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May 30, 2015
05/15
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CNNW
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death row at angola state prison for 14 years.99 michael and gordon had proven thompson had not committed the carjacking outside the superdome, but they had yet to prove their client was innocent of killing 34-year-old ray liuzza in cold blood. however, material they finally received from the new orleans' d.a.'s office provided ample ground for an appeal. >> the daily police reports showed us that these witnesses, freeman and perkins had told very, very different stories in 1985 before the trial as compared to what they said on the witness stand. we began to see how their stories were contrived to secure a conviction of an innocent man. >> there were numerous pieces of evidence inconsistent with john's guilt or consistent with freeman's guilt and that showed that freeman had lied at trial in his testimony on behalf of the state. >> after testifying he saw thompson murder ray liuzza, kevin freeman was given a plea deal and only served ten months in prison. >> we also received leads about potential witnesses who would be helpful. th
death row at angola state prison for 14 years.99 michael and gordon had proven thompson had not committed the carjacking outside the superdome, but they had yet to prove their client was innocent of killing 34-year-old ray liuzza in cold blood. however, material they finally received from the new orleans' d.a.'s office provided ample ground for an appeal. >> the daily police reports showed us that these witnesses, freeman and perkins had told very, very different stories in 1985 before...
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May 11, 2015
05/15
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ALJAZAM
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the devil is in the details we heard from one ambassador, the ambassador from angola going into the meeting africa very important in the debate since a lot of the migrants are coming from africa, they don't think a military solution is the way to solve the problem. it is essentially a humanitarian issue, you need to address the root causes, poverty conflict and so on in order to stop the people from fleeing from their country. humanitarian organization he like amnesty international and the international red cross have raised similar concerns that there needs to be a legal route for migrants to go to the eu as well as addressing those root issues. but we heard the eu foreign policy chief lay out what she described a very comprehensive approach acknowledging that these other steps need to be made. we'll wait and see if she's able to convince some of the skeptics to go along with the military part of the plan. >> christiankristin do we know when the security council will work on the matter? >> the resolution would have to be what's called a chapter 7 resolution authorizing force. there has to
the devil is in the details we heard from one ambassador, the ambassador from angola going into the meeting africa very important in the debate since a lot of the migrants are coming from africa, they don't think a military solution is the way to solve the problem. it is essentially a humanitarian issue, you need to address the root causes, poverty conflict and so on in order to stop the people from fleeing from their country. humanitarian organization he like amnesty international and the...
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May 8, 2015
05/15
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BLOOMBERG
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you have venezuela, angola, algeria, ecuador.yers are extremely big losers when it comes to lower oil prices and the chart you are looking at there are the greek -- right even's for the country. -- break evens for the country. libya needs $200 oil in order to break even. iran is right around that line of $65 oil but they need to hundred billion dollars in investment. -- $200 billion in investment. the rig count number today, it increased in the balkans for the first time in five months. we saw one rig return in the crimean basin -- higher oil prices are drawing back in shale priors -- players. citi sees 100 of these rigs coming back by the end of this year. mark: "street smart" at the top of the hour. alix: we will talk jobs and some tech. the second half-hour, we have brad hargraves. a huge venture capitalist invests in things like potbelly. we will get his take on the venture capital landscape. mark: thank you so much. after five years, this is the final edition of "bottom line." to the crew, you are the best. your hard work an
you have venezuela, angola, algeria, ecuador.yers are extremely big losers when it comes to lower oil prices and the chart you are looking at there are the greek -- right even's for the country. -- break evens for the country. libya needs $200 oil in order to break even. iran is right around that line of $65 oil but they need to hundred billion dollars in investment. -- $200 billion in investment. the rig count number today, it increased in the balkans for the first time in five months. we saw...
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May 22, 2015
05/15
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BLOOMBERG
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the real story is in the currency market, the euro --pping after angola merkel we are also seeing theich has become a favorite of and a bigists, move in oil. it had a 10th weekly advance amid signs that a glut of stockpiles is easing. we are leaving out the strength of the dollar, a big move higher in the dollar off the strong cpi numbers. the strongest increase in monthly cpi and two years. erik: the dollar moving strongly against the euro. you will see a big advance, a bit of a pop. talk about mike pearson, the ceo of valeant pharmaceuticals. of the most inquisitive companies in the pharmaceutical it industries. years, he hasfive done seven deals over more than a billion dollars. he is raising some questions about where pearson is going to go shopping next. he needs to get his leverage down so that he can go back to the debt markets and borrow more money, but he is ross affecting our here is what he told me. i think people are nervous about the emerging mac it's. -- markets. many companies are reluctant to go there and we like to go where people are reluctant. our strategy is somewh
the real story is in the currency market, the euro --pping after angola merkel we are also seeing theich has become a favorite of and a bigists, move in oil. it had a 10th weekly advance amid signs that a glut of stockpiles is easing. we are leaving out the strength of the dollar, a big move higher in the dollar off the strong cpi numbers. the strongest increase in monthly cpi and two years. erik: the dollar moving strongly against the euro. you will see a big advance, a bit of a pop. talk...
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May 4, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN2
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you happen to be i guess i caught it in the north atlantic you felt warm everywhere except i guess angolaibia and the u.s. northeast. is meandering cold war front which is that over the winter cutting to the deep south of the u.s. and it is doing it again this year, whether that's a long-term new normal or whether it's just an odd anomaly is obviously too early to say. now, what of the quantity about all about all of this? i do believe that sustainable development is the calling card of our time, because it is the philosophy that says we need a holistic approach that puts economic, social, and environmental objectives in a holistic framework on par. not just chasing gnp, not just chasing the bottom line of income, but and economic, social and environmental framework that holistic that combines these societal objectives. as an analytical framework is the study of complex nonlinear interacting, natural, and human systems. so sustainable development is both an analytical approach as well as a moral approach, in my view, both the positive and they normative framework for our time. what is imp
you happen to be i guess i caught it in the north atlantic you felt warm everywhere except i guess angolaibia and the u.s. northeast. is meandering cold war front which is that over the winter cutting to the deep south of the u.s. and it is doing it again this year, whether that's a long-term new normal or whether it's just an odd anomaly is obviously too early to say. now, what of the quantity about all about all of this? i do believe that sustainable development is the calling card of our...
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May 25, 2015
05/15
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LINKTV
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we created prosthetic clinics in cambodia and vietnam, angola and numerous other countries, and participatedto ban landmines. so we have -- [applause] thank you, yes. the work goes on, that we stand in solidarity with you. it is truly an honor for me to in a small way, represent those veterans of conscience, like yourself, working for peace. thank you very much. [applause] juan: in 1972, a young woman was elected to congress, the second-youngest woman ever elected to the house of representatives. and she became a stalwart example of what a statesperson is supposed to be like, what a government servant, a servant of the people, is supposed to be in government, pat schroeder. [applause] >> oh, i can't tell you how happy i was to hear my voice. i was sitting there quaking, thinking i'm going to have to go after ron dellums again. i mean, that's only the worst place in the world to be although it's pretty tough to follow you two guys, too. but anyway, what happened to "ladies first"? no, i'm kidding. i'm kidding. [laughter] anyway, anyway, what a delight to be here. and i just want to say it's h
we created prosthetic clinics in cambodia and vietnam, angola and numerous other countries, and participatedto ban landmines. so we have -- [applause] thank you, yes. the work goes on, that we stand in solidarity with you. it is truly an honor for me to in a small way, represent those veterans of conscience, like yourself, working for peace. thank you very much. [applause] juan: in 1972, a young woman was elected to congress, the second-youngest woman ever elected to the house of...
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May 17, 2015
05/15
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KYW
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the space-- physical, touchable, jim crow confinement just like the guard tower from the prison in angola, louisiana, notorious for cruelty. >> carlos bustamante: it's about 21 feet tall. and this is cast concrete, so it's an enormous object. >> pelley: from monumental to miniscule, carlos bustamante is the project manager building a place for 33,000 moments in time. >> bustamante: so when you had the railcar, the railcar pieces the guard tower, and all the support equipment, we had a convoy of about 12 semi-trucks traveling down the road across six states to get here. and it took them about three days. >> pelley: how do you get those things into this building? >> bustamante: so we set up two very, very large cranes. and these cranes are... are rare, there's not a lot of them this size. and we picked up these two objects, and basically brought them over the site and lowered them down about 60 feet below grade. >> pelley: the answer is, you don't move these objects into the building, you put these objects in place and you build the building around them? >> bustamante: exactly. there's no o
the space-- physical, touchable, jim crow confinement just like the guard tower from the prison in angola, louisiana, notorious for cruelty. >> carlos bustamante: it's about 21 feet tall. and this is cast concrete, so it's an enormous object. >> pelley: from monumental to miniscule, carlos bustamante is the project manager building a place for 33,000 moments in time. >> bustamante: so when you had the railcar, the railcar pieces the guard tower, and all the support equipment,...
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May 12, 2015
05/15
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CSPAN2
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these are refineries that have existed on nigeria and angola crude for a long time. so i think from what i've seen and from what i expect to happen over the next few months i think it's about important open question. just a step back sago and for understandable are talking about, the blocking -- bakken shale in north dakota what from about 100000 barrels a day production in 2008 do right now is about 1.2 1.1 somewhere in there, tenfold increase. we didn't build pipelines to accommodate all that. we figured out you can put it on train cars and nowhere but in an incredible amount of volume of crude we never had before in train cars. actually we did before but it was in the 19th century. this is sort of a modern equipment of that. we put them on hold or take cars, which clearly have shown to be got not up to snuff because we've had a number of train car derailments involving both the older train cars and even newer generation thing called at 30 miles an hour and what resulted, giant fireballs as this crude is very jazzy and is very flammable. the question is, okay we've
these are refineries that have existed on nigeria and angola crude for a long time. so i think from what i've seen and from what i expect to happen over the next few months i think it's about important open question. just a step back sago and for understandable are talking about, the blocking -- bakken shale in north dakota what from about 100000 barrels a day production in 2008 do right now is about 1.2 1.1 somewhere in there, tenfold increase. we didn't build pipelines to accommodate all...