Didi Trial Mark Jelagos may not like ordering gags…but here’s why the federal government needs it!!!
May 7, 2025 4:40pm PDT
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Mark Jelagos may not like Diddy’s lawyers to be subject to a gag order — and so is him… But a prominent LA prosecutor says the prosecutor needs it to avoid the possibility of a lawsuit.
Kirsten Brown-Neil, LA County’s Deputy District Attorney, spoke to Arun Subramanian warning of Geragos to see what he says about the “Two Angry Men” podcast on “TMZ Live.”
When asked about Jelagos, who cited the Supreme Court decision that the defendant and his attorneys said they had the right to speak publicly about the case, Kirsten said he believes Jelagos has a very narrow view of the award.
Kirsten says that our own Harvey Levin needs to see what he says on the podcast… Or he and Jelagos might be used in this case as a basis for charm!
As to whether they are talking too much to the public and whether it should be on the defense to potentially addictive their case, Kirsten says it is actually unfair to prosecutors… “Because someone like Jelagos could potentially interfere with their clients in an accident.
The way Brown Neal explains it can be used by Geragos, who is some kind of informal member of Didi’s legal team, to which he has ever held his mother – by speaking out and biasing the ju-deceased in some way, he himself can be used to ineffectively in the lawyer’s appeal.
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Therefore, if the prosecutor can secure a conviction, MG doesn’t want to talk… because Diddy’s part can use something like that to try to appeal the decision.
Brown Neal says prosecutors don’t just secure their beliefs – they have to protect them once they get it too.
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Kirsten also speaks about how prosecutors represent the people… so the public has the right to hear them discuss the case when they can.
Of course, the prosecutor wrote to the judge about Jelagos, known as “Six Pack of White Women” in a recent episode of “Two Angry Men,” and told Jelagos, “I’m watching, I’m listening.”
The third day of judges’ selection ended on Wednesday…and a 45-person ju umpire pool was selected. There will be no court tomorrow, but that number will be 12 ju judges and six alternatives on Friday.
The trial is ongoing – in the opening discussion to begin next week… don’t expect to hear a defense discussing it!