Wowee. You should read this entire Politico article about the deliberations, but there's this:
Ellen
indicated that she and another juror who happened to be a lawyer helped
spearhead a lot of the deliberations. Some jurors, she said, did not
seem to have followed every twist and turn of the trial. Others, she
said, seemed to have preconceived notions against convicting anyone
regardless of the facts — which the jury had to overcome to arrive at
its verdict. And when she completed her service, after a five-week trial
and lengthy deliberations, Ellen came away with a conclusion: If she
were ever on trial, she would waive her right to a jury and instead let
the judge decide her fate.
“I
would never want my fate in the hands of people who are mostly
completely ill-equipped to understand what’s going on,” she said.
Ellen
described the extraordinary volume of evidence jurors had to sift
through as they considered the 34 counts against the six defendants —
part of prosecutors’ video evidence trove that is unparalleled in
American history. She said she grew exasperated at times with some
jurors’ insistence that they had to rely only on direct evidence to
reach a conviction, rather than circumstantial evidence that can point
to someone’s guilt. But despite these frustrations, she ultimately
compared the experience to “12 Angry Men” and a “made-for-TV movie” in
which jurors understood the gravity of their charge and the significance
of the case they had just witnessed.
Ellen
indicated that of the four defendants who took the stand “three did
harm to themselves by testifying.” One of them, she said, was Bennie
Parker, whose testimony she said helped convince the jury that there was
a plan to storm the Capitol even before the group arrived at the
building. That testimony, she said, damaged other defendants, including
Parker’s wife Sandra, who was convicted on several counts for which
Parker — who didn’t enter the building — was acquitted.
***
Ellen
saved her harshest remarks for some of the defense lawyers in the case,
who she said at times acted in ways that perplexed and even upset the
jury. For example, the lawyer for one defendant, Laura Steele, didn’t
put on a case for his client but noticeably laughed repeatedly
throughout the trial, Ellen said.
“I was horrified,” she said.