tv News RT June 4, 2018 7:00pm-7:30pm EDT
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dealing with paige and offer a nursery. for their. there are no. good or are there. but the. player. page was here. for. how did you know about it you. he said i knew he had a deal but how did you know. he. ordered. it but who did he have to deal with. to be a little. bit but he told you that. one on one.
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there david page who is two thousand and ten. he come in there at first we didn't know what use in their food and then he was light on an arrow got thirty years for. murder and each season then he went on telling us about his case. how they drove who shot whom he was sent a lot of stuff to the sion a mensa type. the. more they hid where they were he hid the gloves something but he took a ministry took him somewhere else how they were at
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a pump jack and he shot the name. he is they fit david yes no david perry. knew. his lawyer paid up the district attorney and they made a deal of police agreement that if they would pay to testify thirty years in the clear clear young would get the death penalty. like. thirty years for david paige that's the least amount of ever seen anybody get for murder ever usually is eighty nine to seventy five. i've never seen nobody just get thirty years and you actually overheard him saying that he made a deal. he told me he said his lawyer made to do with the district attorney is that if you testify. they would guarantee him that he would no more than thirty years and then he would be fifteen. and how come that
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so many people say to you that made it a crime. how does that work. a lot. and it's also a lie that you have said that they were not going to connected to the murder because you were wearing gloves were you wearing gloves that night i bought some asked why because it was cold. it was eleven degrees and it was eleven degrees are eleven celsius. it was cold. but where are those gloves and their distaste gusty because they were they try to destroy him so i said look i think your. d.n.a. to my blood samples tested was articulate. they know that as i was talking about so set and argue about it they go back out to the crash scene and found out they left out there. but when they sent the gloves to be tested they asked for d.n.a.
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testing on the outside of the gloves and i daresay i was thinking what would they do then. they offer here a deal is struck by how many years there was in the like fifty or sixty or sixty or sixty or so first they offered to sixty instead and then they at one point offered you thirty eight years that. it didn't feel right now. because you've helped them i figured you help me i hope you. this is where the criminality of the state's actions come in because they're bound by supreme court law i mean that is the law
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of the land if you make a plea bargain you have to inform the defense when i go into a trial i'm allowed to know everything that's going on. my lawyers had a hearing before the trial and put the district attorney's on the stand under oath and asked them as there been any talk of plea bargains and they said now they all said no ok well we got that report the new attorneys i did they get that the lawyers personal file and that's how they got this report and so they go get the attorneys billing records that he's found with the courthouse to get his money and on almost every line is met with this returning and tried to discuss plea bargain met with this attorney is like five months very different conclude. yet. three twenty resumes in the room with. you.
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is it true that the investigator told here that he thinks that you are the killer in the second case yes. and what it is to respond to him when he said that the same scenario what did he say about that scenario harris he never shot it down but he just kept saying i still think you're the one that did i think you're the one that did. the da had their head a bit on the kid's hair causes horrible case beyond and there's me not saying nothing so you get one side of the story as the co-defendants as it was like the perfect storm for you know they went all out they had this big elaborate trial like
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this never been had texas before. they just wrote his das and after months this state to a marketplace an appeals court upheld markovitch and he retired. the only reason i can think of and forgive me if this is too. short sighted but the only thing i could think of is that they offered you deal because you were a killer and they wanted to. close the case they wanted to have this capital murder . in iraq. that didn't happen them. and how would you feel if he would actually been executed but what would it do to you or to your soul or to your honor there's a there's a saying that our religion is and it's pretty much the only rule we have to follow . many are now to do what you will. actually do what i want to songs i'm not hurting anyone i mean i hurt anyone i can't say that but they're happy couples for
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we have the privilege of being the most allied ally of the united states. send overseas to and many other alliances from those good by the west and the united states and. the members will also have the privilege of being the most sanctioned. of that to any group of countries so it sounds contradictory it is going to be and pakistan this shows that pakistan will do what is in its national
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interest it will know and just go with the wind one reel the other. twenty eight team coverage we've signed one of the greatest goalkeepers of also but there was one more question and by the way who's going to be our coach. you guys i know you on the us he's a huge star among us and the huge amount of pressure you have to go i mean eight percent of the football with you and all the great the great good you are the rock at the back nobody gets past you we need you to get going let's go. along. and i'm really happy to join us for the two thousand and thirteen world cup in russia meet the special one. needs to just say to redo the team's
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parliament looks into the. private data. to get more revelations show that the phone company was involved in a secret country insurgency operation in yemen. as french authorities. read a rather. prisons are. largest feel. inadequate also ahead this hour. the. russian president vladimir putin sits in for an interview with austrian t.v. giving rise to a wide ranging discussion. remarkably from. just a few moments into a brand new day here in moscow choose the fifth welcome to our two international i
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mean i know neal the israeli prime minister is in berlin on the first leg of his european trip where he's seeking to push for the twenty fifteen iran nuclear deal to be dropped. german chancellor angela merkel wrapped up their talks a little earlier have spoken to journalists in the german capital brings us more. well benjamin netanyahu certainly being trying on this first leg of his three day european tour where he's been meeting or will be meeting with e.u. leaders to try and convince them to follow the united states is lead and move away from the iran nuclear deal that was a very bad deal because it gave you are the capacity also to develop advanced sort of futures forty times more effective in the intervening years so they could have an unlimited enrichment capacity in a few years that's not a good deal we see that iran is devouring one country after the other and the deal
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also released a lot of cash for you ron well if what was said by the leaders on the podium is anything to go by we can pretty much gather that prime minister netanyahu would still anger merkel fell on deaf ears the german chancellor using her time addressing the media to say that germany and herself remain committed to trying to save the iran deal. we have differing opinions on the use and activists of the joint comprehensive package that for and with this agreement will have more transparency that's the position we will hold in germany well this is a pretty tough sell for benjamin netanyahu obviously doesn't seem like he had any influence on angle or merkel's ideas and expect pretty much the same as he heads to london to paris that's because european leaders are upset at the move by the united states to pull out of the iran deal they cite the years of diplomatic effort that went into getting that deal in the first place the economic value of the deal to
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many european companies the fact that a lot of the senior officials in europe feel let down by the united states pulling out of this so we can really expect spend to netanyahu to hear similar things as he heads off to london to paris to government regret the decision of the u.s. administration to withdraw from the deal who wants to be. bustles don't want to pay blindly to what americans tell them we are it's a stick so much in keeping these agreements number one top economic relations with iran have been acting already by the european union level to make sure that the nuclear agreement is preserved yeah fudgie trump has lost the past no one followed his decision and now we have to make good on the feeling our obligation. the work some concessions for mongo.
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