s trying to outlaw video games, right? RIGHT??? It's called art imitating life.
The same thing happened to the show Mr. Robot. "It's not possible for someone to be this stupid." Next day. "I guess it is possible." Eventually it was anything goes. Eventually it worried me that Trump was getting his ideas from the show.
I'm like 70% leaning towards Alex Jone's lawyer just HATING his client and wanting to screw him over at this point. Because how the heck do you make such a monumental error on such a high-profile case? He's either the worst lawyer in the history of lawyers (Which I doubt, since Alex Jones is very wealthy and can afford the highest-paid lawyers) or this was on purpose.
Or he was staring at a potential charge of subornation of perjury and decided to rat his client out to stay out of jail.
If it's true that it was actually the legal assistant that sent everything, I could absolutely see that being completely intentional. Sure you get fired, but your "mistake" gets the awful client dunked on lol
Simple, bribery and blackmail. Why do you think a lawyer that a million dollar earning man would make a mistake so big in the first place? Because someone either bribed him, or threatened to kill him via "accident" like what happened in the case with Epstein's "suicide" and witnesses against his accomplice Ghislane to limit the trial to the punishment of one accomplice rather then open up an investigation involving Epstien's black book. A mistake like this can ACTUALLY get a lawyer disbarred because it's not arguing for his client.
However, the lawyer has currently not been disbarred for that. And why do you think that is? Because, of course, they need him for other cases. See, blackmail or bribery in history does not end with one incident, there's compromises and secrets kept, so they'll likely use this particular lawyer in other cases or use him as a mole to aid defence of their particular brand of criminal after a swift promotion, because the same people have some amount of control over the US court. Now that he's burned, he's in their system. You don't leave when you get that on you.
Jones made powerful enemies by exposing the island meetup of world leaders back in the day and now he's getting socially destroyed on flimsy claims. And people like you eat it up because you're emotionally driven and do not do research.
@@bloodyidit4506 Likely more importantly, aiding and abetting his own client in committing perjury would itself be a crime of its own.
Subornation of perjury is not something a lawyer should take lightly.
I'm not as sure as you are that they'll actually get disbarred considering that the alternative could have been prison time.
@@shentino Unfortunately, lawyers get off scot free for that. Both sides do too. The law doesn't really apply to lawyers during a case either mostly because a lawyer cannot be feasibly proven to have been an aid or abetter to a lying defendant or witness. It's called plausible deniability.
There's a reason they weren't disbarred. That's normally something that a lawyer would get disbarred for, intentional or not. And it reeks of foul play from the other side. People still haven't learned "innocent before guilty" son. You're all convinced from the start, which is why we have laws. You all want blood, which is why we have laws. Yet you're still fine with breaking them.
To continue with the key analogy, from what I understand the proper procedure would be to go through and say, "You cannot go through that door, that door, that door..." representing the files not meant to be sent. Or obstructing the specific doors in some way. Meanwhile what he actually did was say "Please don't" and left the prosecutor to his own devices.
But everyone knows that whenever someone tells you not to do something, especially if it's not legally binding, it just makes us want to do it that much more
Look at the facial expression at 7:54 and read the judge's face. It's only a split second because she needs to seem impartial and fair. Her face says - "OMG...you were just destroyed and it was captured on video for eternity."
I was so excited because this trial actually had a bombshell, and I thought that never happened in real court. Lol
right?? it feels like a TV show "BOOM" moment that makes the viewers burst out in gasps and luaghter.
You mean like what Epstein did? With the Clintons?
Well, that's because if everything goes normally, stuff like this never happens. Of course, this didn't go normally. :)
If you have real lawyers, it doesn't happen.
@@RPGgrenade You could actually feel the lawyer going, "Holy shit this _really is_ my Perry Mason moment, but play it cool son, play it cool... act like you been here before..."
Devin usually: I am a good lawyer boy, who always presents my biases in the most professional way possible while working. I am a paragon of composure.
Devin watching Alex get pinned down like a bug: _giggling uncontrollably, having the time of his life_
*I love it.*
This needs more upvotes
There comes a point, when a bias is so great, and so *richly* deserved, that you need not say it.
I just can't wait to see Devin's reaction to the FBI at Mar-A-Lago (with the DEA soon to be involved, maybe)
@@eastportland lmao I love how he beams when he covers trump and other anti-fash news developments. So heartwarming.
'You got it upside down'
Gives me a full James May belly laugh every time XD
Thank you for your explanations. Love your insights into the legal processes.
“Hmhmhm, yes mr Jones, indeed” is such a funny line I can’t believe it’s in a real trial, and also so incredibly appropriate for what comes next
You'd think it was an embellishment from a dramatization. That's one for the books.
Lol, that moment sounds so Bond-villain-copycat-esque. I had mental images of the lawyer twirling his moustache.
This will now replace "You can't handle the truth!" As most iconic courtroom line.
All while pulling at the corner of his waxed mustache.
I never get tired of watching this trap sprung.
I'm a lawyer in Germany.working in the field of internal investigations. I absolutely love your channel!!! Thanks to you a have understood so much about the US system!
I can’t fathom how nervous the lawyer was waiting for the 10 days to expire from the defense.
Probably barely slept
I can fathom the moment he got the all clear that it did expire lol 😆
@@brad777luck The clouds parted, angels sang, and he danced a dance of "holy shit that actually happened!" is my guess
@@xger21 lit a cigar and drank a 500 y/o bottle of scotch
@@brad777luck The moment from the original Jurassic Park, John Hammond steals the champagne and pops the cork:
"We were saving that!"
"You were. For today."
2:50 I had to re-watch it to confirm that the lawyer did in fact hand that document to Alex Jones the right way up. Alex then looked at it, and flipped it upside down LOL
No it was upside down. I've seen the full page. It's a mess. And goes from right to left.
@@badda_boom8017 mmmmmhmmmmmm
It looks to me like the lawyer initially laid it sort of diagonal, and then sort of started twisting it to be facing jones and then jones without really looking kept spinning it in the same direction not realizing that the lawyer had already straightened it out.
LOL so funny! Thank u for pointing that out :)
Btw sorry for being dum but what is the thing he is actually in court for? I only heard them talking about sending some text messages
This isn’t throwing someone under the bus. This is shoving their face into the train tracks and not stopping until the blood stops
His attorney grew a conscience and purposefully threw the trial lmfao
That awkward moment when the argument of the respondent turns into: "Yes I lied under oath, but you shouldn't be allowed to know that!"
"And I would have gotten away with it if it weren't for you meddling kids!"
@@vez3834 🤣 What's even more bizarre is this corrupt clown still has droves of conspiracy theorists following him as some kind of all wise hero... So many right wing loonies just cling for dear life to their batshitinsane, lying, corrupt "heroes" no matter what, purely because their petty mind can't bear even the thought of admitting they were wrong - total cowardly egos. Ironically, the strongest minds admit when they've been wrong, change their ideas and move on - which takes real integrity and courage.
Let me guess, when a cop illegally acquires evidence against you then it's different
yea called fruit of a rotten tree
@@vinslungur Yes, actually it is. This was not a cop illegally acquiring evidence. This was a plaintiff's attorney in a civil matter acquiring evidence through the incompetence of the defense attorney. Period. Totally different scenario.
This went far beyond Law & Order style writing and plunged head-first into Pheonix Wright territory!! The only thing the plaintiff was missing was pounding his hands on the podium and dramatically pointing at the defendant!! "OBJECTION!!!"
can we just be honest here? anyone pursuing a career in this stuff is a complete waste. do something useful and dont go into "law"
@@Blox117 Roe V Wade was just overturned you absolute MUPPET.
@@beezusHrist | What did Roe v Wade have to do with Blox's post?
@@RaceBandit are we in idiocracy now or what??? YOU figure that one out on your own, sport.
@@RaceBandit haha your guess is as good as mine!
Sure, Alex Jones' lawyer sent the text messages by "mistake". WHOOPS lol
"You've got it upside down: 😂😂😂😂😂
it's amazing seeing a lawyer basically stating, in a formal manner; "your honour, this guy sucks"
and then the judge turning to the other guy and going "man, you REALLY suck. sorry, what was that, you were just giving me another example of how much you suck?"
It's amazing watching journalists be persecuted, and watching a bunch of lawyer worshipping yuppies clap for the destruction of their own country.
Which is why I cannot wait for the dollar to implode, because many of us will be happy to die picking through rubble to find the likes of you, who's arrogance and gluttony have squandered so many sacrifices, who's inability to think critically has created a veil behind from which the enemy does it's dirty work.
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣!!!
I imagine there was some empathy involved with the judge. Like, this dude says you suck. Wait a minute, now you’re going to double down on you sucking? I would’ve failed law school for that
Everybody here is so fed up with the constant stream of nonsense from Jones, it's plain as day.
That judge is totally an android
I love the absolute glee you can hear in plaintiff counsel as he's setting this whole thing up. He knows this is probably going to be the highlight of his career and he's gonna be telling the story how he absolutely murdered Jones on the stand for years to come.
I just hope he can also claim to get Jones off the air...🙏🏼🤞🏼
Its the little 'hehehe' he has just before anilating him. When you get to mockingly laugh at the person your examining...you know its good
Yeah, my dude was GIDDY. I loved that for him so much. May he be the hero of every cookout for years to come! "Let me tell you all about the time when I straight up murdered Alex Jones on the stand...."
I know he was skipping out of that courtroom, clicking his heels, squealing with glee.
If you wanna hear more from that lawyer, he was on the knowledge fight podcast. It's hilarious 😂
This is the kind of video i like. Good stuff Devin 👍🏼
So basically it's legal to lie under oath and bury evidence as long as you don't get caught.
I mean, anything is "legal" if you don't get caught.
Not "legal" you just have to prove they did it.
@@nothingworks1881 Dammit, now I have "Tweeter and the Monkey Man" playing in my head.