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Jun 29, 2014
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. >> we had three primary suspects in this case, mike harting, andrew rich, and sharon schneider. >> the first suspect, mike harting, was a friend of john helble's. a witness recalled seeing harting's truck parked near helble's home around the time of the murder. >> mike harting was good friends with john. we knew that john and mike had some narcotics business together. >> but harting had an alibi for the time of the murder, and he passed a polygraph test. the next two suspects, andrew rich and sharon schneider, were friends of john's who lived about an 18-hour drive away in greybull, wyoming. >> we learned from a good friend who saw andrew rich and john helble together on january 18th of 1999 that, in fact, andrew rich had been at the trailer house of john helble. >> but andy said john was alive and well when he and sharon left to return home. police searched the couple's apartment and found marijuana, methamphetamine, and several .22-caliber bullets, the same caliber used to kill helble. these bullets, along with the slugs from helble's body, were sent to the fbi lab for a neutron
. >> we had three primary suspects in this case, mike harting, andrew rich, and sharon schneider. >> the first suspect, mike harting, was a friend of john helble's. a witness recalled seeing harting's truck parked near helble's home around the time of the murder. >> mike harting was good friends with john. we knew that john and mike had some narcotics business together. >> but harting had an alibi for the time of the murder, and he passed a polygraph test. the next two...
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Jun 29, 2014
06/14
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feel that keisha solved the case along with the detectives, and she provided the evidence against andrew rich. she got her man. >>> just weeks before testifying at a criminal trial, one of the key witnesses, a brilliant research scientist, was murdered. for 15 years, there were many suspicions, but little proof. ironically, advances in the very research the victim had been working on helped nail her killer. >>> when you ask friends and colleagues about helena greenwood, you hear words like brilliant, quiet, honest and a hard worker. she earned a ph.d. in microbiology and was an executive in the biotech industry. >> she was not only an excellent scientist but she had marketing skills. and those two things often are not concurrent. >> helena was very forward thinking, especially looking at technology. but she also knew the power that technology by itself doesn't market a product. basically it's the human need. if there's a human need, there's a product. that's required. >> helena and her husband, roger, a landscape designer, lived in atherton, a quiet suburb outside san francisco. our story beg
feel that keisha solved the case along with the detectives, and she provided the evidence against andrew rich. she got her man. >>> just weeks before testifying at a criminal trial, one of the key witnesses, a brilliant research scientist, was murdered. for 15 years, there were many suspicions, but little proof. ironically, advances in the very research the victim had been working on helped nail her killer. >>> when you ask friends and colleagues about helena greenwood, you...
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Jun 1, 2014
06/14
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reformers try to restrict voting privileges to the middle class and rich property owners in the late 19th century. one of those reformers, andrew white, the president of cornell university had this complaint about the ill effects of universal suffrage. >> in american cities, crowds delivers -- may exercise virtual control. the vote of a single tenement house managed by a professional politician will neutralize the vote of an entire street of well-to-do citizens. >> tammany of course would take that complaint as a complement. how do they do it? how did the peasants, how did they exercise such power in a city of such conspicuous wealth and privilege? they did it through organization. they did it through tammany, which is why reformers like dr. white and others so loathed the machine. if empowered of those considered unworthy of power, and, indeed, unworthy of the vote. the president of yale university made it clear what he thought of tammany's voters. >> none -- the massive city proletarians ought to be excluded from the polls. >> tammany had a very different view of democracy. tammany encouraged people to vote, a lot. [laughter]
reformers try to restrict voting privileges to the middle class and rich property owners in the late 19th century. one of those reformers, andrew white, the president of cornell university had this complaint about the ill effects of universal suffrage. >> in american cities, crowds delivers -- may exercise virtual control. the vote of a single tenement house managed by a professional politician will neutralize the vote of an entire street of well-to-do citizens. >> tammany of course...
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Jun 1, 2014
06/14
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, dick has been locked in a public battle with governor andrew cuomo over whether it is a good idea to give or tax breaks and tax cuts to the rich. i ensure that kind of thing leads to some awkward moments on the social circuit. they here at the house of labor, quite frankly we couldn't be more proud of you, my friend, my brother. dick ravitch. [applause] >> well, it is a thrill to be here. i thank you all for coming and rich, i thank you for inviting me. i have to begin by saying a couple of things. i begin my book with a quote from plato that says if you're not prepared to engage in politics, you deserve to be governed by inferior people. in many ways, this book aside and telling a lot of stories come to some of are fun, if i had a purpose and a motive, it listed lead that young people recognize the only way change anything in a democracy is by getting involved with politics. you don't govern at being above politics. no particular person intended to be covered by that. number two, the change only comes about through the political process. and it is essential that politics not be treated as citizens so many world is a dirty wor
, dick has been locked in a public battle with governor andrew cuomo over whether it is a good idea to give or tax breaks and tax cuts to the rich. i ensure that kind of thing leads to some awkward moments on the social circuit. they here at the house of labor, quite frankly we couldn't be more proud of you, my friend, my brother. dick ravitch. [applause] >> well, it is a thrill to be here. i thank you all for coming and rich, i thank you for inviting me. i have to begin by saying a...
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Jun 17, 2014
06/14
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FBC
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he is a critic, he is out calling bankers greedy and he says rich people should not be speculating in the markets. the judge as in judge andrewapolitano, soccer. mass celebration, and down 2-1. the highlight, john anthony brooks, 86 minute, if you don't know soccer that is at the end of the game. next up, team usa against portugal. listen and watch this. >> what you are taught to do every single time is down, the united states. means keeping seven billion ctransactions flowing.g, and when weather hits, it's data mayhem. but airlines running hp end-to-end solutions are always calm during a storm. so if your business deals with the unexpected, hp big data and cloud solutions make sure you always know what's coming - and are ready for it. make it matter. peace of mind is important when so we provide it services you bucan rely on. with centurylink as your trusted it partner, you'll experience reliable uptime for the network and services you depend on. multi-layered security solutions keep your information safe, and secure. and responsive dedicated support meets your needs, and eases your mind. centurylink. your link to what's nex
he is a critic, he is out calling bankers greedy and he says rich people should not be speculating in the markets. the judge as in judge andrewapolitano, soccer. mass celebration, and down 2-1. the highlight, john anthony brooks, 86 minute, if you don't know soccer that is at the end of the game. next up, team usa against portugal. listen and watch this. >> what you are taught to do every single time is down, the united states. means keeping seven billion ctransactions flowing.g, and when...
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Jun 12, 2014
06/14
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MSNBCW
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you know, andrew carnegie, the steel magnate used to say the more unequal american society, the better. he said it was a measure of the country's progress, that the gap between rich and poor was widening in the late 19th century. he thought the rich should get richer, it would provide an example to the poor. it didn't bother him at all that people were working hard and making very little. so in a way i think we see today an echo of that view, that the richer the rich get, the better it is for the united states. it's an incredibly mean-spirited point of view. as i said, no sense there of the common good, the collective welfare. >> absolutely. dr. hanes, in light of the brilliant summation that dr. jones gave us, don't you think these policies that hurt poor people hurt america? mr. carnegie was wrong. the gulf between the have-gots and have-notes reproduces the dysfunction that good zit encit want to get rid of the same persons who talk about national security in no way are concerned about the security of the least of these, no way concerned about the security of those who are trying to get some of the american dream. so with that being the case, we are hurting no
you know, andrew carnegie, the steel magnate used to say the more unequal american society, the better. he said it was a measure of the country's progress, that the gap between rich and poor was widening in the late 19th century. he thought the rich should get richer, it would provide an example to the poor. it didn't bother him at all that people were working hard and making very little. so in a way i think we see today an echo of that view, that the richer the rich get, the better it is for...
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Jun 10, 2014
06/14
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CNBC
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rich" all new episode. >> 10 eastern. >> tonight. >> thanks, robert. >> all right, guys. >>> now over to andrew for "squawk alley." >> hey there, goodnlo park, california. 11 a.m. here on wall street. and squawk alley is live"squaw" >>> welcome to squawk alley. carl quintanilla is off today. i'm andrew sorkin. check trading. green arrows, across the board. sorry, red arrows across the board. whoops. look at that dow off 12 points. not gonna call this horrible horrible. s & p 7500 off 2 points, nasdaq marginally as well. an up and down day, apple and twitter seeing green so far. radioshack, grub hub and pandora, san dix and glue is litt -- zoo lily making moves to the down side. with we have a lot to talk about this morning. start with facebook, because it is going on the offensive. the social network grabbing paypal president david marcus to run its messenger unit. seems like the street likes the move. ebay moves to the downside. facebook trading higher. should tell you more because the social network accidentally released its new app shot, slingshot, on the app store. slingshot has been pulled but the app still supposed to be faceb
rich" all new episode. >> 10 eastern. >> tonight. >> thanks, robert. >> all right, guys. >>> now over to andrew for "squawk alley." >> hey there, goodnlo park, california. 11 a.m. here on wall street. and squawk alley is live"squaw" >>> welcome to squawk alley. carl quintanilla is off today. i'm andrew sorkin. check trading. green arrows, across the board. sorry, red arrows across the board. whoops. look at that dow off 12...
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rich man's vacation playground. the story is truly all about family. >> the family in question, carnagia. >> some orchard is 22,000 square feet it's monstrous. >> in 1880s, thomas, iron and steel mag nature andrew'sght up most of cumberland island. mansions were built for his children including the orchard. he built even bigger house for himself, it was the scene of grand family gatherings. here was the guilded age in the middle of a wilderness. in 1959 the mansion burned. by then the family's fortunes were in decline but cumberland was in their blood, especially thomas' rather ex senntive granddaughter lucy. she passed her fierce passion for the island on to gogo ferguson, her granddaughter. >> this is grandma with an alligator, not sure it's alive but fabulous picture. >> growing up gogo, whose real name is janet, spent her summers with her grandmother. >> she always wore a bandanna and buck knife. even for a dinner party. she had deer that had been abandoned here that she raised on a bottle. she gave us all this incredible sense of nature. most people don't have. >> in 1978, divorced, in need of work, gogo took hanna her small daughter home to cumberland island where, like her grandmother she
rich man's vacation playground. the story is truly all about family. >> the family in question, carnagia. >> some orchard is 22,000 square feet it's monstrous. >> in 1880s, thomas, iron and steel mag nature andrew'sght up most of cumberland island. mansions were built for his children including the orchard. he built even bigger house for himself, it was the scene of grand family gatherings. here was the guilded age in the middle of a wilderness. in 1959 the mansion burned. by...
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Jun 12, 2014
06/14
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BLOOMBERG
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andrew, people associate pimco with the new normal. your firm now has the new slogan "the new neutral" going by your caught -- your colleague, -- coined by your colleague, richelieve. that pimco applied the new neutral to all developed banks, thend central u.s., europe, and japan? >> it is not the new neutral. in the u.s., we think the terminal rate over time is going to be lower than in past cycles, and it could be -- well be something like two percent nominal real to real. because the economy is still long-term trying to get over the impact of the 2008 a national crisis. in the european case, the ecb is going to be on hold for a very , longer than in the u.s., longer than in the u.k. when they do eventually raise rates, expect them to have very low rates as well. the common factor is very low leverage. it will be hard for the u.s. to policy rates going much above zero in terms of real terms, two percent nominal probably, without this impacting gross -- growth. there is the common factor with the new normal. and the u.s. is scaling back its own qe. sometime in the second half of next year or into 2016 they are likely to start hiking rates, which in the euro
andrew, people associate pimco with the new normal. your firm now has the new slogan "the new neutral" going by your caught -- your colleague, -- coined by your colleague, richelieve. that pimco applied the new neutral to all developed banks, thend central u.s., europe, and japan? >> it is not the new neutral. in the u.s., we think the terminal rate over time is going to be lower than in past cycles, and it could be -- well be something like two percent nominal real to real....
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Jun 25, 2014
06/14
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CNBC
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andrew. >> it says here the reason liberal arts kids are plugged into college. >> who says that. >> the reason liberal arts majors get jobs is bus they come from rich families, their pluck them into a job. >> that's not true at all, my friend. okay. coming up next. it is only one man's opinion on twitter, for the less. an update on the crisis in iraq and the new worries that pop up each day, water up with ukraine and russia right now? we will go through the global hot spots, senator bob corker raising the tax, does a proposal like this make it through congress? the senator joins us in the next half hour. we have a lot more. we are back in just a moment. . >>> there was a triple digit decline. there are some modest advances, dow futures are up 17 points. subpoena just over 2 points. general mills is reporting earnings, sails short of consensus. the company says it's pro potential spending if developmental markets was less effective. general mills sees cost of inflation up 3% in its current fiscal year. abbvie says a deal would create superior stand alone prospects for shire. it is willing to move to quickly engage. >> it's time for an update on the global hot spopt
andrew. >> it says here the reason liberal arts kids are plugged into college. >> who says that. >> the reason liberal arts majors get jobs is bus they come from rich families, their pluck them into a job. >> that's not true at all, my friend. okay. coming up next. it is only one man's opinion on twitter, for the less. an update on the crisis in iraq and the new worries that pop up each day, water up with ukraine and russia right now? we will go through the global hot...