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Oct 16, 2017
10/17
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him.nd then several other encounters at conferences where i knew he was going to be or he invited me to show up. person did you see in over those eight different interviews, and how many years whether between all of those? prof. taubman: the first interview was in 2007. the last was in 2016. what i saw apprised me. he was remarkably natural, informal, warm, humorous,. he did not ask questions in advance. he did not insist on having his own interpreter. jane and i speak russian. so we did it ourselves. we recorded it. i have not met that many world leaders, so i can't compare him. but i would be surprised if many of them are as, as i say, natural and informal as he was. host: what did you learn from those interviews? prof. taubman: one thing i learned was a sense of him as a person, which i just described. in addition, i had questions that i asked over the course of those eight interviews. i had a strategy. one part of the strategy was to quote 10. i would hold up something he had said and
him.nd then several other encounters at conferences where i knew he was going to be or he invited me to show up. person did you see in over those eight different interviews, and how many years whether between all of those? prof. taubman: the first interview was in 2007. the last was in 2016. what i saw apprised me. he was remarkably natural, informal, warm, humorous,. he did not ask questions in advance. he did not insist on having his own interpreter. jane and i speak russian. so we did it...
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Oct 22, 2017
10/17
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him some. it's vice versa. everything that i do it comes from my heart. >> let's go there, entrepreneur. >> entrepreneur. >> i won't leave him in here for dead, man. he got 20 years. i got eight. i'm going to keep it 100 with him, you feel me? 100 i'll be till i d-i-e. >> just a few weeks later, joseph arnold was transferred to another prison, leaving tavaris lee back in santa rosa. >> certainly there was some sadness, some pain involved when they were separated. it's understandable. you don't have a lot. it's got to make the days easier when you find somebody that you bond with, i mean, that's really sometimes all you can have, especially santa rosa, because that was just a lockdown facility. >> yeah, i miss him. i miss him a lot. you know, a real true friend. >> has it been hard here without him? >> you know, in life we all got to accept that we got to move on with things, so you just cope with what you got in front of you and move, you know. >> despite the loss of his friend and business par
him some. it's vice versa. everything that i do it comes from my heart. >> let's go there, entrepreneur. >> entrepreneur. >> i won't leave him in here for dead, man. he got 20 years. i got eight. i'm going to keep it 100 with him, you feel me? 100 i'll be till i d-i-e. >> just a few weeks later, joseph arnold was transferred to another prison, leaving tavaris lee back in santa rosa. >> certainly there was some sadness, some pain involved when they were separated....
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Oct 7, 2017
10/17
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him out. there was more to this friendship. >> john and melissa sutton knew nothing of what police were discovering. christopher and his girlfriend were still living with john. garrett kopp was still coming around, so solid evidence or not, detectives decided it was time to act. they needed a confession to make their case. >> i told the investigators bring him to me. >> coming up, a showdown of a killer. >> what do you do? >> go in the back door and walk in and shoot him. >> case closed? far from it when "dateline" continues. of diabetic nerve pain these feet... liked to style my dog as a kid... loved motherhood, rain or shine... and were pumped to open my own salon. but i couldn't bear my diabetic nerve pain any longer. so i talked to my doctor and she prescribed lyrica. nerve damage from diabetes causes diabetic nerve pain. lyrica is fda approved to treat this pain from moderate to even severe diabetic nerve pain. lyrica may cause serious allergic reactions, suicidal thoughts or actions. tel
him out. there was more to this friendship. >> john and melissa sutton knew nothing of what police were discovering. christopher and his girlfriend were still living with john. garrett kopp was still coming around, so solid evidence or not, detectives decided it was time to act. they needed a confession to make their case. >> i told the investigators bring him to me. >> coming up, a showdown of a killer. >> what do you do? >> go in the back door and walk in and...
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Oct 29, 2017
10/17
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attacked him. you. >> know what, you want to think it's funny [ bleep ] -- >> gill, gill. >> in the midst of all this, this nurse comes in to address his medical problem, and she's very calm. and i expected him to have a worse reaction but it seemed to calm him down. >> have you ever broken your hand before? >> yes, several times. every time a c.o. pisses me off. >> hurt here? >> yeah. >> does it hurt here? >> yeah, all of it. >> has it ever taught a c.o. a lesson? >> i've never taken it far enough to teach them a lesson. >> she meant hitting the wall. >> does it teach them a lesson when you hurt yourself? >> what was impressive to me about the staff is they deescalated the situation by calmly talking to him, engaging him in a conversation. >> i'm not going to sit there and be [ bleep ] by inmates and not take it out on the staff. >> gill, listen to me a minute. none of that has been determined. we're going to get through this. >> let's get through this and then we'll deal with that, one step at a
attacked him. you. >> know what, you want to think it's funny [ bleep ] -- >> gill, gill. >> in the midst of all this, this nurse comes in to address his medical problem, and she's very calm. and i expected him to have a worse reaction but it seemed to calm him down. >> have you ever broken your hand before? >> yes, several times. every time a c.o. pisses me off. >> hurt here? >> yeah. >> does it hurt here? >> yeah, all of it. >> has...
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Oct 9, 2017
10/17
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this is him talking about -- we saw him tweeting about the emmy awards, this is him tweeting -- talking, excuse me, about an nfl owner kneeling during the national anthem. "get that son of a bench off the field right now -- get that son bitch off the field right now." what's his purpose in going there with that kind of language and venue? from the beginning of wonder what actions he takes that are calculated and to what extent they are simply impulsive. the more i watch him, the more i think it's simply impulsive. i'm not sure he had a purpose or that he knew he was going to say that when he stepped up. that he just started in and wandered off. it's one of the reasons that people around him are so far unable to rein him in. they don't know what he's going to do or when he's going to do it. one of the remarkable things to me about president trump is that he is exactly like he was during the campaign. for everybody else there is kind of a candidate discount that you take into account when they change from candidates to be president. they realize this is two different roles. and the first
this is him talking about -- we saw him tweeting about the emmy awards, this is him tweeting -- talking, excuse me, about an nfl owner kneeling during the national anthem. "get that son of a bench off the field right now -- get that son bitch off the field right now." what's his purpose in going there with that kind of language and venue? from the beginning of wonder what actions he takes that are calculated and to what extent they are simply impulsive. the more i watch him, the more...
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Oct 10, 2017
10/17
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him.bc news said we have to have a reporter covering trump's campaign, and i was literally standing around the newsroom, so they assigned me to it. >> it was going to takes six months? >> it was going to take six weeks, because he wasn't going to release his tax information. surely, he would get laughed off stage. everybody was wrong about his prospects. we got lucky because we started taking it seriously much earlier than anyone else did. i would be following donald trump from campaign rally to campaign rally for months on end, when i was the most familiar face to him in a crowd. it would be me and local news reporters, and he wouldn't know anyone. he would walk to me and we would have longer conversations. the first time i was ever shared the same air as donald trump was the first rally i went to. that was in 2015 in june. honing his greatest campaign hits. the media is terrible, i get the greatest standing ovations of anybody. and the media is terrible. and then he called me out from th
him.bc news said we have to have a reporter covering trump's campaign, and i was literally standing around the newsroom, so they assigned me to it. >> it was going to takes six months? >> it was going to take six weeks, because he wasn't going to release his tax information. surely, he would get laughed off stage. everybody was wrong about his prospects. we got lucky because we started taking it seriously much earlier than anyone else did. i would be following donald trump from...
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Oct 24, 2017
10/17
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it gave him pleasure. it gave him a sense of thrilling accomplishment when one of his editor was being celebrated or the magazine had suddenly taken a huge surge. and he was also very supportive when it wasn't going so well, which is really more important. he was there, he was confident. when i took over "the new yorker," it was a very hard battle as it was at the beginning of "vanity fair," but i never felt for one second he didn't have my back. ands was the only person i had to please as far as i was concerned. as long as si felt i was going in the right direction, i felt confident he would stay with it, which he did, of course, both times. >> and remarkably as we all know, there was never an impulse toward editorial intervention. if he loved something, he would call up excited and say what a great piece or whatever it is. but he never bad mouthed any of us. never said why don't you do this or do that. that was not his idea. >> i sold my first piece to the new yorker to box, and then i came to work for t
it gave him pleasure. it gave him a sense of thrilling accomplishment when one of his editor was being celebrated or the magazine had suddenly taken a huge surge. and he was also very supportive when it wasn't going so well, which is really more important. he was there, he was confident. when i took over "the new yorker," it was a very hard battle as it was at the beginning of "vanity fair," but i never felt for one second he didn't have my back. ands was the only person i...
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it wasn't easy for him but he gave it his all really miss him a full. set of this unbridled revolution that so exasperates the americans confuses the soviets. there was major debate over the principles that had been adopted in the soviet union and those that he was developing. the debate was one of material stimulus versus moral stimulus. the material stimulus principle that had been adopted in the soviet union and that the most realist of the cuban communist thought they could adapt. was to give either more money or consumer goods to the people so they'd work harder. changes agreed arguing that people should simply be given moral stimulus that's what moral stimulus meant they'd be given a little pennant or medals to show they were avant garde workers and that they were leading the first free territory of latin america. of course it didn't work. the cuban leaders luckily didn't have a great deal of responsibility during the missile crisis. the cuban leaders with fidel castro at the head wanted to send as a preventative measure a nuclear missile onto a m
it wasn't easy for him but he gave it his all really miss him a full. set of this unbridled revolution that so exasperates the americans confuses the soviets. there was major debate over the principles that had been adopted in the soviet union and those that he was developing. the debate was one of material stimulus versus moral stimulus. the material stimulus principle that had been adopted in the soviet union and that the most realist of the cuban communist thought they could adapt. was to...
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Oct 9, 2017
10/17
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they arrested him and charged him with murder. then, an amazing turn of events. after his steadfast denials, the engineer admitted that, yes, he was the shooter. but he said he was not guilty of the crime because he had been insane when he pulled the trigger. a little more than a year after his arrest, hemy neuman's trial for murder began and the prosecutor said his insanity plea was prepros rouse. >> hemy neuman killed rusty sneiderman because he wanted his wife, his money, because he wanted his life. period. >> reporter: and according to the prosecutor, the evidence would show that hemy knew exactly what he needed to do to accomplish that goal. far from being crazy, the prosecutor said, he tried to plan the perfect murder. five months after hiring sneiderman's wife, around halloween of 2010, he hemy neumanmade his purchase. >> he told me it was for household protection. >> he bought 50 hollow point bullets for $375 cash from this man. the transaction took place in a parking lot. >> he seemed like he didn't know much about guns but he was interested in learning.
they arrested him and charged him with murder. then, an amazing turn of events. after his steadfast denials, the engineer admitted that, yes, he was the shooter. but he said he was not guilty of the crime because he had been insane when he pulled the trigger. a little more than a year after his arrest, hemy neuman's trial for murder began and the prosecutor said his insanity plea was prepros rouse. >> hemy neuman killed rusty sneiderman because he wanted his wife, his money, because he...
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Oct 12, 2017
10/17
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charlie: do the people who know him best worry about him? robert: his family knows him best.t times they are concerned he is being pulled in so many directions. this is someone who was never in public life as an elected official, now president of the united states. there has been alarm he is doing too much, that is relentless personality is spilling over day after day as frustrations mount as well. some of the people who care for him told me he loves when he plays golf because he is calming down from the pressures on him. he gets criticized for playing golf, but his closest friends say that the best thing he is taking time away from the oval office. charlie: thank you so much, pleasure. robert: thank you. ♪ ♪ the harvey weinstein story continues to bring allegations against the film executive, and the new york times published allegations that he had been paying people for decades. today a new yorker article online shares accounts from several women who have come forward about sexual harassment and assault. joining me is tina brown. she is ceo of tina brown live media and foun
charlie: do the people who know him best worry about him? robert: his family knows him best.t times they are concerned he is being pulled in so many directions. this is someone who was never in public life as an elected official, now president of the united states. there has been alarm he is doing too much, that is relentless personality is spilling over day after day as frustrations mount as well. some of the people who care for him told me he loves when he plays golf because he is calming...
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Oct 11, 2017
10/17
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best worry about him? >> his family knows him best. i think at times they are concerned that he's pulled in so many different directions. this is someone who's never in public life as an elected official, now suddenly president of the united states. there has been alarm at certain times that he's doing too much, that his relentless personality is spilling over day after day as his frustrations mount as well. some of the people who really care for him have told me they love when he plays golf because they at least believe he's calming down from all the pressures on him. he gets criticized from playing golf often but his closest friends say it's probably the best thing that he's take upsome time away from the oval office. >> rose: bob costa, thank you so much, pleasure. >> thank you. >> rose: robert costa from "the washington post." back in a moment. stay with us. >> rose: the harvey weinstein story continues to bring forth more accusations against the film executive and investigation by the "new york times"
best worry about him? >> his family knows him best. i think at times they are concerned that he's pulled in so many different directions. this is someone who's never in public life as an elected official, now suddenly president of the united states. there has been alarm at certain times that he's doing too much, that his relentless personality is spilling over day after day as his frustrations mount as well. some of the people who really care for him have told me they love when he plays...
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Oct 14, 2017
10/17
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i went down a few times to see him, of course to give him more money. music to kids at a music school down there. i'd fly up to dulles airport and then to kansas and change planes so they couldn't track how i was going and how i was getting to him or we'd meet in other cities. i never flew directly to him so, you know, so they couldn't trace me, you know, to get to him. >> but that kind of devotion doesn't come cheap. jim's life on the lam had taken a toll on jean's health and it's devoured the inheritance she received when her mother died. >> the man cost me everything i had. i spent every dime i had. i lost my house, and i lost my livelihood -- sorry. >> and yet, after her father died in 2007 jean says she seriously considered joining her husband in mexico where he was known as maestro jim and sharing his life as a fugitive. >> i knew what border crossing i was taking. i had a new i.d. i was getting ready to leave and not be able to come back to this country for the rest of my life. >> maybe you would have died in a shootout with him. >> that's probab
i went down a few times to see him, of course to give him more money. music to kids at a music school down there. i'd fly up to dulles airport and then to kansas and change planes so they couldn't track how i was going and how i was getting to him or we'd meet in other cities. i never flew directly to him so, you know, so they couldn't trace me, you know, to get to him. >> but that kind of devotion doesn't come cheap. jim's life on the lam had taken a toll on jean's health and it's...
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Oct 24, 2017
10/17
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i consider him a friend.er him a friend, and he said things to me oftentimes -- bill o'reilly can be a jerk to people, and he can say things, you know. so that's different from -- look. >> i'm glad you brought that up. >> i have no idea what happened behind closed doors. sometimes it's just his behavior, the way he is that came across as being offensive to people. >> i actually wrote something along these linings of he's mostly an equal opportunity offender. when it comes to debating and arguing. that's not what i'm talking about. he said to me thank you for your blondness at the end of an interview. that's very different than bill and i getting into an argument about immigration chirch hwhich had a problem with. >> for anyone to pay $32 million, i'm sorry, i find that impolite to imagine. i know he's got huge amounts of money, but to me it's interesting how people keep bringing their children into this. harvey weinstein did it in the recording. bill o'reilly brings his children continually into this. >> ande
i consider him a friend.er him a friend, and he said things to me oftentimes -- bill o'reilly can be a jerk to people, and he can say things, you know. so that's different from -- look. >> i'm glad you brought that up. >> i have no idea what happened behind closed doors. sometimes it's just his behavior, the way he is that came across as being offensive to people. >> i actually wrote something along these linings of he's mostly an equal opportunity offender. when it comes to...
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Oct 18, 2017
10/17
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he is going to call him a name? give him a nickname? the senator's critique of the president's foreign policy is a policy critique. he may be right. he may be wrong. the president is not about ideas. that's mr. trump's problem here. he was for single pair health care. he was for the war in iraq. no he is against it. politics is not about policy or ideas for him. it is for you and i think you project that on to him. but it's not how he is. it's all about his own narcissism. so these this is why when the president's policies are attacked by senator mccain, he responds with personal attacks. >> he did use the word unpatriotic to describe the policy. and that's a pretty heavy word. that's not just a policy work. i hate the way donald trump counterpunches. i've been on record for this for a long time. but i don't think we should ignore that that was a pretty harsh criticism and branched out into the actual voter. >> pretty harsh. could have called him deplorable. mccain could have said hey, it's just a basket of deplorables. >> even though i
he is going to call him a name? give him a nickname? the senator's critique of the president's foreign policy is a policy critique. he may be right. he may be wrong. the president is not about ideas. that's mr. trump's problem here. he was for single pair health care. he was for the war in iraq. no he is against it. politics is not about policy or ideas for him. it is for you and i think you project that on to him. but it's not how he is. it's all about his own narcissism. so these this is why...
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Oct 18, 2017
10/17
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someone needs to train him and teach him what to say. they can write a script for him and he can just call and say you have my sympathy. i'm sending you a letter. >> congresswoman, you asked to be put on the phone with the president after what you heard the portion of the phone call that you heard. what were you going to say to him if you had been put on the phone? >> you know what, i think i was going to curse him out. >> and what were you going to say? you don't have to use the curse words. what was it about what you heard that got you so livid? >> i'll just keep that to myself because i don't want to politicize that. >> and who stopped you from getting on the phone call? >> the master sergeant that was in charge. he said i can't do that. >> the portion that you did hear, was that on speaker phone? >> yes, it was. >> so part of it was on speaker phone. >> she was speaking on speaker phone. and i was not the only one in the car. >> i see. so who else heard the conversation? >> well, there were -- her aunt, her uncle, my press person, th
someone needs to train him and teach him what to say. they can write a script for him and he can just call and say you have my sympathy. i'm sending you a letter. >> congresswoman, you asked to be put on the phone with the president after what you heard the portion of the phone call that you heard. what were you going to say to him if you had been put on the phone? >> you know what, i think i was going to curse him out. >> and what were you going to say? you don't have to use...
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Oct 24, 2017
10/17
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i had to get him dressed every day. i had to teach him to brush his teeth.in the shower with him because he did not know how to take care of himself. he joined a group called the friends club, a bunch of guys who had dementia. i took him the first day and he held my hand like this all the way through, just wouldn't let me go. i felt like i was taking my child to nursery school. charlie: they can also be cruel for you. sally: charlie, he had these blackouts, psychotic episodes where he would destroy things in the house and not remember any of it. he got lost all the time, but the best thing about it, not the best, but the luckiest thing for me was he never did not know who i was. he always knew who i was. -ness.er lost his ben he could be confused and not be able to carry on that conversation, but he would have that spark and he would tease me. up until the very in. -- end. he would get up in the middle of the night. they called at sundown in. when he got the medal of freedom, you have to go to the white house. saidarned in august and you can't tell anybody.
i had to get him dressed every day. i had to teach him to brush his teeth.in the shower with him because he did not know how to take care of himself. he joined a group called the friends club, a bunch of guys who had dementia. i took him the first day and he held my hand like this all the way through, just wouldn't let me go. i felt like i was taking my child to nursery school. charlie: they can also be cruel for you. sally: charlie, he had these blackouts, psychotic episodes where he would...
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Oct 2, 2017
10/17
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host: who was president before him and who is president after him?cott: garfield was president before him and the president after him was grover cleveland. why do you want to write a book about chester a. arthur? scott: i was looking for, every president has an interesting story. i think that chester arthur may be, if he is not the most upscale president, he is one of them. take of a pole they college students and they give them a list of names and ask them to identify who is the president, chester arthur writes among the lesser-known presidents. what most people remember about him is his this think of facial hair, his sideburns. interesting. to focus on. interesting period to focus on. reconstruction leading up to teddy roosevelt and the progressives. it is a. -- it is a period people give a lot of -- two in school. and then wilson and then we were off to world war i. this is a. of what wehere a lot think of as the modern world really starts to take shape. the country really was transformed from a largely agrarian country to an with largecountry cor
host: who was president before him and who is president after him?cott: garfield was president before him and the president after him was grover cleveland. why do you want to write a book about chester a. arthur? scott: i was looking for, every president has an interesting story. i think that chester arthur may be, if he is not the most upscale president, he is one of them. take of a pole they college students and they give them a list of names and ask them to identify who is the president,...
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Oct 9, 2017
10/17
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>> put my paws on him. i didn't give him that chance to put his hands up or nothing. just punched him. >> steven says he witnessed the fight and said he agrees with conteh's version. >> conteh had no marks on him. i didn't see him get hit one time. >> i beat him like he stole something and kept going. his face was [ bleep ] up. his body had bruises and everything. he had bruises on his legs, man. it was good. i was all right. he a sheep. i'm a wolf. >> since the fight occurred inside their cell, it was not witnessed by staff, so no disciplinary measures were taken. lacey was transferred to another cellmate for a different reason. >> several inmates said he was bullying people and threatening people if they didn't do things the way he did them. >> though lacey has kept it a secret from other inmates, he is convicted of aggravated sexual battery against a victim under the age of 13. >> i think inmate lacey is a bully. a couple of inmates said yesterday he would make statements about he can't stand people that commit crimes against children. things of that nature. i thin
>> put my paws on him. i didn't give him that chance to put his hands up or nothing. just punched him. >> steven says he witnessed the fight and said he agrees with conteh's version. >> conteh had no marks on him. i didn't see him get hit one time. >> i beat him like he stole something and kept going. his face was [ bleep ] up. his body had bruises and everything. he had bruises on his legs, man. it was good. i was all right. he a sheep. i'm a wolf. >> since the...
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Oct 28, 2017
10/17
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i actually checked him for any injuries, or any blood, or anything on him. he had nothing. >> reporter: tom had told the deputy he'd only just come in the door to find his wife dead. he'd been gone all night at his friends' house, the millers, playing poker. so that's where investigators went. >> i heard the banging on the door and ringing of the doorbell. and i woke him up. i'm like, somebody's banging at the door. >> what time is this? >> this is, like, 6:00 in the morning. >> 6:00. >> right. >> that's pretty early to get a knock on the door. >> "nothing good happens from answering the door--" >> right. >> at 6:00 in the morning. >> reporter: when greg realized it was the police at his door, his first thought was that his daughters had been in a car accident. >> the investigator told me, "no, nothing is wrong with your daughters. did a guy named hockey puck, as you know him, or tom, play poker here last night?" >> hockey puck is tom's nickname? >> correct. and i said, "yes, he did." he said, "well, when he went home he found his wife murdered last night."
i actually checked him for any injuries, or any blood, or anything on him. he had nothing. >> reporter: tom had told the deputy he'd only just come in the door to find his wife dead. he'd been gone all night at his friends' house, the millers, playing poker. so that's where investigators went. >> i heard the banging on the door and ringing of the doorbell. and i woke him up. i'm like, somebody's banging at the door. >> what time is this? >> this is, like, 6:00 in the...
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Oct 10, 2017
10/17
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him. the plan came imnated from him and it was controlled by him, it wasn't the result of somebody aggravating him. that may be the reason we're finding it so very difficult to find that external trigger. we do have criminal behavior that is not triggered by some external problem or incident. it happens all the time. this was certainly the biggest most sensational crime we've seen in so long. i do think it was something he had been thinking about for many years. >> phil, the sheriff saying they've uncovered more than 200 times the shooter was traveling through las vegas was never seen with anyone else, does seem to stand in contrast with what sheriff said last week. he didn't think this could be carried out by one person alone. maybe it doesn't stand in contrast but it's interesting that they haven't, according to law enforcement hasn't been seen with someone else. >> your first response has to be before we assume that nobody else is involved, we have to look at every avenue. that's sort o
him. the plan came imnated from him and it was controlled by him, it wasn't the result of somebody aggravating him. that may be the reason we're finding it so very difficult to find that external trigger. we do have criminal behavior that is not triggered by some external problem or incident. it happens all the time. this was certainly the biggest most sensational crime we've seen in so long. i do think it was something he had been thinking about for many years. >> phil, the sheriff...
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Oct 30, 2017
10/17
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i asked him.one day he told me, he said, whatever i have, if you need it, i'd give it to you. and i said, "can i have your last name?" and he said yes, so that's what we're doing. yeah, i got his name on my leg. do you want to see it? >> although ronnie had less than a year to complete on his sentence, the couple couldn't wait to get married and put in a request for a prison wedding. >> i told them we wanted to get married october 7th. >> that will work. october the 7th. >> you're going to be a good boy. promise? say promise. >> being good in prison has not always been ronnie's strongest quality. >> yeah, i got about 100 write-ups. might be over that. been caught tattooing, smoking weed, drinking, fighting. got locked up for robbery inside of here. >> he kind of had a bully type attitude. >> what are you waiting for? >> and it was clear he wanted to be on the show. he wanted to do it, but at every turn, he was resistant. there was one point where i went into his cell to get some "b" roll of him in
i asked him.one day he told me, he said, whatever i have, if you need it, i'd give it to you. and i said, "can i have your last name?" and he said yes, so that's what we're doing. yeah, i got his name on my leg. do you want to see it? >> although ronnie had less than a year to complete on his sentence, the couple couldn't wait to get married and put in a request for a prison wedding. >> i told them we wanted to get married october 7th. >> that will work. october the...
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Oct 16, 2017
10/17
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him. would hold up something he had said and read it and ask him to elaborate or i would take off from it. i didn't want him to simply repeat what he might have already said. the other thing was we began at the very beginning with his grandparents. i knew that he would want to talk about his time in power. much, much later. but i had been told he might only grant us one interview. it worked. the first interview took two hours. we'll my got up to 1949. sure enough, we had more. host: what were the years he was in power? prof. taubman: he was in power from march 1985, to december 25th, christmas day, 1991. six years. .host: i want to go to a chapter near the end called the final days. and the start reading a little bit of it and let you pick up from there. you say that this was august to december of 1991. gorbachev finally began to purchase opponents. fewer did the job for him. one of the conspirators shot his wife and then himself. former armed services chief of staff marshal sir gay, who h
him. would hold up something he had said and read it and ask him to elaborate or i would take off from it. i didn't want him to simply repeat what he might have already said. the other thing was we began at the very beginning with his grandparents. i knew that he would want to talk about his time in power. much, much later. but i had been told he might only grant us one interview. it worked. the first interview took two hours. we'll my got up to 1949. sure enough, we had more. host: what were...
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Oct 2, 2017
10/17
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to get to see him come and meet him, albeit briefly, was amazing. hear the values and comparison to the facilities that he had, to what we have now, it is amazing. england are currently five points clear at the top of their group with two games to play that ahead of thursday's match against slovenia at wembley, they have doubts with defender philjones and fabian delph, they both sat out of training and are being assessed by the fa's medical staff. also absent at training to date werejordan henderson, daniel sturridge of liverpool and michael keane because they were playing yesterday and went to recovery sessions. gordon strachan says there is no better position in football then to better position in football then to be in charge of your own destiny! the players beat slovakia and slovenia and they are guaranteed second in their world cup qualifying group that their opponents are buying to reach the play—offs as alistair lamont reports. back at the national stadium ahead of the final home match in this world cup qualifying campaign, slovakia, the oppo
to get to see him come and meet him, albeit briefly, was amazing. hear the values and comparison to the facilities that he had, to what we have now, it is amazing. england are currently five points clear at the top of their group with two games to play that ahead of thursday's match against slovenia at wembley, they have doubts with defender philjones and fabian delph, they both sat out of training and are being assessed by the fa's medical staff. also absent at training to date werejordan...
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Oct 23, 2017
10/17
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we can't let him change the tire by himself. we got to get down there with him. you know?>> come on, brian. >> no way. >> about an hour later, we arrived at the mobile home that ray was about to call home. >> all right. yeah. here. all right. hey, you guys, man, this is like -- to me, this is a castle to me. >> we arrive at this mobile home owned by ray's parents, and they had fixed it up for both ray and roy to live in. >> come on in. and watching him go through this house, it was almost like watching one of those home makeover shows. he had so much exuberance every time he turned around and saw some modern convenience that was now his. he was so overjoyed. >> this is really actually my favorite room in the whole house. guys, i like cooking so much. and my thing -- what i want to do maybe my daughter comes by tomorrow is i want to cook deep-fried chicken tacos because i like that. it's a really good dish. >>> due to mature subject matter, viewer discretion is advised. >> msnbc takes you behind the walls of america's most notorious prisons. into a world of chaos and danger
we can't let him change the tire by himself. we got to get down there with him. you know?>> come on, brian. >> no way. >> about an hour later, we arrived at the mobile home that ray was about to call home. >> all right. yeah. here. all right. hey, you guys, man, this is like -- to me, this is a castle to me. >> we arrive at this mobile home owned by ray's parents, and they had fixed it up for both ray and roy to live in. >> come on in. and watching him go...
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Oct 9, 2017
10/17
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with him i suppose? narrator: and who was this wealthy man of mystery now living in the italian alps? i don't think they have any idea of what's going to happen. [music playing] narrator: it had all the makings of a perfect fantasy, the perfect husband away with his perfect wife for her 30th birthday in the picture-perfect greek isles. the weather was perfect. the accommodations aboard their private, fully staffed 80-foot yacht, perfect. it was late september 2004, and with their mother and a few close girlfriends along to help the golden couple celebrate, michelle weinberger had every reason to believe she was living a perfectly charmed life with the man of her dreams. then, as if suddenly doused with cold water, her dream ended. when i woke up in the morning at 7 a.m. with a horrible feeling in my stomach, he wasn't there next to me. and i put my hand on his side of the bed, and i remember feeling it empty. narrator: michelle says she darted from the bed and ran around the boat calling for her husband,
with him i suppose? narrator: and who was this wealthy man of mystery now living in the italian alps? i don't think they have any idea of what's going to happen. [music playing] narrator: it had all the makings of a perfect fantasy, the perfect husband away with his perfect wife for her 30th birthday in the picture-perfect greek isles. the weather was perfect. the accommodations aboard their private, fully staffed 80-foot yacht, perfect. it was late september 2004, and with their mother and a...
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Oct 2, 2017
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him growing up.their features and everything change. he was here last week and he asked me why am i in jail. i just told him the bad people arrested me and brought me here. and now the good people got to get me out. >> and today amariye has come for a visit along with his grandmother shannon. >> who are you seeing, ma'am? >> annishia smith. when annishia went to jail, i didn't give it a second thought about raising my grandson. i went and i got him. and he's been with me ever since. this is not how i planned on spending my 40s. i was more so thinking the kids were going to be grown. it was going to be easier. i'm gonna be able to sit back and relax. see my grand kids on sundays. none of that's true. he's getting ready to turn five this year. and she's been here ever since he was one. and this is the only real contact he's had as far as mother and child goes with his mother, that he can remember. so it's very important to get to see her. >> hey mommy. >> hey. >> visits mean a lot. but at the same time
him growing up.their features and everything change. he was here last week and he asked me why am i in jail. i just told him the bad people arrested me and brought me here. and now the good people got to get me out. >> and today amariye has come for a visit along with his grandmother shannon. >> who are you seeing, ma'am? >> annishia smith. when annishia went to jail, i didn't give it a second thought about raising my grandson. i went and i got him. and he's been with me ever...
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Oct 5, 2017
10/17
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this is a big game for him. because of him being from detroit.tonight's games for england, scotland and northern ireland, but for now, back to you. police have said the former prime minister sir edward heath would have been questioned about allegations of raping an 11—year—old boy and indecently assaulting six other people if he was still alive. friends of sir edward have insisted the claims are "groundless". wiltshire police chief constable michael veale said it would have been a dereliction of his duty if he had not investigated the former prime minister. i am satisfied, satisfied there were compelling and obvious reasons to investigate allegations made against sir edward heath. as i have said, sir edward heath was an extremely prominent, influential and high—profile person who was arguably one of the most powerful people in the world commensurate with the public office and political office he held. the allegations against him were of the utmost seriousness and from a significant number of people. i hope people will understand that given these
this is a big game for him. because of him being from detroit.tonight's games for england, scotland and northern ireland, but for now, back to you. police have said the former prime minister sir edward heath would have been questioned about allegations of raping an 11—year—old boy and indecently assaulting six other people if he was still alive. friends of sir edward have insisted the claims are "groundless". wiltshire police chief constable michael veale said it would have been a...
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Oct 19, 2017
10/17
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gave him the pretext. he was the pretext to use initially with the letter and then donald trump finally had to come clean saying no, i wasn't the letter. i wanted to get rid of him because of the russia investigation. >> the answer that we played where sessions tells senator leahy that he had not been connected by mueller. that's surprising to me. i imagine he's telling the truth because he's not going to purger himself >> i'm not willing to say he wouldn wouldn't purger himself. >> fair enough. >> it's not surprising. mr. mueller has to take witnesses in a logical order and i don't know what the investigation is showing and where sessions would be in terms of when he wanted to interview him. he clearly is someone that if i were mueller i would want to be interviewing because he has been a participant in so many episodes that relate to obstruction of justice. and i think you were right when you said the facts are pretty clear and when i was asked in may whether i could make an obstruction of justice case,
gave him the pretext. he was the pretext to use initially with the letter and then donald trump finally had to come clean saying no, i wasn't the letter. i wanted to get rid of him because of the russia investigation. >> the answer that we played where sessions tells senator leahy that he had not been connected by mueller. that's surprising to me. i imagine he's telling the truth because he's not going to purger himself >> i'm not willing to say he wouldn wouldn't purger himself....
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Oct 13, 2017
10/17
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i know about the pipe l who are supporting him and who still support him.t a green room they didn't like. they were critics of his before they went aboard his team and on and on and on. are you saying he's surrounding had ill self with fans, he's not competent, he doesn't tolerate dissent? what are you saying? >> he demands, however you say the noun of that, many of these people, and i make this point in the column, would not have gotten these opportunities under a different president. donald trump knows that. they know that. and that's sort of one of the dysfunctions of the administration. they don't have the kind of power or don't feel the kind of confidence that they might if they were serving a president who had a lot of other options. donald trump, you'll remember, did not have his pick of the crop when he went outlooking for cabinet officials. there were many people who were never trumpers who were going to enter the administration. there were many people who were nonstarters because the administration donald trump kept a list of anything that said an
i know about the pipe l who are supporting him and who still support him.t a green room they didn't like. they were critics of his before they went aboard his team and on and on and on. are you saying he's surrounding had ill self with fans, he's not competent, he doesn't tolerate dissent? what are you saying? >> he demands, however you say the noun of that, many of these people, and i make this point in the column, would not have gotten these opportunities under a different president....
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fidel would tell him they needed him so badly that he was not to go and get himself shot that he should hang back a little and calm down he'd tell them. as time went on and the rebel army started winning a military comeback it's against the test as. it also carried out in parallel a very efficient and interesting policy in the mountains. the policy was led by che guevara and consisted of setting up schools in the sierra maestra mountains and hospitals to doand in reality they were tents but the peasants were treated there and taught to read and write wherever possible. the rebel army paid great attention to their relations with them that's how little by little the guerrillas proved efficient against the dictatorship it's also how they won social support because protests were. impelling now these successes fed the development of popular mobilizations in the towns. vera left at the head of the guerrilla collins going to take a central town on the island of santa clara so it was a real street because he had never been there before the very first time he went on to santa clara he applied a
fidel would tell him they needed him so badly that he was not to go and get himself shot that he should hang back a little and calm down he'd tell them. as time went on and the rebel army started winning a military comeback it's against the test as. it also carried out in parallel a very efficient and interesting policy in the mountains. the policy was led by che guevara and consisted of setting up schools in the sierra maestra mountains and hospitals to doand in reality they were tents but the...
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Oct 30, 2017
10/17
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chief phillips woke him up. >> so what do you say to him then? >> we didn't tell him that brooke was deceased and -- and our main objective is to try to find out what he had been doin' that evening. >> you wanna hear his story before you talk about what happened to brooke? >> that's right. >> reporter: clayton told investigators he had their son that weekend. he said he was at work all day saturday and then spent the evening at home. >> could he have left the child and gone out? >> he could have. >>> coming up. Ã >> reporter: brooke morris was laid to rest at just 23 years old and while her friends said their goodbyes, her mother, tina, admits to being in denial about brooke's death. >> i kept thinkin', you know, "she's gonna call. she's gonna call. i know she's gonna call. and she's gonna say, "mom, you know, it was a (sigh) big mix-up," you know? i just couldn't grasp that she was gone forever. >> tina had a very hard time. i remember being at her funeral. and tina was holding this picture of brooke and just crying, just hysterically. i mean, t
chief phillips woke him up. >> so what do you say to him then? >> we didn't tell him that brooke was deceased and -- and our main objective is to try to find out what he had been doin' that evening. >> you wanna hear his story before you talk about what happened to brooke? >> that's right. >> reporter: clayton told investigators he had their son that weekend. he said he was at work all day saturday and then spent the evening at home. >> could he have left the...
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Oct 2, 2017
10/17
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and i spoke with him. basically gave him some words of wisdom.ething to go off and think about on his journey. he a bright guy. so that's why i had a camaraderie with him. you still young, brother. you 19. you got your whole life ahead of you. you can do anything you want to. you can be anything you want to be. him being gone, it just lessened the individuals that i communicate with. >> now that list has gotten even shorter. he recently read the court newspaper and found out new information about one of his fellow inmates in administrative segregation. >> fred, man, the dude killed a little baby, man. i found out he killed an infant. when i found out about that, we can no longer be associates, man. because what type of man would i be to associate myself with a [ bleep ] like that? >> these are charges. nothing has been proven. but i mean hinkston has his opinions and he sticks by them. really he's just a big bully. and he's in here terrorizing people. that's what he does, i guess. that's what he's good at. >> coming up, things get messier in the
and i spoke with him. basically gave him some words of wisdom.ething to go off and think about on his journey. he a bright guy. so that's why i had a camaraderie with him. you still young, brother. you 19. you got your whole life ahead of you. you can do anything you want to. you can be anything you want to be. him being gone, it just lessened the individuals that i communicate with. >> now that list has gotten even shorter. he recently read the court newspaper and found out new...
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Oct 16, 2017
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him liked him. >> did you have a crush on him maybe?popular. i wanted to get into that group. >> was there any thought of what you were going to do while you were spending time together? >> he wanted to have sexual intercourse. i said i didn't know if i wanted that because something bad could happen or somebody would find out. >> did you want to have sex? >> i told him i did but i really didn't. >> so who brought up sex? >> he did. he kept talking about it, telling me i was going to be fine. and i kept saying i don't know. and then we walked upstairs to my aunts and he picked me up and carried me to my aunt's room. >> was there anything else that he did physically to you during this encounter? >> no. >> i don't have any other questions. >> cross? >> thank you, your honor. your mom and dad tell you all of the time that they're very proud of you? >> yes. >> and that makes you feel good? >> yes. >> and you knew when they found out that you had sex with zack you were going to get into trouble that you couldn't even imagine? >> yes. >> so un
him liked him. >> did you have a crush on him maybe?popular. i wanted to get into that group. >> was there any thought of what you were going to do while you were spending time together? >> he wanted to have sexual intercourse. i said i didn't know if i wanted that because something bad could happen or somebody would find out. >> did you want to have sex? >> i told him i did but i really didn't. >> so who brought up sex? >> he did. he kept talking about...
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Oct 15, 2017
10/17
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to him. time there was no doubt, you know, we were that close. when you're presidential photographer, you do not alter things. you photograph what's there. i one-time was in kennebunkport, maine, and it was the summer before president bush was going to run for president, it was 1987. he had already been vice president. and life magazine wanted to send a photographer they are and photograph him relaxing and on vacation. and he said, no i'm on vacation. and so, life they were taken aback, they said, nobody says no to life. there was some back and forth. and they said ok, we'll let david valdez do some photos and bobby baker barrel was the photo editor at life. she didn't know me so she said ok, let's give this guy a shots. so i talked to barbara bush and said, you ought to just come over to our house at walker path at 6:00 and watch what happens. so the next morning i go over and their bedroom is literally just inside the door there. so i go in and there's george and barbara bush in bed, his ha
to him. time there was no doubt, you know, we were that close. when you're presidential photographer, you do not alter things. you photograph what's there. i one-time was in kennebunkport, maine, and it was the summer before president bush was going to run for president, it was 1987. he had already been vice president. and life magazine wanted to send a photographer they are and photograph him relaxing and on vacation. and he said, no i'm on vacation. and so, life they were taken aback, they...
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Oct 6, 2017
10/17
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why isn't the president so upset with him fire him for goodness sakes? >> josh, the president immediately accused nbc news of practicing fake news. and now we have a reporting tonight from a large group, a large group of unnamed sources in the trump white house contradicting the president saying the president is infuriated. saying that they believe that rex tillerson did call him a moron, especially because he did not deny calling him a moron and so the counter to donald trump's statements come from inside his own white house. >> look, lawrence. the reporting is true. and everybody knows it. and i'm sure that secretary tillerson is not the only person to have expressed that sentiment in one form or another. in the hushed corridors of the white house or another important building here in washington, d.c. this is an open secret. you know, lawrence, harry truman was referred to the white house as the crown jewel of the federal penal system and to torture that metaphor, it does appear we have the inmates running the asylum now. if you will recall the whole r
why isn't the president so upset with him fire him for goodness sakes? >> josh, the president immediately accused nbc news of practicing fake news. and now we have a reporting tonight from a large group, a large group of unnamed sources in the trump white house contradicting the president saying the president is infuriated. saying that they believe that rex tillerson did call him a moron, especially because he did not deny calling him a moron and so the counter to donald trump's...
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Oct 15, 2017
10/17
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pat him down real quick in case he's got it somewhere on him. >> i got it.eck his boxer and stuff. >> while cermano is strip searched, the intelligence unit inspects his cell for the key. >> see, they hide stuff inside the toilet paper rolls. it's a nightmare to actually get in there and spot anything in there, especially small items like razors and things like that. >> use one of your hands. pull your bottom lip down. upper. >> see, they try to resew it and try to hide stuff in there. >> run your fingers through your hair. take your boxers off and hand them to me. >> though the key has yet to turn up, intelligence officers find other contraband. it involves the one thing cermano treasures the most. his books. >> these are messages that one gang member is writing to another. these messages will go throughout the facility and that way they'll know these guys are here. they'll also write other messages that have to do with the same thing, like trying to get people, assault people, whatever, and they're actually able to hand these over to the staff and the staf
pat him down real quick in case he's got it somewhere on him. >> i got it.eck his boxer and stuff. >> while cermano is strip searched, the intelligence unit inspects his cell for the key. >> see, they hide stuff inside the toilet paper rolls. it's a nightmare to actually get in there and spot anything in there, especially small items like razors and things like that. >> use one of your hands. pull your bottom lip down. upper. >> see, they try to resew it and try to...
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Oct 11, 2017
10/17
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lieutenant mason killed him and mcgrath killed him and uni'dfied pawnee killed him. we really don't know. probably danny mcgrath and if not danny then buffalo bill cody. luther was there and he took hum branch to that after his brother died in the wild west show outliving everybody and said cody was not there and missed it. in fact he was when you read carr's points and distinguishes himself there. i think that's it. there's susannah, the lady that was captured. i found her descendants and finished up a grant with the state trying to locate her body but we were not successful. but her little boy with five arrows in his back lived and i found all his descendents. he was four years old at that capture. thank you. [ applause ] >> thank you, jeff. that was riveting. for many years, summit springs was reenacted in the wild west show cody put on. here's a small world factoid. after his stationing in -- on the plains, carr was sent to apache country during the apache wars as jeremy kindly mentioned my new book is available on all fine book sellers and the internet on amazon
lieutenant mason killed him and mcgrath killed him and uni'dfied pawnee killed him. we really don't know. probably danny mcgrath and if not danny then buffalo bill cody. luther was there and he took hum branch to that after his brother died in the wild west show outliving everybody and said cody was not there and missed it. in fact he was when you read carr's points and distinguishes himself there. i think that's it. there's susannah, the lady that was captured. i found her descendants and...
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Oct 23, 2017
10/17
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hang him.co reported that report, when bannon mentioned that name, someone in the audience yelled "hang him." ken vogel is with "the new york times." carla, it's good to see you again. i haven't seen you since chronicle days. thank you for coming on. could you hear that guy yell "hang him"? >> oh, yeah. this was one of the most shocking things i've seen. i've covered these conventions for almost 20 years. and to listen to bannon mention mccain and that cry of "hang him." i was expecting someone in the audience to respond, to say no, to get up and walk out. there was complete silence, chris. it really showed how there we were in orange county, the birthplace of the reagan revolution. >> true. >> and the 11th commandment, thou shalt not speak ill of another republican, the 11th commandment has been shredded. >> i think it was mccarthy knew he would run against lyndon johnson when he could go any bar in america and not get punched in the nose. now you can go into any trump rally, say something hor
hang him.co reported that report, when bannon mentioned that name, someone in the audience yelled "hang him." ken vogel is with "the new york times." carla, it's good to see you again. i haven't seen you since chronicle days. thank you for coming on. could you hear that guy yell "hang him"? >> oh, yeah. this was one of the most shocking things i've seen. i've covered these conventions for almost 20 years. and to listen to bannon mention mccain and that cry of...
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Oct 24, 2017
10/17
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i just never warmed to him. i never considered myself a never trumper, i hoped that he would come around and make that pivot, but i could just never get there given the statements that he continued to make and continues to make. i just -- i don't think that it's the best foot forward for the republican party. resentment is not a governing philosophy. and at some point we're going to have to actually get beyond it to solve the big problems we have. we have some sizeable problems to fix. >> you're going to be around until january of 2019. do i have my math right? that's a long time to be in washington after the speech today and after the statements you're making now. what do you hope to accomplish during that time? >> well, i mean, we are a co-equal branch of government. we pass the legislation, president signs it. there are things we can do, you know, with the president's help. it's usually easier. there are things we can do, you know, with the president's opposition. one thing that we're going to need to do quic
i just never warmed to him. i never considered myself a never trumper, i hoped that he would come around and make that pivot, but i could just never get there given the statements that he continued to make and continues to make. i just -- i don't think that it's the best foot forward for the republican party. resentment is not a governing philosophy. and at some point we're going to have to actually get beyond it to solve the big problems we have. we have some sizeable problems to fix. >>...
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Oct 22, 2017
10/17
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host: if you could sit down with him and give him some advice would you tell him? guest: i would tell him to just take a deep breath, slowdown, be willing to listen to people who may not necessarily already agree with you. have an open mind about some of these tough decisions. be more open to the facts and evidence about the consequences of your policies. i would certainly has a former secretary of state talk to him about korea and iran. i would talk to him about the threat russia poses to europe and to our internal well-being because of the continuing attacks that we know vladimir putin is undertaking against our own unity at home. i would do my best to lay out a case and i would say mr. president, you have the opportunity to change course. look, i know we are all fully formed adults and we get into this office, but that does not mean we stop learning circuits like you love to play golf as does my husband has to former presidents like barack obama. i bet you are not adverse to having some pro- give you some tips about how to be an even better golfer. this job is s
host: if you could sit down with him and give him some advice would you tell him? guest: i would tell him to just take a deep breath, slowdown, be willing to listen to people who may not necessarily already agree with you. have an open mind about some of these tough decisions. be more open to the facts and evidence about the consequences of your policies. i would certainly has a former secretary of state talk to him about korea and iran. i would talk to him about the threat russia poses to...
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Oct 11, 2017
10/17
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why is puerto rico about him? >> you know everything is about him, right? it's all about him.is trumpy world right now. >> these people don't even have power. they're not even watching this on tv. >> when he's attacked, when he's criticized, he was to figure out some way to attack back. he just can't stop himself. he took heat for throwing the paper towels and the way he behaved over there, and he's not going to let go. he's still talking about his electoral college -- it's all fake news and he's going to go out of his way to try and prove it even if it's fake news to try and prove the original news was fake. >> there are trump supporters who will look at this and say these are things the news is not telling me. they're getting food and medicine. and just the fact the white house is putting out a video like that that is very selective edited corrodes faith in news outlets that go ahead and reports things that are happening nationally. >> but donald trump as he was taking reaction started to actually blame the puerto rican people and in the tweet said they needed to take more r
why is puerto rico about him? >> you know everything is about him, right? it's all about him.is trumpy world right now. >> these people don't even have power. they're not even watching this on tv. >> when he's attacked, when he's criticized, he was to figure out some way to attack back. he just can't stop himself. he took heat for throwing the paper towels and the way he behaved over there, and he's not going to let go. he's still talking about his electoral college -- it's...
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Oct 2, 2017
10/17
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CSPAN3
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they went off after him. his whole troops have to restrain him this is a important moment because it brings together the notion of how he perceived war. what if best friends had just been murdered on the cold ice at princeton. the game has continued. he is courageous. he does not care if they shoot him or not. he goes after. i think it also shows because he would write a letter of recommendation. he had no enemies. he considered war to be something of a game and sport. i will get to how that changed later in life and his own mind. it also brings into play the notion of how he perceived the fight. he had a certain a plump. i think that describes imperfectly and he became the character of the army. he became what everyone in who was a soldier wanted to do. it also extended a fig leaf constantly. he treated them well. he decided the british were essentially murdering during the war and he wanted to treat them well. he wanted to treat them with fair play. i think it was part of his code of honor. he wanted to rea
they went off after him. his whole troops have to restrain him this is a important moment because it brings together the notion of how he perceived war. what if best friends had just been murdered on the cold ice at princeton. the game has continued. he is courageous. he does not care if they shoot him or not. he goes after. i think it also shows because he would write a letter of recommendation. he had no enemies. he considered war to be something of a game and sport. i will get to how that...
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that infuriated him. out of anger and out of passion. >> she was a jackson, and that's what he knew. >> reporter: so, the jacksons had money. >> that's what he knew. >> reporter: and beyond money problems, oxman seeds more suspicions in the media about skeletons in bohana's closet. he tells "hard copy" that police responded at least a dozen times to 911 calls from past girlfriends. >> there are literally incident upon incident upon incident of the police being called to his house, where he has had fights with various and sundry people, his girlfriends. >> reporter: while oxman is on his media blitz, there's a newly-assigned aggressive young prosecutor on the criminal case, lori jones. she recognizes the key to charging bohana is getting that coroner, dr. david posey, to change his "undetermined" opinion on the manner of death. >> he told us they just didn't have enough. they needed to know more. >> reporter: so jones says she reinvigorates the investigation, sending police back to the pool. that's her in
that infuriated him. out of anger and out of passion. >> she was a jackson, and that's what he knew. >> reporter: so, the jacksons had money. >> that's what he knew. >> reporter: and beyond money problems, oxman seeds more suspicions in the media about skeletons in bohana's closet. he tells "hard copy" that police responded at least a dozen times to 911 calls from past girlfriends. >> there are literally incident upon incident upon incident of the police...
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Oct 31, 2017
10/17
by
MSNBCW
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eye 125
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on him. mean, and when we talk about the president bringing family members into the administration, having ivanka working there, having jared working there and what that means, the great precedent for that is bobby kennedy. coming in and being the attorney general for his brother. that decision-making process that they went through about having him there because jack kennedy trusted him more than anybody else in the world. i feel like it's the hall of mirrors version of what we're seeing here with this kind of nepotism now. >> it is an mirror image the opposite because bobby took care of jack. trump has to take care of his family. bobby was the one who was the chief counsel on the rack et cetera committee. he was the prosecutor. bobby got him elected senator, got him elected president. bobby was the one who called when the bad pigs crashed in and the whole thing was going the wrong way, come back, bobby, i need you. during the cuban missile crisis, bobby was the one that said, let me get my g
on him. mean, and when we talk about the president bringing family members into the administration, having ivanka working there, having jared working there and what that means, the great precedent for that is bobby kennedy. coming in and being the attorney general for his brother. that decision-making process that they went through about having him there because jack kennedy trusted him more than anybody else in the world. i feel like it's the hall of mirrors version of what we're seeing here...
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Oct 11, 2017
10/17
by
MSNBCW
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this is a very volatile man and the staff around him is trying to contain him. general kelly, thankfully, has been able to keep the wheels on the train. but the risk is that general kelly, and you see it on his face, whether he was face palming during trump's u.n. speech, this is a man who shows up to work every day really doing this for the duty of the country. he's not enjoying his job, people around him tell me. how long this relationship can stay together, i think is a big question. something that everyone in both washington and the country should care about. >> let me play skeptic for a second. i wonder are we being spun by people close to the aides of the president? as a kind of like covering maneuver? to be like, well, it's not us, believe us, we're trying to keep this guy in line. >> well, i mean, everyone around kelly speaks to his character. and his stature and his integrity. so i don't think this is the case behind the scenes they're egging him on, i genuinely think they're trying to a daily basis to do the right thing. that said we're in a situation
this is a very volatile man and the staff around him is trying to contain him. general kelly, thankfully, has been able to keep the wheels on the train. but the risk is that general kelly, and you see it on his face, whether he was face palming during trump's u.n. speech, this is a man who shows up to work every day really doing this for the duty of the country. he's not enjoying his job, people around him tell me. how long this relationship can stay together, i think is a big question....