go to a 60 want to minutes report that aired in 2014 when correspondent leslie stahl asked bill keller, then the executive editor of "the new york times," about the meeting he was summoned to at the white house that made keller decide not to run your story. if thereesident said is another attack like 9/11, we're going to be called up before congress to explain how we let that happen and you should be sitting alongside us. it was, in effect, you could have blood on your hands. >> he was saying if anything goes wrong, we're going to blame you. >> right. any code that is bill keller, then executive editor of "the new york times." >> that was actually a later meeting. that was the final meeting where right before they publish the story. there were other meetings thater with the government led to their decision -- the decision to kill the story. at that meeting with the president was at the very end of the whole process. amy: so that was at the end of the process, and then they decided to run the story because you were doing it anyway. >> yeah, yeah. i mean, they would argue, and there's so