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tv   NBC Nightly News  NBC  April 11, 2012 5:30pm-6:00pm PDT

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on the broadcast tonight, murder charges against the man who shot and killed trayvon martin. tonight, he's in custody in florida. we'll have reaction to the prosecutor's decision. defiance. a report north korea may fire off the rocket as early as tonight, and we're there. the revelation. if you have ever wondered what was going on in that famous photo, tonight, hillary clinton reveals the truth of that night. and taking a stand. ashley judd, her first television interview fighting back against rumors and insults about the way she looks in a society she says is out of whack. "nightly news" begins now.
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good evening. tonight, george zimmerman, the armed neighborhood watch volunteer who shot an unarmed teenager named trayvon martin after a scuffle, has been charged with murder in the second degree. he has been free, released by police in sanford, florida. he was not arrested until just late today. after weeks of protests and national attention, the case of trayvon martin has now entered a decidedly new phase. our team is in place, and we begin our coverage of this still unfolding tonight with kerry sanders in florida. good evening. >> good evening. the special prosecutor has charged george zimmerman with second degree murder. george zimmerman, 28 years old, was taken into custody, according to the special prosecutor. he turned himself into the federal department of law enforcement. there was no issue in the fact
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that he was taken into custody. he is going to eventually be brought here within the next 24 hours to sanford, to the seminole county court where he will be read the charges officially and also have his first appearance where he can ask for a bond to be released from jail. this is what angela corey had to say just a few minutes ago. >> today, we filed an information charging george zimmerman with murder in the second degree. a capias has been issued for his arrest. with the filing of that information and the issuance of the capias, he will have a right to appear in front of a magistrate in seminole county within 24 hours of his arrest and thus formal prosecution will begin. >> the special prosecutor says that if zimmerman suggests he did nothing wrong because of florida's stand your ground law, she will fight that vigorously. now, zimmerman's new attorney said he's concerned about his client getting a fair trial. >> he's concerned about getting
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a fair trial and a fair presentation. there's obviously been a lot of information flowing. i think a lot of it has been both premature and maybe inappropriate. i don't think a case like this should be tried here, and it's not going to be. >> defense attorney marcos maris said when zimmerman is arraigned on the charges, he will plead not guilty. >> kerry sanders starting off our coverage from sanford, florida, tonight. >> with us in the studio, our chief legal correspondent, savannah guthrie. you're the lawyer here, not me, but as i understand it, other than premeditated murder in the first degree, this is the toughest possible charge. you said a few minutes ago, also tough to prove. >> tough to prosecutor. these facts are ambiguous. one person who was a witness to this, trayvon martin, no longer with us. it's a he said, george
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zimmerpen's account, against perhaps some of the witnesses, but as far as we know, some of the witnesses' accounts are conflicting. and where there is ambiguity, in fact, our legal system sets it up so the benefit of the doubt goes to the accused. add to that, you have florida's stand your ground self defense laws, and actually, this defendant will have an opportunity to go before a judge before there's even a trial and argue that he was acting in self defense. if he can prove it by a preponderance of the evidence, a lower standard, a judge could dismiss the case. >> how are you feeling tonight if you're say the former police chief of sanford, florida. this guy was walking around as late as perhaps lunch time this afternoon? >> it's an embarrassment for the police force because they said, essentially, we can't arrest. there's nothing we can do here. george zimmerman said it's self defense and that's the end of the story. now we have seen this special prosecutor out of the community coming in and saying, you know what, these cases are hard, but
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we fight them every single day and we're going to get justice for trayvon martin. it's a bit of a black eye for the department. also in terms of what was lost in the early hours, evidence that might have been lost may have the prosecutor at a disadvantage as she tries to bring the charges. >> savannah guthrie, our chief legal correspondent following this all along. savannah, thank you, as always. we want to go now to ron allen. also in sanford, florida, where he's covered this story for weeks himself. with some reaction to the prosecutor's decisions. ron, good evening. good evening to you, brian. i think the feeling here is one of relief that the special prosecutor has finally made a decision and made an arrest. this is a city of 50,000 that has been on edge and under siege by all of the protests, some people would say to you that have been going on for so long. no one is more relieved than the parents of trayvon martin. sabrina fulton and tracy martin. here is what they had to say after the special prosecutor's announcement. >> we simply wanted an arrest. we wanted nothing more, nothing
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less. we just wanted an arrest. and we got it. and i say thank you. thank you, lord. thank you, jesus. secondly, i just want to speak from my heart to your heart, because a heart has no color. it's not black, it's not white. it's red. and i want to say thank you from my heart to your heart. >> this is just the beginning. we have a long way to go. and we have faith. the first time we marched, i looked to the sky and i just told myself, when i walk, i will walk by faith. we will continue to walk by faith. we will continue to hold hands on this journey, white, black, hispanic, latino, we will continue to walk. we will march and march and
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march until the right thing is done. thank you. >> there's also been a lot of positive reaction from the advocates and civil rights activists marching and rallying with the martin family saying this is a good first step. there's still a long way to go as mr. martin just said. we just heard from the mayor of sanford, mayor jeff triplett, who was urging calm, urging the people to let the justice system take its course, urging patience. he also said this is just a beginning because the filing of charges raises a lot of questions for the police department here, the police department that accepted zimmerman's claim of self defense at the scene and chose not to arrest him. the police chief has stepped aside, they're trying to find a new one, a process that could take a couple more weeks, but the mayor is trying to bring stability back to the city. he said there would no longer be a threat of economic boycotts which is one thing that the activists and marchers had
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threatened to escalate here if there was not justice for trayvon martin's family. now we go forward, but the beginning of a long process. a trial that could be months if not longer, away. still a federal investigation of what went on, still investigations of the police department, how they handled the matter, so a long way yet for sanford, florida, as this case continues. brian. >> ron allen in sanford, florida, a community he's become familiar with over the last few weeks. ron, thanks. >> a program note, nbc news will continue to cover the latest developments in the story, and trayvon martin's parents will be in our nbc studios tomorrow morning on "today." the other big story we're watching tonight, north korea may fire off a rocket as early as tonight. despite global pressure not to, and global attention because of it. our chief foreign correspondent richard engle remains on the ground again tonight in pyongyang. >> earlier today, we were taken to see the main mission control
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room here in pyongyang. it was a quite primitive facility. 16 engineers in the entire room. the big screens were showing a live transmission of the rocket, but there were only about six telephone lines, and experts we were speaking to said there's a real risk this satellite will never actually make it into orbit and the rocket could actually come crashing down. and that would be an enormous embarrassment for north korea because one of the main motivations for the rocket launch is to establish the credentials of the new leader here, kim jong-un. just today, he was appointed the most senior position in the communist party. brian? >> richard engle, thanks. >> there was a big scare today in a part of the world where memories of the devastating '04 tsunami are still fresh. today's 8.6 earthquake struck off the coast of indonesia in mid-afternoon, touching off a panic in the streets of banda aceh. it was felt across the region,
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in india, thailand, singapore. two hours later, again, a powerful aftershock, further rattling nerves. tonight, tsunami warnings have been lifted, thankfully. it's relief, and it's enormous relief after what they have been through. still ahead, as "nightly news" continues this evening, that look on hillary clinton's face the night the u.s. went after bin laden. tonight, for the first time, she talks about some of the details, what was going on that we didn't know about then. and later, the story behind what they're able to charge for ebooks. tonight, the government has come down hard on apple.
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secretary of state hillary clinton was in annapolis last night. she talked in dramatic detail about what happened the night osama bin laden was hunted down and killed by the team of navy s.e.a.l.s. her reflections were prompted by a question by a mid-shipman who
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asked her what we all wondered at the time, what were you thinking as you watched it happen? andrea mitchell has more from secretary clinton. >> it is a white house photo that captures all of the drama of a command decision fraught with risk. in the situation room, concern is high. what if they fail? >> it was a pretty intense, tense, stressful time. and i'm not sure anybody breathed for 35 or 37 minutes. for me, the worst part was when one of the helicopters, the tail got stuck, and it was not flyable. >> she thinks about jimmy carter's failed iran hostage rescue in 1980. >> we got the word they thought they had killed bin laden, but think about what they had to do because it was imperative that we take the body. >> they needed bin laden's dna to prove he was dead and had to
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get out before pakistan's military knew they were there. but first, the downed chopper had to be blown up. >> the s.e.a.l.s had to take the women and children out of the house to get them away from the site of where the disabled helicopter was. all of this is happening, you know, the bodies going out, the women and children are coming in. the reserve helicopter is on its way, but it's not there yet. you know, there was a lot of breath holding. and then finally, you know, all of the helicopters were up and out and on their way to -- back to afghanistan. >> then, as they walked to the east room for the president's address to the nation -- >> we heard these incredible cheers and shouts and all of these students from around the area had just spontaneously come to the gates of the white house. >> two years earlier, clinton caused a ruckus telling pakistan's government she
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couldn't believe none of them knew where bin laden was hiding. it turns out she was probably right. andrea mitchell, nbc news, washington. up next, what a card carrying member of congress said today that harkened back to another time, and not our proudest.
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i'm kerry sanders in sanford, florida, where george zimmerman charged now with second degree murder has been booked into the sanford jail. the seminole county jail. you can see his picture here. he was booked in just a short time ago. he will spend the night in jail. tomorrow, he will have his first appearance. he'll have an opportunity to make a case for bond. it will be up to a magistrate to determine whether he can indeed get bond, but tonight, he spends the night in jail. his attorney said he will fight the charges and plead not
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guilty. i'm kerry sanders in sanford, now. back to you, brian. republican congressman allen west of florida retired 22 year army veteran of iraq and afghanistan, serving his first term in congress, today made an allegation that while false, harkened back to a dark time in american history when senator joe mccarthy became synonymous with a red scare, an effort to root out communists, real and imagined, from the u.s. government. the congressman was asked today about those he serves with in the house. >> what percentage of american legislature do you think are card carrying marxists or international socialists? >> a good question. i believe it's about 78 to 81 members of the democrat organization that are members of the congress.
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>> the congressional progressive caucus, as you might imagine, was surprised and offended. they issued a statement saying in part, quote, calling fellow members of congress communists is reminiscent of the days when joe mccarthy divided americans with name calling and modern day witch hunts, end of quote. it's kind of like mcdonald's growing their own potatoes for french fries. delta airline is trying to buy its own refinery to supply jet fuel. the conocophillips plan and trainer, p.a., could go for $100 million or more. but since delta airlines is one of the biggest buyers of jet fuel in the world, the company thinks it would be a worthy investment. the justice department is suing apple and two big book publishers accusing them of conspiring to raise the price of ebooks. the action comes at a time when millions of americans continue turning to ebooks. recent studies said 1 in 5
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americans has read an ebook in the past year. now the government says they have been paying too much for the convenience. our report from nbc's pete williams. >> jumping into the exploding market for electronic books, the justice department accused publishing company executives of illegally agreeing with each other to raise prices and limit competition. >> we allege these executives knew full well what they were doing. that is taking steps together to make sure the prices consumers paid for ebooks were higher. >> the government said the publisher panicked when amazon started selling ebooks for its kindle devices at a cut price, $9.99. court documents say the publishers feared readers would demand lower prices for all ebooks and even printed ones. so the government said the publishers teamed up with apple as it was about to launch its
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ipad and agreed to charge more for ebooks and stop allowing amazon to undercut them. >> as a result of the alleged conspiracy, we believe consumers paid millions of dollars more for an assortment of the most popular titles. >> government lawyers said it jacked up ebook prices by as much as $5. the government accuses apple of conspiring with five of the nation's largest book publishers, three of them insisting they did nothing wrong, nonetheless, settled with the government and agreed to change their conduct. apple and the other two deny the charges and say they'll continue to fight in court. a separate lawsuit brought by the state seeks money back for consumers who were overcharged. they could get checks or discounts on future ebooks. >> people who remember the time when the prices of ebooks seemed to go up overnight, as in next morning, they were more, is that what we're talking about here? >> precisely. that's what the justice department said led them to investigate this in the first place. in one three-day period, the prices suddenly took a big jump. that's when they began taking a look at this in 2009. >> pete williams with his ereader in our d.c. newsroom tonight.
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thank you. up next for everyone who has ever been insulted for their looks, ashley judd has taken a stand. and tonight, in an exclusive interview with us, she tells us why.
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the actress ashley judd has been in the news of late, and not for the right reasons. she's a tv and film veteran, part of the musical judd family. she's married to indy 500 winner dario franchitti. she has a masters from harvard, has done years of humanitarian work overseas, but it was how she looked in a recent round of interviews for her new tv series that put her in the news. specifically, rumors she had work done when what she had was a round of steroids for a sinus infection that wouldn't go away after the flu. attacked on the web for having a puffy face, she took to the web in an essay in the "daily beast" and fought back. tonight in her first television interview since it all began, she talks about what motivated her in her own words. >> i don't think that being a public figure makes it legitimate to criticize people
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the way they are currently criticized in this cultural climate. i got sick in february. i just did everything i could, including steroids, because we just could not get ahead of this infection. and i had a very early appearance on a monday morning and got up and went about my business, and the next think i knew, i was being slammed by these extraordinary rumors. i started to catch the double bind where you know, my face looked puffy. she's had work. you know, and then look at the same image in a different interpretation by a separate set of people is, oh, come on. she doesn't even have any wrinkles at all. she's clearly had work. i look bad, i had work. i look too good, i had work. there was an incredibly nasty vitriolic and gloating tone about it. i think it's the objectification of girls and women and this hypersexualization of the society that invites the criticism.
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we're anesthetized by it, we're taught not to admit how much it hurts. just go buy more hairspray, get back to the gym, buy another, you know, butt clencher exercise dvd. you know, that's how to undo the hurt, when in fact that's just contributing to the pain. i want people to share their puffy face moment and talk about being excoriated, being humiliated, being objectified, being ridiculed, and men as well. my husband and i watch a lot of motorsport in our house, and the products that are marketed to men and the messages that boys are given about what it means to be masculine and sexy are so ridiculous, equally so. i think what happened to me is very common. it might look a little different in other people's lives because they may not be public figures, but we all go through it. >> and ashley judd will say even more on this topic.
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we will air that tonight on "rock center" at 9:00 p.m., 8:00 central. we hope you can join us for that later this evening. for us, for now, that's our broadcast on a wednesday night. thank you for being here with us. i'm brian williams. we, of course, hope to see you right back here tomorrow evening. good night. nbc bay area news starts now. >> good wednesday evening. thanks for joining us. >> and i'm raj mathai. a tornado, heavy rain, thunderstorms. it's not over. a slice of winter in the spring. it's impacting businesses, our commute, and even the giants' home opening day. let's start with rob mayeda who is tracking the timetable of the storms from the nbc bay area

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