IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLORADO Criminal Action No. 96-CR-68 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff, vs. TERRY LYNN NICHOLS, Defendant. REPORTER'S TRANSCRIPT (Trial to Jury: Volume 133) Proceedings before the HONORABLE RICHARD P. MATSCH, Judge, United States District Court for the District of Colorado, commencing at 5:00 p.m., on the 17th day of December, 1997, in Courtroom C-204, United States Courthouse, Denver, Colorado. Proceeding Recorded by Mechanical Stenography, Transcription Produced via Computer by Paul Zuckerman, 1929 Stout Street, P.O. Box 3563, Denver, Colorado, 80294 APPEARANCES PATRICK RYAN, United States Attorney for the Western District of Oklahoma, 210 West Park Avenue, Suite 400, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, 73102, appearing for the plaintiff. LARRY MACKEY, BETH WILKINSON, GEOFFREY MEARNS, JAMIE ORENSTEIN, and AITAN GOELMAN, Special Attorneys to the U.S. Attorney General, 1961 Stout Street, Suite 1200, Denver, Colorado, 80294, appearing for the plaintiff. MICHAEL TIGAR, RONALD WOODS, and JANE TIGAR, Attorneys at Law, 1120 Lincoln Street, Suite 1308, Denver, Colorado, 80203, appearing for Defendant Nichols. * * * * * PROCEEDINGS (In open court a 5:00 p.m.) THE COURT: Be seated, please. It being 5:00, we'll return the jury and see if they want to recess for the day; give them cautionary instructions. (Jury in at 5:00 p.m.) Members of the jury, good afternoon. JURORS: Good afternoon. THE COURT: As I told you in the instructions, of course, the timing of your deliberations is entirely a matter for the jury to determine. I also suggested that you may want to work the routine days starting a little earlier than we did in the courtroom, at 8:30 and then recess at 5. And I'm assuming that that's agreeable to you and therefore you would now like to recess for the day. And so we will now interrupt your deliberations. And the reason for bringing you back into the courtroom, of course, as I'm sure you recognize, is the opportunity again to remind you of the things that I probably don't have to repeat but which are extremely important; and that is again to remind you that each one of you is one of 12; that you serve on the jury, a jury of 12, and that therefore your work on the case, as it were, is limited to the time when you are together serving as the jury with your foreperson in charge of the deliberations. And accordingly, during the time now -- and would you like to resume again at 8:30 in the morning? Is that the . . . So between now and then, of course, you will separate and do as you choose individually. And again, I remind you that, of course, it would be inappropriate and a violation of your oath if two or more of you were to talk during this time about the case, remembering that it's the 12 of you who use your recollection of the evidence in the case and who discuss the case as a group. And, of course, I must remind you again now, as I did all throughout the trial, of the necessity under your oath of staying away from anything that might be out there in radio, television, newspapers, magazines; not let anybody -- so that you'd stay away from anything that could possibly influence or affect your decisions in the case and of course that you not discuss it with your families or friends or anyone. The thing to do is to rest, relax, let this matter sit even in your own minds until you're back together working on the case tomorrow. So with those cautions and those instructions, members of the jury, we'll now recess your deliberations and ask you to be back in the courthouse and resume your deliberations in the morning. Now, we'll do as we did again -- I mean as we did yesterday: ask you to have everything that pertains to your deliberations in that one room, that deliberation room, which we'll seal off. And no one will be in there other than the 12 of you. And you can be certain that no one will therefore have access to anything that you may have in there. So with that, members of the jury, you're now recessed until 8:30 tomorrow morning. And we hope you each have a pleasant evening. You're in recess. (Jury out at 5:05 p.m.) MR. TIGAR: May we approach, your Honor? THE COURT: Yes. (At the bench:) (Bench Conference 133B1 is not herein transcribed by court order. It is transcribed as a separate sealed transcript.) (In open court:) THE COURT: All right. Court is in recess subject to call. (Recess at 5:07 p.m.) * * * * *