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Apr 21, 2019
04/19
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KPIX
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>> david levine thank you for joining us. stick around because i want to talk about the role of special prosecutors from barry bonds to donald trump. but right now we will take a lighter look, an adult look at the weather.>>> let me handle that description. first thing i have to focus on is the wind and the fact that it is not going to be windy today. not like yesterday. it looks pretty in a from the camera on top of the salesforce tower. this is our exclusive look at kpix 5. we see that thing in all directions and that is most impressive, a few low clouds over the bay and they will not stick around all day. more blue skies but i want to get to the wind. take a look at the wind speeds now, single digits, five mile- per-hour in santa rosa, three miles in san jose and anywhere you go they are single digits. even if we come for a closer look and look at the bay, it is single digits. the wind stream, the brighter the color the stronger the way then you can see the direction the wind is moving those are strong northwind off the co
>> david levine thank you for joining us. stick around because i want to talk about the role of special prosecutors from barry bonds to donald trump. but right now we will take a lighter look, an adult look at the weather.>>> let me handle that description. first thing i have to focus on is the wind and the fact that it is not going to be windy today. not like yesterday. it looks pretty in a from the camera on top of the salesforce tower. this is our exclusive look at kpix 5. we...
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Apr 20, 2019
04/19
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KQED
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r hoover institution fellow lonnie chen, colle law professor david levine and washington cooperate for the "san francisco chronicle." she joins us via skype from the nation's capitol. welcome to you all. what has the scen been like in washington, d.c. the past couple of days after the mueller report was released? >> one of the things you have to realize about the timing of this release is that it came during the first week of lawmakers easter and passover recess. so the odd thing about it is that the halls of capitol hill were largely empty when this report was delivered. some aren't even in the country. this is a popular time t take international trips. nancy pelosi was overseas in ireland doing sort of a tour through prts of europe. we had to get a lot of reaction in emails, in-box sort of statements. overall, i think that washington was really preparing for a report with a lot more redactions. you sow a lot prebuttle focusing on barr misconstruing th report in their eyes and preparing for this dogged fight to get the full report and underlying materials, and they haven't really chan
r hoover institution fellow lonnie chen, colle law professor david levine and washington cooperate for the "san francisco chronicle." she joins us via skype from the nation's capitol. welcome to you all. what has the scen been like in washington, d.c. the past couple of days after the mueller report was released? >> one of the things you have to realize about the timing of this release is that it came during the first week of lawmakers easter and passover recess. so the odd...
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Apr 20, 2019
04/19
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KQED
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so if you think about his se here in california. >> david levine, lonnie chen with the hoovernitution and tal koppen in washington with the "san francisco chronicle." thank you all. e thanks. >>> now to anamination of implicit bias. jennifer eberhart is social psychologist at stanford university and the 2014 recipient of the mcarthur genius grant. her wor her works the way unconscious bias can have profound effects in society. in her book she says we can all get better at spotting situationst t trigger stereotypes and shares her experiences how to fight them. joining me is professor jennifer eberhart. nice to havee. you h >> thank you for having me. >> you say in your book that racial conditioning starts young, even as young as 3 months old. how does that happen? >> yeah. so researchers have found thatn in as young as 3 months of age are already showing a preference for faces of their own racial group. so it happens part because of how our brains are wired, but nortly because of the faces that we are exposed toally. to the extent that we live in segregated spaces, we are exposed to fa
so if you think about his se here in california. >> david levine, lonnie chen with the hoovernitution and tal koppen in washington with the "san francisco chronicle." thank you all. e thanks. >>> now to anamination of implicit bias. jennifer eberhart is social psychologist at stanford university and the 2014 recipient of the mcarthur genius grant. her wor her works the way unconscious bias can have profound effects in society. in her book she says we can all get better...
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Apr 23, 2019
04/19
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KTVU
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>> end of june. >> thank you very much, david levine.te you coming in. >> thanks for having me. >>> those nest cameras that people put inside their homes or inside the front door, are meant to keep homes safe but a washington post report claims the cameras are susceptible to hacking. for more about the camera concerns i'm joined by reed, consumer reporter for the washington post. euharlee a really frightening incident for a california mom. how did hackers get access and how easy was it for them to do so? >> thanks for having me. actually, it was so easy that some people wouldn't even call hacking at all. the other problem is here that almost all people on the internet reuse their passwords from one website to the next. the problem of hacking has gotten so bad that all of our passwords, pretty much our outlet. somewhere along the line, some website you signed up for has been hacked and your password has been posted on the internet. if you don't use a different password for each website on the internet, you really are a sitting duck. the o
>> end of june. >> thank you very much, david levine.te you coming in. >> thanks for having me. >>> those nest cameras that people put inside their homes or inside the front door, are meant to keep homes safe but a washington post report claims the cameras are susceptible to hacking. for more about the camera concerns i'm joined by reed, consumer reporter for the washington post. euharlee a really frightening incident for a california mom. how did hackers get access...
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Apr 30, 2019
04/19
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KTVU
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we appreciate your insight, david levine, uc hastings college of law. the trial is expected to last at least two months and ktvu crime reporter, heavily is there in the courtroom now and will be there in court every day of this trial. we can tell you our two investigates team will have in- depth reports about the followed after the tragedy in we will have more coming up today on the news at 5:00. >>> our worst fears have been realized for family and friends of a well-known football player at haywood high school. the san mateo county coroner's office said that the body found in the ocean at half moon bay over the weekend is that of 18- year-old naphtali moi moi. it was boogie boarding with friends when he went missing. his body was found on the coast near the ritz carlson. >>> a police chase and crash on the bay bridge this morning. it happened around 7:30 am in the westbound lanes and traffic was jammed up for hours. the pursuit started when an officer tried to stop a man on a motorcycle for a bus lane violation at the toll plaza. the chp says after the
we appreciate your insight, david levine, uc hastings college of law. the trial is expected to last at least two months and ktvu crime reporter, heavily is there in the courtroom now and will be there in court every day of this trial. we can tell you our two investigates team will have in- depth reports about the followed after the tragedy in we will have more coming up today on the news at 5:00. >>> our worst fears have been realized for family and friends of a well-known football...
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Apr 18, 2019
04/19
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KTVU
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.>> reporter: a law professor david levine said the stakes are high. the big unanswered questions that mueller find contact between the trump campaign and russian election meddling operatives that might fall short of legal conspiracy.>>> what we might have here is knowledge on the part of trump campaign officials. that the russians were doing certain things. but no evidence they ever actually came together. in the long run preventing interference with our electoral process. is more important than anything else. >> reporter: the attorney general said he will call her cold the redactions and format categories. grand jury material classified items of national security ongoing prosecutions and to protect third-party considered peripheral to the investigation another copy of the report with fewer redactions for congressional committees to view in private. democrats say they feel they should get an unredacted copy along the underlying evidence. democrats already are threatening to subpoena the doj and call on mueller to testify. >>> san francisco based pinte
.>> reporter: a law professor david levine said the stakes are high. the big unanswered questions that mueller find contact between the trump campaign and russian election meddling operatives that might fall short of legal conspiracy.>>> what we might have here is knowledge on the part of trump campaign officials. that the russians were doing certain things. but no evidence they ever actually came together. in the long run preventing interference with our electoral process. is...
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Apr 19, 2019
04/19
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KTVU
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joining us is david levine with the uc hastings college of law. david, your thoughts on today and the biggest take away? >> there are so many, julie. number one is the amount of detail about what the russians tried to do to us and succeeded in many ways and i really hope that congress is going to spend a lot of time figuring out how well the administration is doing and making sure that does not happen again and seeing whether further legal tools are needed to be passed and whether further money needs to go into that. i think that is the big headline. the other details about what the president may have done or why mr. miller decided not to indict are very, very important but in the long run, stopping foreigners from influencing our elections in these ways is really, really key to the democracy. >> let's talk about the president for a second, taking all politics, all spin aside, what does the report say to you and what happ was that mr. mueller was laying out breadcrumbs for others to going. congress being on and also he is very explicit that the pre
joining us is david levine with the uc hastings college of law. david, your thoughts on today and the biggest take away? >> there are so many, julie. number one is the amount of detail about what the russians tried to do to us and succeeded in many ways and i really hope that congress is going to spend a lot of time figuring out how well the administration is doing and making sure that does not happen again and seeing whether further legal tools are needed to be passed and whether further...
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Apr 3, 2019
04/19
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KTVU
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we are joined by david levine. for joining us again. >> of course . >> house chairman, joe nadler cannot the last could issue the subpoena but says he is going to wait and see what bard -- barr does here. what can we interpret from this? >> what mr. nadler is doing is putting a little bit of pressure on to get as much is possible without a fight in court because he doesn't know exactly what is going to happen if we go to court and he do also doesn't know what is in the report and does not know exactly what mr. barr is going to give some right now it is leverage, a little pressure on mr. barr to provide as much is possible . >> so we have the subpoena which is a legal document that will force him to do that if ruled in his favor if they take it this far but as of right now, can they force the attorney general to get out the report unredacted? >> not yet. right now they are just asking for it and then i'm sure that they would like to negotiate something that will work out. it seems like there are two steps. one step
we are joined by david levine. for joining us again. >> of course . >> house chairman, joe nadler cannot the last could issue the subpoena but says he is going to wait and see what bard -- barr does here. what can we interpret from this? >> what mr. nadler is doing is putting a little bit of pressure on to get as much is possible without a fight in court because he doesn't know exactly what is going to happen if we go to court and he do also doesn't know what is in the report...
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david: jussie smollett's legal battles are for from over, tmz reports that se city of chicagos preparing to sue the actor. here with us now tmz founder harvey levinthank you for being here. have you been following this story from the beginning, how do you think this plays out. >> well, i think jussie is in a box, he has been so clear proclaiming his innocence. that he said he is victim of a real homophobic and racist attack that to settle this thing, and to pay the money is going to create prproblems for him. on other hand. if he goes to trial this is a situation where it is not a criminal trial, which is beyond a reasonable doubt, standard of proof is just tipping scales 51-49. and he is in perilous territory there. he has to make a hard decision both are high-risk. >> this is caroll roth. i would like to get in on a class act suit for my time wasted talking about this. i have to ask you, being out in hollywood, we have seen a lot of apology tours before. what did you think happens with jussie smollett's career either if he is found guilty by the city of chicago suit or by fbi. or if nothing happens? >> you know, we kind of talk about this befor
david: jussie smollett's legal battles are for from over, tmz reports that se city of chicagos preparing to sue the actor. here with us now tmz founder harvey levinthank you for being here. have you been following this story from the beginning, how do you think this plays out. >> well, i think jussie is in a box, he has been so clear proclaiming his innocence. that he said he is victim of a real homophobic and racist attack that to settle this thing, and to pay the money is going to...
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Apr 22, 2019
04/19
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BLOOMBERG
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levine will be staying with us. coming up, tesla and panasonic in need of couples counseling. that's according to our next guest. this is "bloomberg." ♪ davidhe bottom line, where we took it -- take a look at three companies worth watching. the ceo of nomura saying that they will remain an independent volker with a turnaround plan going quickly. he's laying off a lot of people, but it's not a good sign in general for the ceo says he's going to remain independent. talking about lagging, halliburton has lagged all of the oil service companies, but a be that's about to change, up over 4% in the pre-markets and they are saying that the worst is over for service pricing and that the prices have eventually bottomed. we knew that the activity had trough, but the question is the prices that have trough and apparently that's now with rising oil prices. david: that's got to be good news. exactly. and with the wells that are drilled but uncompleted, that's good for halliburton. the third company we are watching is tesla. for more we have craig erwin, the managing director and senior analyst at rauf, who has a neutral rating on the stock. i'm particula
levine will be staying with us. coming up, tesla and panasonic in need of couples counseling. that's according to our next guest. this is "bloomberg." ♪ davidhe bottom line, where we took it -- take a look at three companies worth watching. the ceo of nomura saying that they will remain an independent volker with a turnaround plan going quickly. he's laying off a lot of people, but it's not a good sign in general for the ceo says he's going to remain independent. talking about...