With no explanation, chose the best option from "A", "B", "C" or "D". judge initially excused him, but then called him back to the witness stand and described videotape evidence shown to the jury that depicted Manselli running for a bus, sitting on a bus for extended periods, and bending over without any indication of pain. The district judge asked whether “with that additional information,” Dr. Leone would “still be of the opinion that [Manselli] was totally disabled.” Leone replied “No.” The question was not leading nor was it phrased in adversarial language. Moreover, this question, the only instance of allegedly improper questioning identified by Manselli, takes up less than one page of the transcript. This is much less frequent and much less substantial than questioning that has been found to violate the fair trial right in the past. See id. at 382 (<HOLDING>); United States v. Guglielmini, 384 F.2d 602,

A: holding that the judges stated belief that the defendant was guilty did not disqualify the judge from presiding on remand
B: holding that defendant was denied right to a fair trial and reversing where on 16 of the 60 pages of the trial transcript where defendants testimony appears his credibility or the theory of his defense were challenged by inquiries from the presiding judge
C: holding that the jury is the judge of the weight and credibility given to witness testimony
D: holding that judge presiding at trial may not testify in that trial as witness
B.