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Jurors didn't give their names but in a post-verdict news conference said the sometimes brutal testimony took an emotional toll, especially because they could not talk about the case during the five weeks of trial. So when deliberations began, simply being able to discuss the case provided an emotional release. The hardest part, one juror said, was Elizabeth Smart's testimony. "I'm a soft, old man," said the juror identified only as No. 7. "When you hear the things that happened to Elizabeth Smart, you have to be pretty callous to not have it hit you right in the heart." The five-week trial turned on the question of Mitchell's mental health. The thinly built, gray-haired Mitchell was routinely removed from the courtroom because of his singing and taken to another room to watch the proceedings on closed-circuit TV. His lawyers did not dispute that he kidnapped Smart but wanted him to be found not guilty by reason of insanity, which would have sent him to a prison mental hospital. Prosecutors countered that Mitchell was faking mental illness to avoid a conviction, labeling him a "predatory chameleon." Smart testified she believed Mitchell was driven by his desire for sex, drugs and alcohol, not by any sincere religious beliefs. Jurors did not buy the insanity defense, finding him guilty of kidnapping and unlawful transportation of a minor across state lines for the purposes of illegal sex. The sex charge was based on Mitchell taking her for five of the nine months to California. Mitchell had told defense attorneys he "expected to be convicted" as part of religious tests and seemed somehow unaffected by the decision, Steele said. "He takes it in his religious way," Steele said.
[Associated
Press;
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