you know what the community is feeling. you have your finger on the pulse of this. ultimately is this case going to come down to the whodunnit arguments or more of the mitigation of, please don't kill our client? >> ashleigh, it's an excellent question. and the defense counsel was brilliant this morning by turning in front of that jury in opening statements and saying, he's guilty, he did it. what that does is two things, it basically makes the jury immediately in a weird way trust defense counsel because they're not expecting it and it's exactly what's on everybody's minds. and secondly it takes the focus off of whodunnit and puts the focus on, huh, why and what does this mean in terms of punishment? do we kill him or do we sentence him to life in prison without the possibility of parole where he will die, ashleigh? >> so then ultimately, paul callan, walk me through how you technically conduct a trial like this? do you spend a whole bunch of