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Mar 13, 2014
03/14
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they traced the call to a pay phone in fayetteville, north carolina. >> we knew that mr.n was involved in the air conditioning business. we had a general area where the phone call came from. so we concentrated the search in that area. >> and that is exactly where they found him. >> mr. partin was quite shocked to see detectives. he was taken into custody on a warrant. upon questioning by detectives, he refused most of the questions. he didn't confess. >> but dna finally told the tale. partin's dna matched dna on the hair found on joshan's body. >> this dna just sealed the deal. >> to see whether partin's roommate was involved, investigators searched his suv, and on the front seat found a blood stain. but a test on the blood stain didn't match joshan ashbrook. it was dna from the man's son. the roommate also claimed he was at work in tampa on the night joshan was murdered. an alibi corroborated by his employer. prosecutors believed partin picked up joshan while she was hitchhiking. >> hey, there. >> partin gained joshas trust by having his daughter with him. and by helping
they traced the call to a pay phone in fayetteville, north carolina. >> we knew that mr.n was involved in the air conditioning business. we had a general area where the phone call came from. so we concentrated the search in that area. >> and that is exactly where they found him. >> mr. partin was quite shocked to see detectives. he was taken into custody on a warrant. upon questioning by detectives, he refused most of the questions. he didn't confess. >> but dna finally...
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Mar 28, 2014
03/14
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FOXNEWSW
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out of state fayetteville state and the worst is shaw university 121,000 dollars it will set you backping figures. >> lots offer money there. >> thanks so much, laurie. >> 12 minutes until the top of the hour. coming up forbidden fruit outraged after a diabetic man is kicked out of the movie theater for eating strawberries. >> detention getting down right dirty for one 11-year-old boy. you are not going to believe what he was forced to do. first let's check in with steve doocy to see what's coming up on "fox & friends." >> coming up on "fox & friends" we are taking you to a sports clinic helping wounded warriors back into the game and literally back into life. what happens to your luggage when you check it at the airport? we the key to keeping your stuff safe. who is looking at it when it's in there somewhere? geraldo rivera is here. chris wallace. it is friday that means best of "fox & friends" all kicks off 11 minutes from right now on the fox news channel. stay with us. the girls will be right back. it's a growing trend in business: do more with less with less energy. hp is helping
out of state fayetteville state and the worst is shaw university 121,000 dollars it will set you backping figures. >> lots offer money there. >> thanks so much, laurie. >> 12 minutes until the top of the hour. coming up forbidden fruit outraged after a diabetic man is kicked out of the movie theater for eating strawberries. >> detention getting down right dirty for one 11-year-old boy. you are not going to believe what he was forced to do. first let's check in with steve...
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Mar 21, 2014
03/14
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reporter paul woolverton has been covering the case for "the fayetteville observer" and joins us now to tell us more. so, paul woolverton, welcome. this case started out as something very different from what it ended up. we mind us what the original case looked like. >> originally, it was a sexual assault case. the general was accused of forcing his accuser, a captain under his command, of giving him oral sex at times when she didn't want to, and this was in the war zone in afghanistan. >> woodruff: and what happened to that case over time? >> well, the general fought it very hard and his legal team fought very hard and they pushed and pushed to get the sexual assault charges dismissed on the allegation that the accuser basically they said she was lying. the prosecutors, of course, kept at it over time, but in the end they arranged to plea bargain, and the sexual assault charges were dismissed, but that still left other charges including adultery and misconduct and maltreatment of the accuser. >> woodruff: explain what happened to the prosecution's case because, as you point out, the
reporter paul woolverton has been covering the case for "the fayetteville observer" and joins us now to tell us more. so, paul woolverton, welcome. this case started out as something very different from what it ended up. we mind us what the original case looked like. >> originally, it was a sexual assault case. the general was accused of forcing his accuser, a captain under his command, of giving him oral sex at times when she didn't want to, and this was in the war zone in...
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Mar 31, 2014
03/14
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we are going now to grady in fayetteville, north carolina, on the line for democrats. caller: good morning. can you hear me? my question is i heard you mention about the 18-year-old can stay on their parents insurance. what happened to an 18-year-old that do not have parents? 18-year-old working on a part-time fast food job? makes $9,500 and cannot make $11,000 limit to qualified. what happens to those people? we have people like that here. there are people whose income are to high to qualify for medicaid coverage but not high enough to qualify them for subsidies through the marketplaces because originally people who broke the law assumed everyone would have a medicaid expansion. so there is a gap for those that are not getting help from medicaid and exchanges. one thing they're working on is in -- encouraging them is to qualify them. there is a cap. there are people not making that much money every year who do not get health insurance through employers and need to find affordable options to have health insurance and that is a population not currently getting assisted
we are going now to grady in fayetteville, north carolina, on the line for democrats. caller: good morning. can you hear me? my question is i heard you mention about the 18-year-old can stay on their parents insurance. what happened to an 18-year-old that do not have parents? 18-year-old working on a part-time fast food job? makes $9,500 and cannot make $11,000 limit to qualified. what happens to those people? we have people like that here. there are people whose income are to high to qualify...
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Mar 21, 2014
03/14
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. >> the fayetteville observer says the u.s.eneral charged with sexual assault will give up $20,000 in pay and he received a reprimand. no jail time. jeffrey sinclair pleaded guilty to lesser charges and says he will retire. the female officer who accused him said she wanted a more severe punishment and is, quote, devastated. >> britain's "guardian" said turkey blocked access to twitter this morning. the prime minister threatened to rip the roots out of the social media network. that's after wiretap recordings that appeared to incriminate him in a corruption scandal were leaked on the site. >> and it is 7:19. ahead on "cbs this morning," an unprecedented look at the moment investigators identified boston bombing suspects. scott pelley is here and will >>> stronger sea breeze overnight. some low clouds and fog have moved back onshore. so it's all pointing toward a cooler friday around the bay area as high pressure is weakening. out the door we go. we have some clouds early on that should gave way to some sunshine in the bay and t
. >> the fayetteville observer says the u.s.eneral charged with sexual assault will give up $20,000 in pay and he received a reprimand. no jail time. jeffrey sinclair pleaded guilty to lesser charges and says he will retire. the female officer who accused him said she wanted a more severe punishment and is, quote, devastated. >> britain's "guardian" said turkey blocked access to twitter this morning. the prime minister threatened to rip the roots out of the social media...
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Mar 12, 2014
03/14
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MSNBCW
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a good friend i grew up with, that got drafted by toronto, ended up in fayetteville, in florida, left-handedyou're playing at the highest point of your athletic career. but injury can happen, and pretty easily, and then sideline you overnight. >> the other thing that happens is your friend was probably a superstar when you knew him in high school, because every one of these guys was the guy. he was hitting .650 or pitching .022. but it doesn't mean you get to the major leagues. the guys who make it to the majors and stay there -- that's the big thing. a lot of guys will make it to the majors and go back. one guy, danny worth, had been up and down between detroit and toledo 11 times in two years. so you're absolutely right about that. >> so, like, the biggest misconception, it sounds like, is the salary. people don't understand the difference. what percentage of those minor leaguers drafted actually make it to the pros? >> well, that get drafted is tiny, because there's 50 rounds in the major league draft. so it's probably 3%, 4% of players who get drafted. once you get to aaa, the odds have
a good friend i grew up with, that got drafted by toronto, ended up in fayetteville, in florida, left-handedyou're playing at the highest point of your athletic career. but injury can happen, and pretty easily, and then sideline you overnight. >> the other thing that happens is your friend was probably a superstar when you knew him in high school, because every one of these guys was the guy. he was hitting .650 or pitching .022. but it doesn't mean you get to the major leagues. the guys...
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Mar 11, 2014
03/14
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as rebecca from fayetteville said, she said raising the medicare age would simply force seniors such as my mother and me to pay more out of pocket. we need responsible, commonsense solutions to keep medicare strong. i agree with that. that is exactly what we need. we need these responsible, commonsense solutions -- hope 234reu they're going to be bipartisan solutions, that's how you get things done in washington is working in a bipartisan way, and i'm hoping over time this medicare protection act will become a great bipartisan vehicle for us to protect medicare. it really does two things in a nutshell. first, it aamends the congressional budget act to a fine any provision that makes changes to medicare to reduce or restrict eligibility criteria as extraneous and improper use of the reconciliation process. and i know that's technical and that is kind of getting down to the weeds but that's i think a very smart way to do it is to use the congressional budget act to protect medicare. secondly, it expresses the sense of the senate that medicare eligibility age should not increase and tha
as rebecca from fayetteville said, she said raising the medicare age would simply force seniors such as my mother and me to pay more out of pocket. we need responsible, commonsense solutions to keep medicare strong. i agree with that. that is exactly what we need. we need these responsible, commonsense solutions -- hope 234reu they're going to be bipartisan solutions, that's how you get things done in washington is working in a bipartisan way, and i'm hoping over time this medicare protection...