it was hard to imagine that. jennifer was a juror sitting on the case. she walked us through the arguments as they deliberated. i m not sure anybody felt bad for jim tan. he made a lot of enemies, but everybody did recognize that that way he died was still a crime. boythe the prosecution and the defense had agreed that charlie s fingerprints were on the ammo. did he actually pull the trigger, or did he load the gun and give it to his mom and say here you go. that was the biggest point of contention. she was ready to vote guilty. p the vote was far from unanimous. eight people guilty. four people not guilty. a stalemate. an impasse seemed to be at hand. still, they talked. three of the jurors were crying really hard because they didn t want to think that he was guilty, but they couldn t ignore it at that point. local media asked prosecutor bill guardman for updates. we don t have experience with