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Trial Lawyer Claims Judge Blocked Key Video Evidence to Favor Connected Plaintiff

Jack Neel · America’s Stoic Lawyer: "Toxic People CRAVE Your Reaction" How to Make Manipulators Powerless · June 4, 2026
Trial Lawyer Claims Judge Blocked Key Video Evidence to Favor Connected Plaintiff
Jack Neel
Jack Neel
America’s Stoic Lawyer: "Toxic People CRAVE Your Reaction" How to Make Manipulators Powerless
"The plaintiff attorney who was friends with the judge, who was much older than me, was arguing why this videotape couldn't be authenticated in some way, which I had already got this stuff from the state. And so the judge, sometimes it doesn't matter what the law shows, he wasn't gonna let the video in."
Jefferson Fisher, a fifth-generation trial lawyer, revealed a case where a judge allegedly refused to admit authenticated video evidence that would have helped his client, an elderly janitor being sued by a Louisiana judge's daughter. Despite having obtained the footage from the state, Fisher claims the judge sustained objections from the plaintiff's attorney who was friends with the judge, suggesting judicial bias based on personal relationships rather than legal merit.

About this episode

In this episode of the Jack Neal Podcast, host Jack Neal interviews Jefferson Fisher, a fifth-generation trial lawyer who has built a large social media following teaching communication and conflict resolution skills drawn from courtroom experience. Fisher shares stories from high-stakes trials, including revealing a case where he claims a judge blocked authenticated video evidence because the plaintiff's attorney was friends with the judge and the plaintiff was a Louisiana judge's daughter. The conversation centers on practical communication tactics, with Fisher explaining how to stay calm under pressure, detect lies, handle manipulation, and repair estrangement. Fisher argues that most communication failures stem from people loading their responses before others finish speaking, and emphasizes the importance of silence, asking clarifying questions, and using phrases like "did you mean to offend me?" to disarm hostile interactions. He critiques modern self-improvement culture as potentially narcissistic when taken to excess, advocating instead for service to others and intentional friendships. Fisher also discusses navigating relationships with manipulative personalities, warning that triangulation and rapid intimacy are red flags. The episode closes with Fisher sharing lessons from his father, who taught him the Socratic method and the principle of not making every conflict your Alamo, reinforcing themes of intentionality, humility, and strategic restraint in both legal practice and daily life.

Key takeaways

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