Both sides offered a few hints so far. Although he's been mostly silent in the courtroom, Hasan used his brief opening statement to tell jurors he had "switched sides" in what he called America's war with Islam and he later leaked documents to the media showing he believed he could be a martyr.
Henricks has alleged that besides his so-called "jihad duty," Hasan was looking for ways to get out of deploying to Afghanistan, and he said witnesses could include former classmates who heard him talking about suicide bombers.
Osborn promised to rule tomorrow on what prosecutors could present.
While prosecutors clearly have an advantage in how much evidence is on their side, the 13-officer jury must be unanimous in convicting Hasan of premeditated murder and for approving a death sentence.
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