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tv   Sophie Co  RT  June 4, 2018 11:00pm-11:30pm EDT

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and so i was like man. i hopped in a car took off right. amount of time to this second murder and went to sleep and. jumped out of the truck and i say no i want persons down there are very brave why i asked them why he sued them and he said he knew my name just. one same a petri. dish. that took
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a toll on me because i'm white and just as i don't want him family i miss the type of man that i was raised to respect it's now i said there a shot i can't already marco to finish who was that they were page. it was i guess who was not supposed to that ok he's not somebody that they need anything or harmed anybody in any kind of way. and so i might and then reality said man. everything is all come back on me too so self-preservation with their self-preservation kicks in i mean people say why do you call the police what it was an option i mean i mean that was what i considered option. i said look i don't know what to do because get away from me and to get out the truck and did he tell you i'm going to turn myself in and yes that yeah he did but i wouldn't i mean i was thinking like they look like they're going to put all of me
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right now and then so i was like ok i don't care what you do to get away from me. and i was wondering what are the odds that they've it page will tell what happened i don't. they. i don't know i mean i guess as between him and whatever god he's choosing a warship right now you know. in the marines are after him how are you i mean he says he can get to see you in the sea. so he dropped you off for a draw. but how much sense does that make if he
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if he helped you at gun point or he didn't hit your gun point right he just felt afraid because he was carrying a gun around the senator really like anything you try to try to get away with and get away from like that if i had a gun and i'm holding you. or even if i'm not holding your drive along with me and you know i've done killed two people you're going to try to talk your way and get away from me. whether or not will court cool or not you're going to try and get away from somewhere form or fashion and it took me that long to figure out ok cool that's the way i'm going to be able to do this and be able to manipulate him letting me go by telling him to get out get away from here you know martin him in my opinion yes. herman who works with the police chase they say why do you run a different i if you're i could see but i did not know i was wanted for murder
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alone for world there's a gun in the truck i'm going to make the deal i'm outside of the city limits or i'm supposed to be i'm going back to do. refuse to talk to the police about you know or use one up all sorts refuse such police period. i mean because i know how it is isis eeriest charge and i've been involved because i know how they do things so i'm not talking we all do without an attorney. but why didn't he when he don't hate us because. you know i said. i was caught up in history cultural my ass it we don't talk to the police you don't form one of the people right but what if you know that it can be i mean i'm not saying it's right or wrong you know sam i mean if it was like a child or some might that some might hurt a child in this there's different you know i mean this is i'm thirty one years old now so i see the nonsense and his quote unquote rules all these drug dealers and stuff and gamers stuff. i'm not saying it's right but it's what i'm here to at the
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time and at the time it was to me i'm not so it probably is nothing and so i didn't know that they would put it on me and i will get these people in trouble to get myself out of trouble it was my whole business and writes i'm not going to say now had i known that they were going to stay was against me already that i was it a little bit of you know but at the same time i'm doing as a mom until my mom go find darnell so he can tell me i'm oliver i think he's one of the first told the police it and i read a statement. although i don't know where it came from or why i haven't it way but i mean that's assist or. even. more clear i. remember. the.
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when lawmakers manufactured consent instinctive public will. when the right wing plus is protect themselves. with the flame and merry go round lives and be the one percent. we can all middle of the room six. million real news. to the summit can donald trump and kim jong un start a meaningful peace process as well as what's in a lease democratic process means for the e.u.
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and much much more on this edition of process. we have the privilege of being the most allied ally of the united states. sent overseas and many other the alliances promoted by the west and states and particularly by members and we also have the privilege of being the most sanctioned. of that to any group of countries so it sounds contradictory it is contradictory and stuff and this shows that pakistan will do what is in its national interest it will know it's just school at the end of one field the other. radially reinforced rammed earth bricks is what they really are.
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this is more than seventy houses about one hundred forty people with families living here. but. it's really a way of forming same as. the sun's coming in and heating the house and being stored in massive walls. sagebrush is. natural environment here but as we are containing the sewage and using the planet's surface to process the sewage we create our own little waste here.
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standing steadfast to germany's chancellor stresses her commitment to the iran nuclear deal as the israeli prime minister arrives in europe to lobby against. european parliament looks into the misuse of the private data by scandal hit cambridge analytical while the revelations show that it's now defunct parent company was involved any secret counterinsurgency operation in yemen. as french authorities scramble to tackle the threat of radicalization in prisons are to travel to europe's largest jail which guards say is overcrowded and security inadequate also ahead. writing reports and sits down for an interview with austrian t.v. giving rise to a wide ranging discussion that at times was remarkably frank. by
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broadcasting live direct for our studios in moscow this is our key international from thomas certainly glad to have you with us and the israeli prime minister is in berlin on the first leg of his european trip where he is looking to push for the two thousand and fifteen iran deal to be dropped following monday's talks benyamin netanyahu and german chancellor angela merkel took some time to speak with journalists brings us. 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's lead and move away from the iran nuclear deal that was a very bad deal because it gave you on the capacity also to develop advanced sort of futures forty times more effective in the intervening years so they could have
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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 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 stop angola 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 usefulness and fact of innes of the joint comprehensive plan of action that for and with this agreement will have more transparency that's the position we'll 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
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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 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 and to paris the government regrets the decision of the us administration to withdraw from the deal we want to be. bustles there would have been a line between americans. to stick so much in keeping these agreements from one time economic relations with iran with things are great the other european union the other to make sure that the nuclear agreement is pursued. trump has lost the battle no one followed his decision and now we have to make good on the feeling of obligation. the work some concessions from angela merkel towards benjamin netanyahu
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she said that germany would provide diplomatic assistance with dealing with what many and yet know who called iranian meddling in certain parts of the world so benjamin netanyahu goes off to try his luck with to resume a and a manual next but he can well imagine a similar type of reception will be awaiting him and both london and in paris as well. cambridge analytic of the company at the center of a private data scandal is embroiled in yet more controversy investigative journalist max blumenthal has published documents which he says were leaked from cambridge analytic as parent company they allegedly revealed that it had been collecting data for private military contractors in yemen here's artie's donald quarter. remember the cambridge analytical scandal millions of people's personal information being mined for financial gain and influence cambridge and a little it's actually a data analytics company dedicated to one thing figuring out how to manipulate you
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at all costs this shadowy consulting firm right surreptitiously gained access to personal data mined from nearly eighty seven million facebook users weaponized personal data you have to look at cambridge and really think in terms of the loss of trust cambridge analytic scandal this was a huge breach of trust well according to newly leaked documents from cambridge analytical parent company s.c.l. it wasn't just for meddling in political campaigns in two thousand and nine s.c.l. carried out a surveillance operation in yemen called project titanium it involved a network of western trained operatives tasked with infiltrating local populations and identifying potential terror threats the nice thing focuses on identifying the groups that support or are conducive to violent jihadist recruitment project titanium was essentially a psychological profile operation against the hottest it's architects wanted to
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find ways to divert people away from islamised ideology field research is used to identify a clear influence pass to do something target groups those who took part were deceived and led to believe that they were part of more innocent surveys but it was for a noble cause especially at the height of military operations against al qaida the s.c.l. group was acting on behalf of our came in to a us based military company they get billions of dollars from the defense department for intel operations around the globe looks like they were doing government dirty work and not just for washington and i know that many other governments work with them as well it's not just the united states government i believe the brits work with them in other countries and that's just the tip of the iceberg.

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