Prospective jurors questioned about their jobs, hobbies
A portrait of New York is emerging as prospective jurors explain their job, their hobbies, and, most importantly, whether they harbor an opinion of the former president that might render them unable to evaluate the facts of the case impartially.
After about 50 jurors were excused after claiming they could not be fair or impartial, and nine more prospective jurors were excused after saying they could not serve for other reasons, about 34 of the initial group of 96 jurors remain under consideration.
One prospective juror was overheard in the hallway after leaving the courtroom, saying "I just couldn't do it."
The remaining 34 are now answering a 42-question form out loud, one by one.
A venture capitalist from Midtown East, a creative ad director from Midtown, and a city employee from the Upper West Side have shared details of their lives and remain in the running to be seated on the jury -- for now.
They listed New York Times, CNN, TikTok and al Jazeera as their news outlets of choice. Each has a degree of higher education: an MBA, a BFA, and an unspecified Masters' degree.
At times, Trump appears to be reading along with them as they answer the questions -- including if they follow him on social media or have read any of his books.