Another prospective juror said this morning that he was an aspiring fashion illustrator. When the judge asked about his hobbies, he answered simply "YouTube."
One other prospective juror is a student majoring in mechanical engineering and says he wants to develop rollercoasters. Pretty cool.
The judge dismissed one juror wearing bright teal shorts who — when asked if serving on a jury for four weeks would present a financial challenge — answered "none other than my wife would have to wait longer to remodel our new kitchen."
One potential juror said they were a member of The Association of Old Crows, per @InsiderHaven. Which is a thing I googled:
EXCLUSIVE: Leaked intelligence memos from the FBI and DC police detail a plan from the Boogaloo Bois to attack the White House, Lincoln Monument, and other DC landmarks ahead of Biden's inauguration.
The Boogaloo Bois anticipate — and in many cases want to incite — a second Civil War in the US.
Their plan involved attacks on major DC civic institutions, and even involved a map and target list. insider.com/leaked-police-…
The plans were scrapped a few days before they were supposed to be set into motion. It's not clear if they were more elaborate than what the FBI and MPD included in the memos. insider.com/leaked-police-…
Weisselberg told me the Manhattan DA's office sent a forensic accountant with experience analyzing mob finances to look at the Trump Organization documents in her possession. businessinsider.com/manhattan-da-t…
An Oath Keepers member bragged about organizing an 'alliance' with the Proud Boys and Three Percenters ahead of the Capitol riot in Facebook messages obtained by prosecutors. insider.com/oath-keepers-a…
"This week I organized an alliance between Oath Keepers, Florida 3%ers, and Proud Boys. We have decided to work together and shut this shit down," Meggs wrote in Facebook messages, according to the filing. insider.com/oath-keepers-a…
This is the same dude whose wife says her court hearings should be delayed because her wedding ring is stuck. insider.com/oath-keeper-ca…
"Lindell — a talented salesman and former professional card counter — sells the lie to this day because the lie sells pillows," Dominion lawyer Tom Clare wrote.
"I lost 20 retailers, and it's cost me $65 million this year," Lindell told me.
The lawsuit paints a portrait of Lindell using the election conspiracy theory to boost his pillow business: advertising on far-right media outlets, conspiratorial discount codes, and pages of social media posts from conspiracy-mongering customers.
Dominion's lawsuit against MyPillow guy CEO includes a lengthy section about how his OAN "docu-movie" features that weird guy who keeps insisting he invented email businessinsider.com/dominion-sues-…
aaaaaaaahhhhhhhhh
There's pages and pages of screenshots of people who say they bought pillows from Lindell because of his false election claims