Trump’s Shock and Awe Campaign Is Our Conservative Dream Come True
Here Are the Final Details Between Colombia and the US Over Deportation Flights
Hey, Federal Employees, Welcome to Reality
Raw Power
An American Black Man's Interpretation of the 14th Amendment
Hear, See, Speak No Evil!
America Humbled
Demoralized Democrats Are Dazed and Confused
DOGE Should Constrain PTAB to Save Money and American Innovation
Mazie Horono’s Laughable Fears About Pam Bondi
With MAGA in Charge, New ‘RINO Removal Project’ Targets Sellout Republicans
Trump’s Opportunity in the Greater Middle East
WH Hails Capturing Top Illegal Immigrant Criminals and It's Monumental
How RFK Jr. Plans to Tackle the Opioid Crisis
Trump Releases Weapons Biden Withheld From Israel
Tipsheet

Biden Taints the Chauvin Trial By Praying the Jury Gets It 'Right'

(AP Photo/Patrick Semansky)

Speaking to reporters from the Oval Office Tuesday afternoon, President Joe Biden said he is praying the jury in the George Floyd, Derek Chauvin trial hand down the "right" verdict. He also claimed the evidence in the case is "overwhelming," despite not being a member of the jury who saw all of the evidence presented throughout the trial.

Advertisement

"I’m praying the verdict is the right verdict. The evidence is overwhelming in my view," Biden said. 

Biden is justifying his pontificating on the case, before a verdict has been rendered, because the jury is sequestered and in deliberations. He also called the Floyd family. 

"I can only imagine the pressure and anxiety they’re feeling, and so I waited until the jury was sequestered and I called," he continued. 

Shortly after the remarks were made, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki was pressed on why Biden chose to weigh in ahead of a verdict, especially given the tense atmosphere in Minneapolis and the judge's requests that politicians refrain from commenting

Advertisement

"I don't think he would see it as weighing in on the verdict," Psaki claimed. 

Advertisement

During closing arguments Monday, Chauvin's attorneys argued comments made over the weekend by Democrat Congresswoman Maxine Waters to "get more confrontational" if the jury doesn't hand down a guilty verdict for murder, are grounds for a mistrial. The judge denied that request, but said the defense could use her statements during an appeal.

“I’ll give you that Congresswoman Waters may have given you something on appeal that may result in this whole trial being overturned," the judge said.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement