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Jan 4, 2021
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we see her here in her inauguration ball gown and that signature pink, and presenting her life, i kind of behind the scenes with mrs. eisenhower at the white house as a way to really attract attention for the kind of life that she was advocating for, this dedication to home and family rather than to work and career. betty ford -- people have asked me over the course of the excavation -- exhibition who my favorite first lady is, and betty ford is my favorite first lady. she had such a short time as first lady and yet her legacy was so impactful. whether it was being very upfront about her battle with breast cancer, which saved millions of lives, the way she advocated for breast cancer screening, to her support for the e.r.a., the fact that she was pro-choice and really very outspoken at a time when women were just really beginning to get very active in advocating for women's rights in the streets and in public. here was a first lady echoing a lot of those concerns. so much so that she became very popular. this is one of the campaign buttons we have in the keep betty our first lady. not
we see her here in her inauguration ball gown and that signature pink, and presenting her life, i kind of behind the scenes with mrs. eisenhower at the white house as a way to really attract attention for the kind of life that she was advocating for, this dedication to home and family rather than to work and career. betty ford -- people have asked me over the course of the excavation -- exhibition who my favorite first lady is, and betty ford is my favorite first lady. she had such a short time...
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Jan 1, 2021
01/21
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for her? >> well we talked about how stressful school is, and we talked about you know, her not feeling well and that's when i just told her yes she's expected to come to class, but if she couldn't, she needed to call me and let me know and we would just make other arrangements. >> reporter: but that morning? no call. no angila. was she ill? class was over before one of diane's students dropped a kind of bombshell. >> she said, "well i think it was angila's house when i drove to school, but there's, um, police tape around it, and a lot of people in hazmat suits." >> reporter: and indeed, it was angila's house. this little place next to a lutheran church. across the street from that elementary school. it was angila's fiance, home from a night shift, who called 911. >> i just got home. my back door is kicked in. and my girl ain't answerin' the phone. my son's inside with her and everything. i'm about to go in and see what the -- is going on. >> okay, why don't you just wait for officers, i'll ge
for her? >> well we talked about how stressful school is, and we talked about you know, her not feeling well and that's when i just told her yes she's expected to come to class, but if she couldn't, she needed to call me and let me know and we would just make other arrangements. >> reporter: but that morning? no call. no angila. was she ill? class was over before one of diane's students dropped a kind of bombshell. >> she said, "well i think it was angila's house when i...
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Jan 31, 2021
01/21
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you can see where she has added names of her mother, her brother and her own daughter. the other thing to keep if mind is that elderly members of the community who served as firsthand witnesses to significant historical reents were often sources for historical research. many of the histories of washington, d.c. and the articles that appear in the early volumes of the historical society's journal contain the same type of personal recollections as though britannia kennon provided to her grandchildren. they even wrote and published memoirs of their lives in the nation's capitol during the 19 the century. in contrast, she appears to have had no interest in writing or publishing a memoir. she granted interviews to local roberts to which she richard events like lafayette's visit in 1824, but it appears to be written for her grandchildren and other family members as the primary audience. by tannan kennon died on the eve of her 96th birthday in january of 1911. according to the terms of her will, the whole estate including her possessions and the 5 1/2 acre tudor place problem
you can see where she has added names of her mother, her brother and her own daughter. the other thing to keep if mind is that elderly members of the community who served as firsthand witnesses to significant historical reents were often sources for historical research. many of the histories of washington, d.c. and the articles that appear in the early volumes of the historical society's journal contain the same type of personal recollections as though britannia kennon provided to her...
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Jan 6, 2021
01/21
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did that affect her activity in the white house and her public duties?> yes, jeff, she says in her oral history that she did, with arthur sleszinger, starting just a little bit of time after the end of the white house years, so in march of '64 she did eight hours of oral history, which are now available. she said that it was ironic to her that when her husband was running for senate and when he was running for president that she would sometimes be accused of being too european or too french or being too high society and not a woman of the people in her clothing and the way she spoke and the fact that she could speak fluent french and the way she put it was she said i didn't bake bread and have flour up to my elbows but she said ironically when i became first lady those all seemed to be pluses. i think she's absolutely right about that, that while she did have to be careful about what she wore and whether she was wearing american designs and how expensive they must be, and might be, but she was very careful and very diplomatic about the cost of restoring
did that affect her activity in the white house and her public duties?> yes, jeff, she says in her oral history that she did, with arthur sleszinger, starting just a little bit of time after the end of the white house years, so in march of '64 she did eight hours of oral history, which are now available. she said that it was ironic to her that when her husband was running for senate and when he was running for president that she would sometimes be accused of being too european or too french...
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Jan 1, 2021
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>> i would tell her how much i miss her and that i love her.eason why i am who i am today. i'd tell her thank you. >>> i'm craig melvin. >> i'm natalie morales. >> this is "dateline." >> any time a child goes missing it's a scary thing. you know there's evil out there. >> first michellea. >> it was terrifying. >> then jenny. >> blood hounds came. >> this was a little awe girl riding her bicycle in the park. >> two little girls taken. >> blonde, blue eyed, riding a bike. >> someone targeting a kid. >>
>> i would tell her how much i miss her and that i love her.eason why i am who i am today. i'd tell her thank you. >>> i'm craig melvin. >> i'm natalie morales. >> this is "dateline." >> any time a child goes missing it's a scary thing. you know there's evil out there. >> first michellea. >> it was terrifying. >> then jenny. >> blood hounds came. >> this was a little awe girl riding her bicycle in the park. >> two...
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Jan 10, 2021
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i mean, no way. >> reporter: police planted microphones in her car, in her purse, and on her body.a arranged a meeting. she told eric that after the domestic violence call, sheriff's homicide detectives came in to ask questions about eric. this dinner date - tina told eric - was to get their stories straight in case the cops questioned her again. tina - wired up - picked up eric from his home and drove to a restaurant called el torito. >> were you worried about this? >> not really. i was more worried that i wasn't going to get him to confess it again. >> i have two stories in my head, i don't want to screw up at all. >> okay, there's nothing. there's no story to tell, you weren't there, it was an accident. >> let's go have some margaritas. >> reporter: once inside the restaurant, tina tried to get eric to repeat the details of pegye's death. eric wouldn't go there. >> you don't need to worry about details, details are not important. >> reporter: so tina tried to get him to say why he did it. >> you could have just got a divorce, why would you go to that degree? i mean how do i know
i mean, no way. >> reporter: police planted microphones in her car, in her purse, and on her body.a arranged a meeting. she told eric that after the domestic violence call, sheriff's homicide detectives came in to ask questions about eric. this dinner date - tina told eric - was to get their stories straight in case the cops questioned her again. tina - wired up - picked up eric from his home and drove to a restaurant called el torito. >> were you worried about this? >> not...
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Jan 12, 2021
01/21
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boldness powered her to her she is today. the boldness to run for leadership when literally no woman had ever had a tap leadership position in either house of congress. she still the only woman to lead her party in the house of congress, and she has to take on the male-dominated establishment to do that. they're only 23 woman in the house representatives. when she got there in 1987 out of 435 members. so she was and when she said she wanted to take a leadership position what she heard through the grapevine was at the sort of men in power were saying was well who said she could run? she's always been someone who said i don't need your permission. i'm going to do this because i believe i can do it. >> so this is a question from charisse did pelosi have a frustration with obama's and obama's cabinets relatives and inexperience. >> yes. i think that is a big thing as some of the chapters in the book about the obama era. was that, she and obama became very close, they have a light of mutual respect and trust and like and so i don'
boldness powered her to her she is today. the boldness to run for leadership when literally no woman had ever had a tap leadership position in either house of congress. she still the only woman to lead her party in the house of congress, and she has to take on the male-dominated establishment to do that. they're only 23 woman in the house representatives. when she got there in 1987 out of 435 members. so she was and when she said she wanted to take a leadership position what she heard through...
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Jan 2, 2021
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work cost her, her life? >> i remember them telling me, "did she come into a lot of money that she couldn't explain?" >> maybe she was selling secrets? >> maybe. >> that's, like, out of a spy novel! >> reporter: what about other secrets, the personal kind? >> we knew they were having issues. >> right before they got married, she found out that he was cheating. >> reporter: but somewhere out there was a stranger keeping secrets too. >> my data guy starts going through her facebook. >> she made reference to firearms in her social media. >> we saw that they were communicating her gas mileage. what a weird thing to do. >> reporter: a mystery that would drag on for months and then. [ gunshot ] one final secret, uncovered by science. >> you start peeling the layers back with acid until the number is visible. >>> she had a job she loved. a baby daughter she adored and her life ahead of her. she was shot dead in her home. her killer thought he covered his tracks. exposing a plot, it defied imagination. >> reporter: a
work cost her, her life? >> i remember them telling me, "did she come into a lot of money that she couldn't explain?" >> maybe she was selling secrets? >> maybe. >> that's, like, out of a spy novel! >> reporter: what about other secrets, the personal kind? >> we knew they were having issues. >> right before they got married, she found out that he was cheating. >> reporter: but somewhere out there was a stranger keeping secrets too....
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Jan 3, 2021
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it makes your whole world fall apart. >> if you took her, please, just let her come home. >> her names heather elvis. it was news nationwide when she vanished. >> she had a new job. she was going on a first date. >> it was all so overwhelmingly horrible. >> she's missing, where is she at? >> police worked the clues. her car abandoned. >> i was scared to death to open that trunk. >> a mysterious caller captured on camera. >> why would this person call from a pay phone in the middle of the night? >> then came the secret. >> she was married. >> rumors about her being pregnant. >> she truly believed she was his wife. >> anger, betrayal, revenge. >> a bomb exploded. world war iii. >> this crazy love triangle, kidnapping potential murder. >> this is heather's life we're talking about. >> terrifying. >> when you see your parents hurting, you wish that you can take all their pain away. with something like this, it's impossible. >> myrtle beach, south carolina, vacation heaven. 60 miles of instagram worthy sand and surf, and thrills at every turn. but leave the tourists behind and go inland ne
it makes your whole world fall apart. >> if you took her, please, just let her come home. >> her names heather elvis. it was news nationwide when she vanished. >> she had a new job. she was going on a first date. >> it was all so overwhelmingly horrible. >> she's missing, where is she at? >> police worked the clues. her car abandoned. >> i was scared to death to open that trunk. >> a mysterious caller captured on camera. >> why would this...
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Jan 4, 2021
01/21
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portrait made by who shows her, here in her favorite turbine. headlways kept her covered. it is also holding on a wig. owne dark curls are not her as she was in her seventh or eighth decade of life. cheeks, all ofr these things speak to her vanity. her from 1848, a very early photograph and .epresentation deli medicine is one of these people part of the revolutionary generation but made it all the to the dawn of photography. she also had a very strong impact. there is a wonderful play -- page of the white house historical association website that talks about this in the ways the hat she is wearing, the really is anbin echo to deli medicine. when sarah polk came to washington dc -- washington, d.c., she was the only first lady to never have had children and she remains that. she had a lot of time to dedicate to her husband and politics, and she learned a lot of the political savvy she needed to get ahead and have a successful presidential administration with her husband. hat as a wayg this nod to her mentor. it is been great over the course of re
portrait made by who shows her, here in her favorite turbine. headlways kept her covered. it is also holding on a wig. owne dark curls are not her as she was in her seventh or eighth decade of life. cheeks, all ofr these things speak to her vanity. her from 1848, a very early photograph and .epresentation deli medicine is one of these people part of the revolutionary generation but made it all the to the dawn of photography. she also had a very strong impact. there is a wonderful play -- page...
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found her standing outside the gate her family didn't even keep her for 48 hours. but i think what did you do over the last 2 days. of us dishes yes. whose dishes my mother this is a now you're back. yes they said that come and visit me that's what they said. yes to. visit you my uncle and missions to. the post we tried our best to return you to your family so you know now you'll have to stay as they don't want to. day is that ok you. 200. and 120 meters wide. that's the size of their entire we're. a world where the days pass more slowly than elsewhere. because sad monotonous well . the world outside doesn't want these. this seen as a disgrace to society 2nd class citizen. didn't even have a nickname for. the ghosts of corruption. and told them. you know that 77 percent. are younger than the law. that's make ends meet and you. know what makes time in all voices what harm. the 77 percent can talk about the issue. for all parties to flash from how's that for a good time this is where. welcome to the 77 percent. this week at g.w. . place. this is g.w. news live from f
found her standing outside the gate her family didn't even keep her for 48 hours. but i think what did you do over the last 2 days. of us dishes yes. whose dishes my mother this is a now you're back. yes they said that come and visit me that's what they said. yes to. visit you my uncle and missions to. the post we tried our best to return you to your family so you know now you'll have to stay as they don't want to. day is that ok you. 200. and 120 meters wide. that's the size of their entire...
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Jan 1, 2021
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pretty and smart, she had her whole life ahead of her. but after her death detectives faced a tough investigation. whoever shot emma had been brazen and it would take a bold plan to catch her killer. here is andrea canning with "noises in the night." >> when the autumn chill seeps into this community north of knoxville, tennessee. hundreds of high school students are dprarawn to the blaze of fry night lights to cheer on their home town heroes, the bobcats. she was the friday night light who perhaps shown brightest of them all. emma walker. a bobcat cheerleader since sher freshman year at central high. >> she was a really good cheerleader. some of them would just go through the motions but emma would put her own kind of sparkle into what she would do. >> fellow cheerleaders kelsey and lauren say their friend could be sassy, too. >> and she said i am kind a big deal. >> and i take it she said that with a hint of sarcasm. >> yes. >> people who didn't know her, they were like oh, she's super pretty cheerleader. oh, no. but then they would mee
pretty and smart, she had her whole life ahead of her. but after her death detectives faced a tough investigation. whoever shot emma had been brazen and it would take a bold plan to catch her killer. here is andrea canning with "noises in the night." >> when the autumn chill seeps into this community north of knoxville, tennessee. hundreds of high school students are dprarawn to the blaze of fry night lights to cheer on their home town heroes, the bobcats. she was the friday...
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her her keep. her. voice we tried our best to return you to your family up there you go now you'll have to stay as they don't want you. day is that ok. 250 metres long and attention 20 meters wide. that's the size of there in triumph. a world where the days cost more slowly than elsewhere. like a sad monotonous warms. the world outside doesn't one thing's been. seen as a disgrace to society 2nd class citizen. didn't even have a nickname for. the ghosts of corruption. a nickname that holds them. because. i am back on form they pulled off a victory over so i can extend their. partially to the fortress of the top teams. in between the prove unstoppable notching up 3 points against later comes. to 13 on w. this is day to day news live in germany is already in a time lock down but even tougher restrictions look to be on the way growing out of a new variants of the coronavirus chancellor angela merkel the whole told us when state leaders today of what more can be done to bring to bring down debts and infectio
her her keep. her. voice we tried our best to return you to your family up there you go now you'll have to stay as they don't want you. day is that ok. 250 metres long and attention 20 meters wide. that's the size of there in triumph. a world where the days cost more slowly than elsewhere. like a sad monotonous warms. the world outside doesn't one thing's been. seen as a disgrace to society 2nd class citizen. didn't even have a nickname for. the ghosts of corruption. a nickname that holds them....
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Jan 2, 2021
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her?> yeah, she was more like a parent to me than she was a sister. >> reporter: even though she was only 18 months older? >> yeah, 'cause she always looked out for me. >> reporter: at 28, heather bogle was mostly looking out for her 5-year-old daughter, mckenzie. heather had never married mckenzie's father, and sister jen says heather's romantic life had never really worked as well as her professional one. >> there was definitely a lot of guys who wanted to be her boyfriend. she was very pretty. >> when everybody says, like, her smile was the best smile they ever seen, that is completely true. >> reporter: carmella badillo was the closest of close friends. >> when i say that she made an impact on people, she touched their soul, not their heart. >> reporter: heather bogle sliced up each day into a life-sized jigsaw puzzle. after clocking out at whirlpool around 6:00 a.m., she'd sleep during the day, waking in time to pick up mckenzie from day care. and then the two could have an evening to
her?> yeah, she was more like a parent to me than she was a sister. >> reporter: even though she was only 18 months older? >> yeah, 'cause she always looked out for me. >> reporter: at 28, heather bogle was mostly looking out for her 5-year-old daughter, mckenzie. heather had never married mckenzie's father, and sister jen says heather's romantic life had never really worked as well as her professional one. >> there was definitely a lot of guys who wanted to be her...
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Jan 6, 2021
01/21
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she packed all of her own clothing. she ironed not only her husband's close but her own.and she arranged it so that she could wear clothing that was appropriate each culture of each nation that she was visiting. always careful not to repeat wearing the clothing in a way that timewise it covered you in one country and would not get to the next country so that it wouldn't look like she was wearing anything the same. trying to show respect each country she was visiting by appearing in something different. it was during the 1960 campaign that the issue of potential first ladies and their clothing was really thrust into national headlines and made a political issue. the media had essentially created an artificial brace for the first lady between pat nixon and jackie kennedy. it began with story claiming that this is kennedy and her mother in law committee spent 30,000 dollars a year on close in paris to which jack the very famously said, i couldn't spend that much on clothing unless they were sable underwear. she then made a remark talking about mrs. nixon, a backhanded compli
she packed all of her own clothing. she ironed not only her husband's close but her own.and she arranged it so that she could wear clothing that was appropriate each culture of each nation that she was visiting. always careful not to repeat wearing the clothing in a way that timewise it covered you in one country and would not get to the next country so that it wouldn't look like she was wearing anything the same. trying to show respect each country she was visiting by appearing in something...
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her head it. was her. voice we tried our best to return you to your family but now you'll have to stay as they don't want you. day is that ok. 200 metres long and a 120 meters wide. that's the size of there in time to. a world where the days cost more slowly than elsewhere. because sad monotonous wars. the world outside doesn't want things but. this scene is a disgrace to society 2nd class citizen. didn't even have a nickname for. the ghosts of corruption. a nickname that haunts them. and on demand. language courses. video and audio. anytime anywhere. w. media center. you know that 77 percent of the cars are younger than the fox. that's me and me and you. and you know what it's time all voices are blocked part. of the 77 percent he told the boss. this is. the 77 percent this weekend on d w. this is g w news live from berlin tonight russia's enemy of the state the kremlin's fiercest critics returns to moscow and is greeted by the police so what city of all he is now behind bars and says that his treatment m
her head it. was her. voice we tried our best to return you to your family but now you'll have to stay as they don't want you. day is that ok. 200 metres long and a 120 meters wide. that's the size of there in time to. a world where the days cost more slowly than elsewhere. because sad monotonous wars. the world outside doesn't want things but. this scene is a disgrace to society 2nd class citizen. didn't even have a nickname for. the ghosts of corruption. a nickname that haunts them. and on...
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Jan 6, 2021
01/21
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her. and it records their names and their dates. this is really very important for silhouettes because silhouettes don't give you a lot of information. unlike the portrait -- the pointed portrait that we have on the screen next to the silhouette, the pointed portrait feels in a lot of details about what a sitter looks like. with the silhouette, you only have the outer form lines. and these silhouettes descended in the adams family and so it's very nice way of understanding both public portraiture in the form of a beautiful painting like this by charles robert leslie. leslie was an artist who was born in the colonial america,er colonial british america, traveled to london and studied at the royal academy under benjamin west, another ex-pat colonial who was teaching painting there. and, you know, a grand painting like this really shows louisa adams in a regal way. where as the silhouette is much more intimate and it would have only been seen by family as opposed to this very formal portrait
her. and it records their names and their dates. this is really very important for silhouettes because silhouettes don't give you a lot of information. unlike the portrait -- the pointed portrait that we have on the screen next to the silhouette, the pointed portrait feels in a lot of details about what a sitter looks like. with the silhouette, you only have the outer form lines. and these silhouettes descended in the adams family and so it's very nice way of understanding both public...
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Jan 6, 2021
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of her was her multilingualism.fluent in french and fluent in spanish so she could step to the microphone and speak in the native tongue of the country she and the president might be visiting and also look at the difference in her fashion, this beautiful, bright pink suit that was sleeveless. so with the next slide, we can see that in addition to how she looked, stewart, of course, talked about some of the most important work in the white house and on a scholarly note, it wasn't just that she thought the white house should be historically accurate and beautiful, though that is what she helped to create and in putting together the white house historical association and putting together committees that would ensure that the white house would always look this way and would always be up-to-date in its history and how it was presenting itself. it so happened that the dean of presidential scholars at that time, a professor named richard newstat who taught at columbia and harvard had written a book in 1960 by coincidence c
of her was her multilingualism.fluent in french and fluent in spanish so she could step to the microphone and speak in the native tongue of the country she and the president might be visiting and also look at the difference in her fashion, this beautiful, bright pink suit that was sleeveless. so with the next slide, we can see that in addition to how she looked, stewart, of course, talked about some of the most important work in the white house and on a scholarly note, it wasn't just that she...
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Jan 9, 2021
01/21
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her sister who i mentioned was ten years older, and a bit of a mother figure to her, live with her.y had moved from the more cramped house, to what you call a mcmahon shun, in fall river. they live there for 12 years together, with winds lizzie borden being increasingly isolated, and then they had a fight and the riff consisted until the sisters died one month of each other. we so lizzie borden lived out her last days alone, shunned by the people she most wish to know. and it struck me that also shows really shows the nerve, that is remarked upon a trial. and possibly also, the provincial-ism that she had a sense that her universe was fall river, and that is where she was going to live. and i think it's that piece of the story too, that contributes to the legend, because very little about her later life is known for sure. and it enhances the enigma, that she presented at trial. and i did want to be sensitive to the question period. so i think i will leave it there, and then see where you all want to go with this. but thank you very much for your attention. [applause] i should say by
her sister who i mentioned was ten years older, and a bit of a mother figure to her, live with her.y had moved from the more cramped house, to what you call a mcmahon shun, in fall river. they live there for 12 years together, with winds lizzie borden being increasingly isolated, and then they had a fight and the riff consisted until the sisters died one month of each other. we so lizzie borden lived out her last days alone, shunned by the people she most wish to know. and it struck me that...
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Jan 11, 2021
01/21
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they found her witty, found her urbane, they found her very sophisticated, they found her to be a lady the other hand, she also had to deal with the fact that she had written this letter called the scarsdale letter. it was this seven to ten-page happened written letter to hi that she mailed. then she got there and killed him. she talks about the stress with the job, how much she loves hi, about their life together. she goes off on lynne tryforos over and all. calls her hi's whore, a shut, lays out all the things she thinks lynne has done to wrong her. during trial jean harris has to answer questions about this letter. she doesn't do it particularly well. now, again, if the jury had believed her, great, but since they didn't and she gets convicted, this looks like a mistake in retrospect. she had a bunch of psychiatrists who talked to her. one of the defenses she might have used was something called extreme emotional defense. it's an idea that she acted in the passion of the moment, the heat of the moment. her lawyer chose not to put on nye psychiatric defense. shaun alexander said the
they found her witty, found her urbane, they found her very sophisticated, they found her to be a lady the other hand, she also had to deal with the fact that she had written this letter called the scarsdale letter. it was this seven to ten-page happened written letter to hi that she mailed. then she got there and killed him. she talks about the stress with the job, how much she loves hi, about their life together. she goes off on lynne tryforos over and all. calls her hi's whore, a shut, lays...
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Jan 6, 2021
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saved up her money to buy her freedom and her son.set up a dress shop in washington and meet clothing for all of the elite women and wives of politicians and developed a close relationship with mary lincoln. the quay put is inscribed inside to mrs. lincoln, 1861. the first year of the lincoln presidency. this relationship developed quickly. she would go to her shop and order ten or 15 dresses at a time. that would take her a few months to make, mary lincoln being one of these very intelligent and ambitious women who would have been a politician on her own probably, had she lived in another era. she channels a lot of her energy into clothing and getting photographs taken of her in the different close, but she would have the speed for her. she had those two images. we do not have a painted portrait of merely can, we only have the represent if in photographs. no known painted portrait. nothing verifiable. this is also one of the reasons why portrait galleries are so focused on commissioning portraits. to ensure that these emissions of hi
saved up her money to buy her freedom and her son.set up a dress shop in washington and meet clothing for all of the elite women and wives of politicians and developed a close relationship with mary lincoln. the quay put is inscribed inside to mrs. lincoln, 1861. the first year of the lincoln presidency. this relationship developed quickly. she would go to her shop and order ten or 15 dresses at a time. that would take her a few months to make, mary lincoln being one of these very intelligent...
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Jan 6, 2021
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she saw her entire nation as her constituency.even when they made that western tour, she started to speak and give informal speeches from the back of the train to the public. she saw the first lady as a public role. and i think that is the most important legacy. >> excellent. so just for a final question, what do you think her -- what specific impact did she have on future first ladies? >> i don't think she did. eleanor roosevelt knew that mrs. harding had close relationships with female reporters. they covered mrs. harding and then mrs. roosevelt. so they spoke to her about that if i think to my knowledge, no other first lady has gotten involved in animal rights. certainfully terms of sad voe casing educational and professional equity of women and you see eleanor roosevelt doing that. laura bush. you see, also, the care of the veterans particularly. i think that is where her great legacy is. there is many first ladies that became advocates for the disabled and wounded veterans of world war two, the vietnam war, right up to mrs. o
she saw her entire nation as her constituency.even when they made that western tour, she started to speak and give informal speeches from the back of the train to the public. she saw the first lady as a public role. and i think that is the most important legacy. >> excellent. so just for a final question, what do you think her -- what specific impact did she have on future first ladies? >> i don't think she did. eleanor roosevelt knew that mrs. harding had close relationships with...
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Jan 6, 2021
01/21
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it was a part of her job, her job, her unpaid job. and she excelled.as comfortable talking to heads of state. she was very comfortable. for example, the trip that was mentioned earlier when there was that terrible, terrible -- yeah, the earthquake. >> in peru. >> in peru. she landed in a mountain and met the wife of the president there, and they walked for five hours through the muck and everything that had been involved in that. it was -- it was something. and it all happened because she read the stories to begin with and the government sent our planes with some things and three weeks later, she was noticing that all the coverage of it really had stopped and she went to the president and said, i'd really like to be helpful here. i'd really like to do something. and within a week, she was on a plane headed for peru. and she was, in fact, she had to sit in a makeshift chair in the front because it was obviously a plane that was taking as much -- as many things as they could load up. >> cargo planes. yeah, exactly. >> and the wife of the president met he
it was a part of her job, her job, her unpaid job. and she excelled.as comfortable talking to heads of state. she was very comfortable. for example, the trip that was mentioned earlier when there was that terrible, terrible -- yeah, the earthquake. >> in peru. >> in peru. she landed in a mountain and met the wife of the president there, and they walked for five hours through the muck and everything that had been involved in that. it was -- it was something. and it all happened...
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Jan 31, 2021
01/21
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in her own small ranch house, in her garage, in her character she had been strangled to death.t was her new boyfriend that called police, said he found her that way. >> she was slumped to the right of the passenger seat. facedown into the seat. >> roy asher was one of the original investigators. we spoke to him in 2009. this was three years after sandra was murdered. >> i saw in the back of her neck some ligature marks. we didn't find to cord, but we had an idea of what could have been used. >> what is this. >> thin cord, like a fishing line. >> sandra's shirt and bra was -- her lip was split as if she had been punched in the face. ryan, the boyfriend, on the right of the screen, told investigator he discovered sandra's body around 9:00 p.m. but the cops could see she had been dead for a while by then. >> probably 8 to 10 hours. >> which could have been put the time of death -- >> in the morning. >> did you get any more exact? >> no. >> given that the estranged husband used to live with sandra and ryan was now dating her, their finger prints would certainly be explained. someth
in her own small ranch house, in her garage, in her character she had been strangled to death.t was her new boyfriend that called police, said he found her that way. >> she was slumped to the right of the passenger seat. facedown into the seat. >> roy asher was one of the original investigators. we spoke to him in 2009. this was three years after sandra was murdered. >> i saw in the back of her neck some ligature marks. we didn't find to cord, but we had an idea of what could...
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Jan 6, 2021
01/21
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the glossy color jet+ coloring, her beauty, her clothing.the tv, even those black and white still look so beautiful, the news reels that were still showing. this was very important for the image of the united states. sadly we are coming towards the first lady ship ending, there were two tragedies that that ending suffered. how the presidency ends we all know. mr. mrs. kennedy lost their baby patrick in august of 1963. here, this beautiful family with carolyn and john, they are pictured at cape cod with the family canines. but it was just after mrs. kennedy lost their premature baby. he only live two days but he had the almond that could not be treated. even just a couple years later it was able to be treated. the president brought from washington the family came in to try to boost the morale. this imagery of this beautiful young family really had had such a young family in the white house since theodore roosevelt. the grandchildren yes, but not the young children of the president and the young lady. this is the baby boom, my mother took me t
the glossy color jet+ coloring, her beauty, her clothing.the tv, even those black and white still look so beautiful, the news reels that were still showing. this was very important for the image of the united states. sadly we are coming towards the first lady ship ending, there were two tragedies that that ending suffered. how the presidency ends we all know. mr. mrs. kennedy lost their baby patrick in august of 1963. here, this beautiful family with carolyn and john, they are pictured at cape...
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Jan 15, 2021
01/21
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in her writing ability and astute understanding of her father's mind. she was a perfect person to accompany him. kathleen: so for the sake of her marriage at this point. sue and so she separated for a husband they do more for work-related putting enough to avoid writing a scandal for the prime minister. and they didn't want to be distractions for unit so she is separated from her husband but she has struck up an attachment with somebody who is at yalta in spirit if not physically present. kathleen: also catherine is single. and now anna roosevelt tell us about her. catherine: she the only mother of the three daughters. and she is 38, the oldest . and she and her father were very close when she was a little girl. they had a shared passion for nature . in the natural world. they would spend long hours together writing in respect through field. and she would become the coke and study and almost with him on the high part from their home in new york. and she then went kind of to the outside looking in and cite kind of surrounded by doctors and nurses in his
in her writing ability and astute understanding of her father's mind. she was a perfect person to accompany him. kathleen: so for the sake of her marriage at this point. sue and so she separated for a husband they do more for work-related putting enough to avoid writing a scandal for the prime minister. and they didn't want to be distractions for unit so she is separated from her husband but she has struck up an attachment with somebody who is at yalta in spirit if not physically present....
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Jan 1, 2021
01/21
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>> i would tell her how much i miss her and that i love her. and that she's the reason why i am who i am today. i'd tell her thank you. >>> i'm craig melvin. >> i'm natalie morales. >> this is "dateline." >> any time a child goes missing it's a scary thing. you know there's evil out there. >> first michellea. >> it was terrifying. >> then jenny. >> blood hounds came. >> this was a little awe girl riding her bicycle in the park. >> two little girls taken. >> blonde, blue eyed, riding a bike. >> someone targeting a kid. >> yeah. >> she was a girl then too. solving the mysteries became her mission. >> so how many names did you hit? >> about 2,300 names. >> could cutting edge technology crack an ice cold case? >> you know, it's like, no way. >> i believe in the devil and people that don't believe in the devil i think they're in for a big surprise. >> hello, welcome to "dateline." michellea and jenny were like most kids their age. they loved to ride bikes and playing outdoors, and they didn't know each other but they'd be forever put together in tra
>> i would tell her how much i miss her and that i love her. and that she's the reason why i am who i am today. i'd tell her thank you. >>> i'm craig melvin. >> i'm natalie morales. >> this is "dateline." >> any time a child goes missing it's a scary thing. you know there's evil out there. >> first michellea. >> it was terrifying. >> then jenny. >> blood hounds came. >> this was a little awe girl riding her bicycle in the...
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Jan 3, 2021
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he had never hit her but he was physical in pushing her. >> reporter: d.a.urke wanted the jury to hear that tom had a hot temper. that he was volatile. >> anger would have been most obvious motive. >> reporter: simply lost his temper? >> anger. >> gun nearby, bang. >> right. >> reporter: to prove it, the witness, "ear-witness" you could say, nick glover, the neighbor whose story was reported on television and helped reopen the case. >> i heard him saying, "oh my god, what have i done, oh my god, what have i done?" >> reporter: nick was 15 at the time. he said he remembered crouching down inside his house, under an open window, listening to tom speak to people in his driveway. >> you can hear one of them, i do not know who it was, say "what? what do you mean?" and he proceeded to say, "i shot my wife." >> reporter: nick said he knew it was tom. he could see him out the window.. >> how certain are you that the voice you're hearing is tom fallis's voice? >> i am 100%. >> reporter: there was more. nick's mom, kathy glover, testified that on the night of the shoo
he had never hit her but he was physical in pushing her. >> reporter: d.a.urke wanted the jury to hear that tom had a hot temper. that he was volatile. >> anger would have been most obvious motive. >> reporter: simply lost his temper? >> anger. >> gun nearby, bang. >> right. >> reporter: to prove it, the witness, "ear-witness" you could say, nick glover, the neighbor whose story was reported on television and helped reopen the case. >> i...
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the aisle found her standing outside the gate. her family didn't even keep her for 48 hours. but i think what did you do over the last 2 days. yeah yeah. i washed dishes whose dishes my mother is here and now you're back. yes they said that come and visit me but that's what they said. yes to. the will visit you my uncle and my sister. the boys we tried our best to return you to your family so you know now you'll have to stay as they don't want to. stay is that ok. 200 metres long and a 100 metres wide. that's the size of their own trial. a world where the days cost more slowly than elsewhere. but the sad monotonous well. the world outside doesn't want these women. this seen as a disgrace to society 2nd class citizen. and even have a nickname for. the ghosts of karachi. to. kick off. back home so they pulled off a victory over friday can extend their claim. partially to the 4th performance of the team. believe proved unstoppable. notching up 3 points against labor cusa should. be given up on w. . children to come to the. one joy your trouble i'm unwilling. to. this is deja vu
the aisle found her standing outside the gate. her family didn't even keep her for 48 hours. but i think what did you do over the last 2 days. yeah yeah. i washed dishes whose dishes my mother is here and now you're back. yes they said that come and visit me but that's what they said. yes to. the will visit you my uncle and my sister. the boys we tried our best to return you to your family so you know now you'll have to stay as they don't want to. stay is that ok. 200 metres long and a 100...
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Jan 2, 2021
01/21
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so between her experience and her writing ability understanding of her father's mind, she was the perfectperson to accompany him. >> what is this state of her marriage at this point? on the precipice? >> she is separated from her husband. they had been putting it off to be able to create a scandal as a prime minister he does not need a distraction is trying to win the war. so she is separated from her husband but she has took up an attachment with somebody who is in spirit but is not physically present he's the american investor to britain john gilbert ryan perspective so sara separated and now anna roosevelt tells about herbert's direct anna is the only mother of the three daughters. she is the oldest. she and her father were very close when she was a little girl. they had a shared passion for nature and spent long hours together riding on horseback to the field. she dreamed that someday she become the co- custodian almost with him of high park their home in new york. has changed all of this. she went to be on the outside looking in ink surrender by doctors and nurses and then his politi
so between her experience and her writing ability understanding of her father's mind, she was the perfectperson to accompany him. >> what is this state of her marriage at this point? on the precipice? >> she is separated from her husband. they had been putting it off to be able to create a scandal as a prime minister he does not need a distraction is trying to win the war. so she is separated from her husband but she has took up an attachment with somebody who is in spirit but is...
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Jan 18, 2021
01/21
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ALJAZ
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arthur was 10 years her junior but she left fell in love with her. once he'd won her heart he got to work on gaining her complete confidence has a body for a bit of me says millie get the protocol a lair bashful or. the water. leak in the middle. and it can minimal or d.m.v. no you have a 10 minute call but the it took a d. it do for her to. unfortunately. died in 2013 without divulging many of the details and secrets of his relationship with sulaco hand. or the undercover plot he carried out for gabby the who would and lebanese intelligence. sami was also involved. at the moment. that had the lead you hold the list them but. this lady over that early 130. 4. there were inevitably. well. we start at the knee when. we we. learned. that you loved us while the lady and the little. dishes and how. a lot of. the little of all the good how will they. a little more of you couldn't. go in and about his body. the co-head surveillance operation was carried out with the support of lebanese president for out she had. salmon was there and other officers were disc
arthur was 10 years her junior but she left fell in love with her. once he'd won her heart he got to work on gaining her complete confidence has a body for a bit of me says millie get the protocol a lair bashful or. the water. leak in the middle. and it can minimal or d.m.v. no you have a 10 minute call but the it took a d. it do for her to. unfortunately. died in 2013 without divulging many of the details and secrets of his relationship with sulaco hand. or the undercover plot he carried out...
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her hair it. was her. voice and we tried our best to return you to your family so yeah but now you'll have to stay as they don't want you. today is that ok. 250 meters no and a 120. that's the size of their entire. a world where the days cost more slowly than elsewhere. because sadly not most will. the world outside doesn't want these women. seen as a disgrace to society 2nd class citizen. didn't even have a nickname for. the ghosts of corruption. and. the. young emigrants. they know the police were stuck. they know that the road is not a solution. they know their flight could be fatal. but going back. not an option. shattered dreams. 15 minutes d.w. . what secrets lie behind. discover new adventures in 360 degree. and explore fascinating world heritage site. world heritage 360 get kidnapped now. this is day 8 of a news live from berlin germany is already in a tight lockdown but even tougher restrictions look to be on the way chancellor angela merkel calls talks with state latest i want can be done to stay
her hair it. was her. voice and we tried our best to return you to your family so yeah but now you'll have to stay as they don't want you. today is that ok. 250 meters no and a 120. that's the size of their entire. a world where the days cost more slowly than elsewhere. because sadly not most will. the world outside doesn't want these women. seen as a disgrace to society 2nd class citizen. didn't even have a nickname for. the ghosts of corruption. and. the. young emigrants. they know the police...
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to be spared due to her mental state and poor legal representation multiple courts have rejected her appeals now only outgoing u.s. presidents donald trump can intervene. but under trump the u.s. has restarted the federal executions for the 1st time in almost 2 decades. 10 prisoners have been killed since july. i think it's revenge i think it's a product of hard heartedness by our leaders who are just trying to make a political point instead of being. instead of being human about it. it's a political message to kill people montgomery is being held in a federal prison in indiana she's one of 3 inmates should jewel to die before trump's term and his successor joe biden once supported the death penalty but it's now pledged to end its use. well for more on this i want to bring in sandra babcock she is a clinical professor of law at cornell wall school win at the new york state she's also an attorney on the montgomery case it's good to have you on the program what options are still open to you at this late hour to prevent the execution of your client. well thank you for having me we are s
to be spared due to her mental state and poor legal representation multiple courts have rejected her appeals now only outgoing u.s. presidents donald trump can intervene. but under trump the u.s. has restarted the federal executions for the 1st time in almost 2 decades. 10 prisoners have been killed since july. i think it's revenge i think it's a product of hard heartedness by our leaders who are just trying to make a political point instead of being. instead of being human about it. it's a...
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Jan 12, 2021
01/21
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about her. so she was exposed to so much that was swimming around in her head with all these brothers and sisters and getting married literally right out of high school and was still constantly looking for the next thing they learning that about her you are never static a product of what people tell you you're supposed to do and for some people that it is a respectability politics thing but her whole mentality is that i have been there and i understand it i know it's not just like a good talking to you need policy, you need a job and i understand that and so much of that is born out of the upbringing so i love that part of the book. volunteer about what you love. >> also rereading that this morning and in the superhero origin stories one hand she is very heroic another she is deeply human and you can see the threads doing this so well that she word continue to grow her life and career started with headstart and moving to these whether forming the organization to provide training and employment s
about her. so she was exposed to so much that was swimming around in her head with all these brothers and sisters and getting married literally right out of high school and was still constantly looking for the next thing they learning that about her you are never static a product of what people tell you you're supposed to do and for some people that it is a respectability politics thing but her whole mentality is that i have been there and i understand it i know it's not just like a good...
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Jan 19, 2021
01/21
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so i think her legacy in the world today, her ability to look into you and for you to see her, connection which sadly isn't, we're not able to do that in real time and still there for people with her when they do connect to and to her spirit is global which became global because it's universal, it's about human beings not seeing that you met somebody else and taking it into yourself. so i think when she was alive , two things happened. it's the strangeness that she was nominated for the nobel peace prize several times but never given. if anyone as the creator, as the chairman, as the supervisor of the universal declaration of human rights document that attempts to bring basic rights to people in all nations across the globe and serve as an instrument for, those rights going forward, she should have been awarded that honor but life was so full of others, i don't think it mattered to her at all at that never took place, i think she actually would have been the first to say she didn't , it was for her husband's policies or her readout of her husband's policies. in her lifetime, she felt love
so i think her legacy in the world today, her ability to look into you and for you to see her, connection which sadly isn't, we're not able to do that in real time and still there for people with her when they do connect to and to her spirit is global which became global because it's universal, it's about human beings not seeing that you met somebody else and taking it into yourself. so i think when she was alive , two things happened. it's the strangeness that she was nominated for the nobel...
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Jan 11, 2021
01/21
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the glossy color magazines, the coloring her beauty, her , clothing. the tv, even those black and white, it still looks beautiful, and the news reels that were still showing and again the usia documentaries, they were very important for the image of the united states. next slide, please. sadly, we are coming towards the end of her first ship. there were two tragedies that that ending suffered. we of course know how the presidency ends. but they lost their baby patrick in august of 1963. here, this beautiful family with caroline and john, they are pictured at cape cod with the family canines. was just after misses kennedy lost their premature baby. days, butved only two he had a long ailment that could not be treated. couple years later, it was able to be treated and he would have lived. but the president brought from washington the family came in to try and boost morale at a sad time. this imagery of this beautiful young family really had had such -- we had not had such a young family in the white house since theodore roosevelt. the grandchildren yes,
the glossy color magazines, the coloring her beauty, her , clothing. the tv, even those black and white, it still looks beautiful, and the news reels that were still showing and again the usia documentaries, they were very important for the image of the united states. next slide, please. sadly, we are coming towards the end of her first ship. there were two tragedies that that ending suffered. we of course know how the presidency ends. but they lost their baby patrick in august of 1963. here,...
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Jan 6, 2021
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always defended her and believed in her. his mother, elizabeth who was the daughter of president harding was actually a little bit more removed from that whole thing. i think as a young woman growing up, you can imagine that it was more difficult for her to deal with it and it was her mother's big issue. but the dna has of course unequivocally proven that mr. blazing's grandfather is president hurting. >> right. publicly president hurting with a supporter of civil rights, he supported the anti-lynching bill, but a third hand account says he was a member of the klan. can you clarify his standing on civil rights. and what was mrs. harding's stance? >> he was not a member of the client, he smoke out against. it what did happen was there was a convergence against washington of the clue pucks klan at the very same time that there was a convergence of one of the secret vaguely secret lodges of the masons. and they had different hats. they weren't anything similar, a ceremonial hats that the members war. and the harding's welcomed
always defended her and believed in her. his mother, elizabeth who was the daughter of president harding was actually a little bit more removed from that whole thing. i think as a young woman growing up, you can imagine that it was more difficult for her to deal with it and it was her mother's big issue. but the dna has of course unequivocally proven that mr. blazing's grandfather is president hurting. >> right. publicly president hurting with a supporter of civil rights, he supported the...
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Jan 10, 2021
01/21
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track her to her car.till, easier this way, and quicker. after all, would a stalker really be waiting for her here under a full moon? >> it was absolutely horrible and we felt so helpless. >> it's every woman's worst nightmare. >> we didn't know if any of us were next. >> reporter: it never occurred to shauna to become a cocktail waitress when she moved to vegas as a 20-something back in the mid 90s. what she wanted then was to be closer to family, meaning, big sister paula. >> she originally just thought, oh, there's no way i could be a cocktail waitress. i don't even drink. >> reporter: but in a casino town, a cocktail waitress could make good money. so now at 46 she was a veteran. >> she would laugh at herself and say, well, i still don't know what these cocktails. i order them, they give them to me and i take them to the people. >> reporter: but she was good at it. everybody could see that. >> all the customers loved shauna so much. >> reporter: why? >> she was a sweet person. >> beautiful. >> reporter
track her to her car.till, easier this way, and quicker. after all, would a stalker really be waiting for her here under a full moon? >> it was absolutely horrible and we felt so helpless. >> it's every woman's worst nightmare. >> we didn't know if any of us were next. >> reporter: it never occurred to shauna to become a cocktail waitress when she moved to vegas as a 20-something back in the mid 90s. what she wanted then was to be closer to family, meaning, big sister...
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Jan 11, 2021
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her door is open, her lights are on, her bed's undone. everything was horrible. and i felt it. >> she had been fearless on the front lines in iraq. >> pretty amazing. i saw her as like a really strong soldier. >> but something had her terrified at home. >> i'm scared. i don't feel safe. >> a desperate call to police. and then she vanished. something made her pretty scared. >> yes. >> no way to say what that was. >> right. >> what had happened to this beautiful army sergeant? the question would launch a spellbinding mystery. >> there were a number of potential suspects, absolutely. >> was a killer out there? >> she was in danger. >> could police catch him? they hatched a plan of virtual genius. >> one of the detectives said, you're not going to believe this. >>> welcome to dateline. maribel ramos was a fighter. joining the army and doing two tours overseas before returning to civilian life. but even her military experience would not be enough to prepare her for the evil she'd battle back home. here's josh mankiewicz with "mystery in orange county." >> orange count
her door is open, her lights are on, her bed's undone. everything was horrible. and i felt it. >> she had been fearless on the front lines in iraq. >> pretty amazing. i saw her as like a really strong soldier. >> but something had her terrified at home. >> i'm scared. i don't feel safe. >> a desperate call to police. and then she vanished. something made her pretty scared. >> yes. >> no way to say what that was. >> right. >> what had...
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Jan 2, 2021
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> her husband throws away her purse, her wallet, her photo i.d.ows it in a garbage can in front of his house where somebody might see it. it's in a dumpster in the back of the reserve base. >> you're saying that he wanted to conceal that? >> what more logical conclusion is there? >> did john heckel have something to hide? the defense didn't offer an answer for that, and john heckel says he doesn't remember much about those days. >> i don't recollect throwing anything like that out. >> the defense even suggested that kathy heckel may not have died on july 15th, 1991. did you really think she lived past that day? >> i certainly have a reasonable doubt as to whether she died that day. >> to support that theory, the defense introduced statements john heckel made more than 20 years ago. in one, heckel said he thought his wife may have siphoned thousands of dollars from a joint bank account. in another, he asked investigators if a woman pictured in a swingers mac zega might be his bief. >> is there any argument that kathy heckel squirrelled away money,
> her husband throws away her purse, her wallet, her photo i.d.ows it in a garbage can in front of his house where somebody might see it. it's in a dumpster in the back of the reserve base. >> you're saying that he wanted to conceal that? >> what more logical conclusion is there? >> did john heckel have something to hide? the defense didn't offer an answer for that, and john heckel says he doesn't remember much about those days. >> i don't recollect throwing anything...
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'd out us all will compose his her songs by herself in her studio. the 39 year old often works in complete isolation just honest oboe a piano and the solitude of the night. can't get this feeling then too i left all alone and everybody's forgotten about here so in a way it can feel completely left alone in a way and i think i like that for making music. she often starts with an improvised melody. and i wrote that and i thought oh my god that sounds like a story like somebody. telling a story like this. i'm constructing a story around a melody and and then there was a song from that and the system have jumping with it jumping into the pool. oh there we have. the artist has released 4 studio albums since 2010 she hasn't turned up any charts but she has gained a worldwide following with her delicate often melancholy songs they've been strained millions of times. combines classical instruments like the cello and piano with digital effects in her compositions sometimes her pitched voice is barely recognizable ringback. for live appearances she arranges he
'd out us all will compose his her songs by herself in her studio. the 39 year old often works in complete isolation just honest oboe a piano and the solitude of the night. can't get this feeling then too i left all alone and everybody's forgotten about here so in a way it can feel completely left alone in a way and i think i like that for making music. she often starts with an improvised melody. and i wrote that and i thought oh my god that sounds like a story like somebody. telling a story...
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Jan 4, 2021
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arrested her, took her downtown, read her miranda rights and then questioned her without an attorneythe time elizabeth, remember, was just barely 15 years old. and what did she say after two hours in that room? >> i told the story. >> the whole story? >> uh-huh. >> elizabeth confessed it all. every grisly detail of that awful night in the shannon house. assuming, that is, that what she told the detectives was actually true. >> it got to the point where i finally did for her. but it never would have happened without her. >> her. her very own mother, joan shannon. she insisted her mom had wanted david dead for months. first by trying to poison him. then later recruiting one of liz's friends to kill him. and finally -- >> she was like, would you be brave enough to do this? >> to do what? >> she wanted me to kill my stepdad. >> in 25 years on the job, detective murphy had never heard a story quite like this. he pressed further, he said, pushing elizabeth to explain how her mother talked her into murder. and the answer, elizabeth says now, was this. it was love given and withheld. >> it w
arrested her, took her downtown, read her miranda rights and then questioned her without an attorneythe time elizabeth, remember, was just barely 15 years old. and what did she say after two hours in that room? >> i told the story. >> the whole story? >> uh-huh. >> elizabeth confessed it all. every grisly detail of that awful night in the shannon house. assuming, that is, that what she told the detectives was actually true. >> it got to the point where i finally...
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Jan 17, 2021
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put some handcuffs on her, take her to jail.r with two counts of murder. >> but the detectives weren't done yet trying to break bambi. on her way to her booking, bambi said the hammer came down hard one more time. >> they surrounded me like a pack of wolves, and they said, go get those crime scene photos of her mama and daddy. and i said, no, no, no. and i was trying to cover my face. and he was pulling my hands off of my face. and he said, "you did this. you." >> detectives said the same thing to rick gagnon. >> they arrested me. that was pretty much it. if bambi did it, then i had to be a part of it. >> so there it was, a daughter and her boyfriend, partners in love and suspected of murder. the alleged motive was basic, get the deed to the land and resolve the custody issue of the boys in one bloody rampage. horry county could sleep easier at night with case closed. but was it case solved? >>> coming up, a new family feud breaks out between bambi and her sons. >> i had a lot of people in my ear saying she did it. i resented he
put some handcuffs on her, take her to jail.r with two counts of murder. >> but the detectives weren't done yet trying to break bambi. on her way to her booking, bambi said the hammer came down hard one more time. >> they surrounded me like a pack of wolves, and they said, go get those crime scene photos of her mama and daddy. and i said, no, no, no. and i was trying to cover my face. and he was pulling my hands off of my face. and he said, "you did this. you." >>...
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Jan 1, 2021
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since her death, her family has worn red in her honor. what they did in october, 2014, when they flowed into this kentucky courthouse for david dooley's trial. >> on may the 2 th of 2012, dan mockbee lost the love of his life. and two little girls lost their mom. at the hands of a man who couldn't even keep his story separate from one day to the next. >> reporter: prosecutor listeneda tally smith knew she didn't have a perfect case. there were no fingerprints no, dna. so she told jurors they wouldn't hear about any smoking gun. but they would hear david didly's own words, which had made him the last man standing in the detective's process of elimination. >> it was through this process that the path kept turning back to one person, the defendant, david dooley. >> reporter: jurors heard that almost all the employees working on the morning of the murder were on the warehouse floor, far away from the upstairs office area where michelle was killed. they were eliminated as suspects. >> we were able to create a time record of where everybody was
since her death, her family has worn red in her honor. what they did in october, 2014, when they flowed into this kentucky courthouse for david dooley's trial. >> on may the 2 th of 2012, dan mockbee lost the love of his life. and two little girls lost their mom. at the hands of a man who couldn't even keep his story separate from one day to the next. >> reporter: prosecutor listeneda tally smith knew she didn't have a perfect case. there were no fingerprints no, dna. so she told...
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Jan 2, 2021
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ok, you know her? >> i don't know her, know her.ho she is. >> funny thing about mike. on the one hand he seemed cooperative. but on the other.. >> we asked for his consent to search the house, you know, for any kind of evidence from the investigation and make sure chelsea wasn't even in the house. and he denied us consent. >> reporter: so, they did it the hard way. >> they came in with 13 swat guys in full gear. and i said, "do you have a search warrant?" and they presented it to me right then and then. and then "are you gonna let us in or we going to kick in the door?" that's when i let them in. >> they're getting tough with you at this point. >> yeah. they went through my house and they were searching for things, like, they left a terrible mess. it's the first time, i think, ever in my entire life of living here, like, forever that i didn't feel comfortable in my own home. >> reporter: outside, investigators took one look at mike's fire-pit and was there something in there? >> they dug through, you know, years of burning stuff. yo
ok, you know her? >> i don't know her, know her.ho she is. >> funny thing about mike. on the one hand he seemed cooperative. but on the other.. >> we asked for his consent to search the house, you know, for any kind of evidence from the investigation and make sure chelsea wasn't even in the house. and he denied us consent. >> reporter: so, they did it the hard way. >> they came in with 13 swat guys in full gear. and i said, "do you have a search warrant?"...
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Jan 31, 2021
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it's her only child. go. >> her name is carol dodge, and the amazing story she would tell us tonight began on the worst day of her life. t it was a thursday, june 13th, 1996, midmorning. she placed a call to a beauty salon to talk to her daughter angie. >> i dialed angie's number at work. and a lady answered, and i said, this is carol dodge, angie's mom. and she said, angie's been found dead. >> just over the phone? >> and i remember saying, god, no. please no. this can't be real. >> reporter: it happened, it turned out, the night before in the tiny ni second floor walkup where the independent 18-year-old had just started to build her life, stabbed to death, her throat cut. and carol was haunted by a conversation she'd had with angie that very week. >> that's what she said to me, you know, mom, i've done something really stupid. >> did you say to her, what did you do?ou >> no, i didn't want to pry. >> reporter: what could that have been, that something stupid? did it lead to murder? idaho falls, idaho, bi
it's her only child. go. >> her name is carol dodge, and the amazing story she would tell us tonight began on the worst day of her life. t it was a thursday, june 13th, 1996, midmorning. she placed a call to a beauty salon to talk to her daughter angie. >> i dialed angie's number at work. and a lady answered, and i said, this is carol dodge, angie's mom. and she said, angie's been found dead. >> just over the phone? >> and i remember saying, god, no. please no. this...
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Jan 30, 2021
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he grabs her by the arms, over her head, and drags her to the edge of the pool. he then seems to roll her body into the pool. >> we thought he was splashing her and trying to wake her up. then i remember greg running in, "oh my god, he put her head underwater, she's in the pool, but now he's holding her head under the water." >> officers arrived on scene. we went over the wall. >> as soon as i picked her up and saw the water go dark red, you know, that's when my heart did sink. >> that's when i first saw scott falater. he stepped in, and from what i recall, almost immediately, i recognized scott falater at the top of the stairs wearing a crisp white t-shirt, red flannel pajamas, and he made remarks, what's going on, what are you doing in my house, why are you here?fud at first. i kept asking, what is going on? all they would yell is, shut up, get down. they kept asking how many people were in the house? four. >> we asked how many people? he said four, two kids, his wife and himself. i observed his wife in the pool as i jumped over the back wall. >> i went to bed
he grabs her by the arms, over her head, and drags her to the edge of the pool. he then seems to roll her body into the pool. >> we thought he was splashing her and trying to wake her up. then i remember greg running in, "oh my god, he put her head underwater, she's in the pool, but now he's holding her head under the water." >> officers arrived on scene. we went over the wall. >> as soon as i picked her up and saw the water go dark red, you know, that's when my...
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Jan 1, 2021
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>> we locate her. we bring her in.e determine that there's another phone in play. >> another phone? >> a phone that they just had. >> the lovers had? what they call burner phones, kind of off the hooks? >> burner phones. we call it the sexting phone. >> the girlfriend told investigators jason kept the phone stashed away, hidden under the hood of his pickup truck. jason not only didn't mention the affair in his first interview, he also never told investigators about that secret phone. does it change him where he stands in your suspects? >> absolutely. he gets elevated at that point. >> if jason had tried to hide the affair, agent ludwick wondered if jason was hiding anything else about his mother's murder. the investigator called jason and told him he knew about the affair and the phone. >> so, he says, i will meet you at the sheriff's office. he's there and he hands the cell phone over. >> say, here you go. >> here's my cell phone. >> knock yourself out, huh? >> yep. >> then a surprise, jason wanted to talk some more.
>> we locate her. we bring her in.e determine that there's another phone in play. >> another phone? >> a phone that they just had. >> the lovers had? what they call burner phones, kind of off the hooks? >> burner phones. we call it the sexting phone. >> the girlfriend told investigators jason kept the phone stashed away, hidden under the hood of his pickup truck. jason not only didn't mention the affair in his first interview, he also never told investigators...
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to be spared due to her mental state and poor legal representation multiple courts have rejected her appeals now only outgoing u.s. presidents donald trump can intervene. but under trump the u.s. has restarted the federal executions for the 1st time in almost 2 decades. 10 prisoners have been killed since july. i think it's revenge i think it's a product of hard heartedness by our leaders who are just trying to make a political point instead of being. instead of being human about it. it's a political message to kill people montgomery is being held in a federal prison in indiana she's one of 3 inmates should jewel to die before trump's term and his successor joe biden once supported the death penalty but has now pledged to end its use. well for more on this i want to bring in sandra babcock she is a clinical professor of law at cornell wall school and if the new york state she's also an attorney on the case it's good to have you on the program what options are still open to you at this late hour to prevent the execution of your calling. well thank you for having me we are still fighti
to be spared due to her mental state and poor legal representation multiple courts have rejected her appeals now only outgoing u.s. presidents donald trump can intervene. but under trump the u.s. has restarted the federal executions for the 1st time in almost 2 decades. 10 prisoners have been killed since july. i think it's revenge i think it's a product of hard heartedness by our leaders who are just trying to make a political point instead of being. instead of being human about it. it's a...