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Jun 1, 2014
06/14
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he will most likely not leave holman until his 30-year sentence is complete. >> i have two daughters, and i look at it from that perspective. don't want these people around my family. no. but there again, some day, in this case robert tetter is going to walk out this door free. so, you have to look at it from that side. he's going to go free. it may not be on parole, but he's going to eos his sentence in 2014, and he's coming out. and society is going to have to accept that. >> see you later. >> coming up -- >> i'm making a birdhouse right now. >> two inmates seek a creative respite from hell. >> art is my sanity, and my salvation. i mean, that's what keep me stable. and personal victories. we grow new beginnings, and better endings. grand gestures, happier happy hours. so let's gro something greater with miracle-gro. what will you grow? you need to see this. show 'em the curve. ♪ do you know what this means? the greater the curvature, the bigger the difference. [sci-fi tractor beam sound] ...sucked me right in... it's beautiful. gotta admit one thing... ...can't beat the view. ♪ intr
he will most likely not leave holman until his 30-year sentence is complete. >> i have two daughters, and i look at it from that perspective. don't want these people around my family. no. but there again, some day, in this case robert tetter is going to walk out this door free. so, you have to look at it from that side. he's going to go free. it may not be on parole, but he's going to eos his sentence in 2014, and he's coming out. and society is going to have to accept that. >> see...
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Jun 15, 2014
06/14
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. >> about halfway through ten weeks of filming for our "extended stay" series at holman correctional facility in alabama, our crew experienced that reality firsthand. they had just finished a routine interview with an inmate in his cell. it was a little after 12:00 noon. >> there was a phone call, and one of our producers went back to get this phone call. and if it wasn't for that, we would have been gone, we would have been out to lunch. as we're standing there waiting for our producer to finish with their phone call, these officers run by. so obviously, i turn on the camera, press record and roll with them. >> suddenly all these officers ran by me and we heard all this commotion and i saw an inmate who was wearing white covered in blood. brian, our cameraman, and i both started filming immediately and realized that a stabbing had taken place. it was such a chaotic scene that i was trying to keep track of what everybody was doing. some of the officers were trying to rescue the stabbing victim. other officers were going after the assailant. >> i got a knife. >> the funny part about t
. >> about halfway through ten weeks of filming for our "extended stay" series at holman correctional facility in alabama, our crew experienced that reality firsthand. they had just finished a routine interview with an inmate in his cell. it was a little after 12:00 noon. >> there was a phone call, and one of our producers went back to get this phone call. and if it wasn't for that, we would have been gone, we would have been out to lunch. as we're standing there waiting...
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Jun 29, 2014
06/14
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night. >> by all appearances, tommy "cheese curl" tunstall, serving life for robbery, was one of holman's. >> tommy was an interesting inmate to interview, actually, because he seemed very calm and confident. quietly confident. >> bring your ass on. [ bleep ]. >> more often than not, when we would start interviewing tommy, inmates would start yelling things at him. >> you've got to tell me what the deal is with you. everybody -- you could run for president in here. >> i guess i get along with everybody. >> but tunstall chooses to spend much of his time with just one man, kenyatta mcmillen, who is serving life without parole for murder. >> i love cheese because he always been there for me, no matter what, and he ain't never changed or turned his back on me on nothing. >> mcmillen and tunstall had been friends for about three years when we met them at holman. >> it done got to the point to where it's like if i'm thinking about something, before i can get it out, he can say it. and it's vice versa. >> do you identify as gay? >> do me -- do i do? yes. >> you're gay? >> yes. >> i was fascinate
night. >> by all appearances, tommy "cheese curl" tunstall, serving life for robbery, was one of holman's. >> tommy was an interesting inmate to interview, actually, because he seemed very calm and confident. quietly confident. >> bring your ass on. [ bleep ]. >> more often than not, when we would start interviewing tommy, inmates would start yelling things at him. >> you've got to tell me what the deal is with you. everybody -- you could run for...
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Jun 22, 2014
06/14
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. >> at the holman correctional facility in alabama, the cats are even more abundant, but none of them >> at holman, they're just wild cats who the inmates connect with and start feeding, even though it drives the staff crazy. >> i'm going to catch him. i'm going to catch every one of you cats. >> there was a sergeant this charge, sergeant english, whose job it was to try to deal with these feral cats and get them outside the prison. the cats became his nemesis, particularly fluffy. >> there's fluffy. i think you're going to have a little trouble with that one. it's personal between him and her, you know what i'm saying? so it's wit, animal wit against human man wit. >> i have been trying to catch fluffy for six months. i haven't caught her yet. >> the inmates love the cats and the cats trust the inmates. and it was just a neat story to see the officers trying to get the cats and the inmates trying to protect the cats. and it just proved to be a really cool story. >> fluffy's having another kitten. >> fluffy seemed to be perpetually breeding more and more kittens. >> she's going to get
. >> at the holman correctional facility in alabama, the cats are even more abundant, but none of them >> at holman, they're just wild cats who the inmates connect with and start feeding, even though it drives the staff crazy. >> i'm going to catch him. i'm going to catch every one of you cats. >> there was a sergeant this charge, sergeant english, whose job it was to try to deal with these feral cats and get them outside the prison. the cats became his nemesis,...
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Jun 15, 2014
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correctional facility in alabama. >> there was an unusual phenomenon at holman prison. they had a big problem with public masturbation. they were dealing with the problem as best they can. if a person got caught, they were immediately put into lockup and they had to go through certain programs in order to get out of lockup. >> the violation is known as rule 38. and the prison's warden had developed a no-nonsense approach to dealing with it. >> my rule is, if you get caught with a 38, there's no questions asked. we're locking you up. we'll sort it out later, but for the time being, you're going to lockup. that's just automatic. okay? the first offense is 90 days, second time i double it, third time it goes to 270, the fourth time it's a year. >> but it happened a lot for some reason there. it was getting to the point where, particularly in the lockdown facility, you'd walk down the tier and all you'd see are hands going. it gets pretty unnerving after a while. i attribute it to the fact that there were a tremendous amount of very young men locked up there, with very long
correctional facility in alabama. >> there was an unusual phenomenon at holman prison. they had a big problem with public masturbation. they were dealing with the problem as best they can. if a person got caught, they were immediately put into lockup and they had to go through certain programs in order to get out of lockup. >> the violation is known as rule 38. and the prison's warden had developed a no-nonsense approach to dealing with it. >> my rule is, if you get caught...
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Jun 22, 2014
06/14
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and, of course, all the other inmates started hooting and hollering everywhere she went at holman prison a scene. >> holly was in ad seg because his various relationships with other inmates led to disruptions, but he's no stranger to troubling relationships. he's serving 25 years for murdering thea man he considered to be his husband. >>>'s and his some of his colleagues were having a little valentine's ball. he comes in and i'm associating with another guy, just talking, and he just grabbed me and one thing led to another. he drug me outside, started to beat on me. beating me, beating me, beating me and beating me. i just -- i stabbed him. he fell, i stabbed him again. >> holly did not let prison end his love life. he told us he's had three prison husbands so far and the current one figured out a way for the couple to be close to one another in the crowded general population dorms. >> i'll tell you he would actually pay the guy that slept next to me, he would actually pay him to sleep in his bed. uh-huh, sure would, just to be beside me. ain't that something? >> the inmate holly conside
and, of course, all the other inmates started hooting and hollering everywhere she went at holman prison a scene. >> holly was in ad seg because his various relationships with other inmates led to disruptions, but he's no stranger to troubling relationships. he's serving 25 years for murdering thea man he considered to be his husband. >>>'s and his some of his colleagues were having a little valentine's ball. he comes in and i'm associating with another guy, just talking, and he...
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Jun 18, 2014
06/14
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. >>> i'm proud to announce the recipient of the $1,000 scholarship to greg holman. >> two students surprisedt the high school for creative and performing arts. two $1,000 scholarships were handed out. congratulations to both of them. >>> now for nbc 10 news at 11:00. west nile is here. mosquitos came back positive for the virus tonight. what's being done to eliminate the danger and what you can do after tonight's rain in your yard to keep the biting bugs from multiplying. >>> we had 94 today. back into the 80s tomorrow. showers and thunderstorms likely. a gorgeous day on friday. >> some relief after the storms. >>> the news continues now with "nbc nightly news" with brian williams. can the federal government help pressure the washington redskins to change their name? >>> on our broadcast tonight, under attack. extremists launch a major assault on the largest oil refinery in all of iraq, now shut down with oil prices on the rise. >>> taking a hit. the feds go after the redskins where it hurts the most, money from team merchandise, as the controversy over the team's name takes a surprise turn.
. >>> i'm proud to announce the recipient of the $1,000 scholarship to greg holman. >> two students surprisedt the high school for creative and performing arts. two $1,000 scholarships were handed out. congratulations to both of them. >>> now for nbc 10 news at 11:00. west nile is here. mosquitos came back positive for the virus tonight. what's being done to eliminate the danger and what you can do after tonight's rain in your yard to keep the biting bugs from...
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Jun 29, 2014
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most of it at the holman correctional facility in alabama and sometimes it seems to have been just ashe's heard the sound of his real name. >> they call me red top. >> hey, redtop. >> they call me redtop. they call me ringating red. >> is there one you prefer? >> none. i just answer to them all. i've learned to answer to them all over the years. >> stall began serving his sentence 28 years earlier, when he was 22 years old. >> back when i first came here there was a lot of violence. >> was it scary? were you scared a lot? >> scared to death. >> my first impression of lawrence stall was that he doesn't fit. he didn't fit in those surroundings. i think that's initially what brought us to him. he looked a little meek. the red hair. the glasses. he looked more like a college professor, versus an inmate. >> the social system in here is totally different. it's nothing like the free world. it's a totally different world, you know? i mean, it's like moving to japan and not knowing japanese, you know? you know, you're lost. and that's how i'd be now if i got out. i'd be lost. >> due to a fatal
most of it at the holman correctional facility in alabama and sometimes it seems to have been just ashe's heard the sound of his real name. >> they call me red top. >> hey, redtop. >> they call me redtop. they call me ringating red. >> is there one you prefer? >> none. i just answer to them all. i've learned to answer to them all over the years. >> stall began serving his sentence 28 years earlier, when he was 22 years old. >> back when i first came...
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Jun 29, 2014
06/14
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. >> during our "extended stay" shoot at the holman correctional facility in alabama, we were filming interviews in the administrative segregation unit when a loud disturbance occurred. >> they put me in a cell! where it comes down to my [ bleep ] bed. it comes down on my bed, man. i can can't [ bleep ] sleep. >> inmate jamie bell is in a rage because his toilet is overflowing. he blames the inmate in the cell above him of creating the problem by interfering with the plumbing. >> [ bleep ]. >> jamie bell. listen. >> the confrontation becomes so heated that warden grant culliver himself gets involved. >> if you would shut [ bleep ] up, then nobody would be so [ bleep ] off at your ass. you're acting like a child. >> listen. >> we just moved him in. >> the inmate above bell's cell is serving life. his name is andrew alexander. >> there was no proof that this guy above him had done anything. but while we were filming i glanced up and i saw andrew alexander staring at me through his window. and i kind of asked him with my mouth, did you do this? and he just had the most cold, evil smile c
. >> during our "extended stay" shoot at the holman correctional facility in alabama, we were filming interviews in the administrative segregation unit when a loud disturbance occurred. >> they put me in a cell! where it comes down to my [ bleep ] bed. it comes down on my bed, man. i can can't [ bleep ] sleep. >> inmate jamie bell is in a rage because his toilet is overflowing. he blames the inmate in the cell above him of creating the problem by interfering with the...
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Jun 29, 2014
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. >> despite his attitude, some at holman are trying to help wilson turn his life around. >> i've knownenneth for several years. a long time. he's a young man with a lot of anger problems. he acts out through his anger. that's what we're trying to deal with now. >> i got a bad anger problem, know what i'm saying? angry because i'm in prison. i'm angry because i ain't with my family. i'm angry because of the way they treat you, the things they do to you. it ain't never a happy day in prison. >> at the time of our visit, wilson had just completed an anger management program that deputy warden tony patterson arranged for him to take in his cell. >> he needs to grow up. immaturity. you know. but he's working on it. >> i got kids, man. everybody going to change one day. >> for wilson, change is essential. most of his sentence for assaulting the officer will overlap with his original sentence. but just a day after we interviewed him, wilson's anger surfaced again. when he saw our crew on the exercise yard, he greeted them with an obscene gesture. >> one [ bleep ], y'all, two, retire. we don't
. >> despite his attitude, some at holman are trying to help wilson turn his life around. >> i've knownenneth for several years. a long time. he's a young man with a lot of anger problems. he acts out through his anger. that's what we're trying to deal with now. >> i got a bad anger problem, know what i'm saying? angry because i'm in prison. i'm angry because i ain't with my family. i'm angry because of the way they treat you, the things they do to you. it ain't never a happy...
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Jun 26, 2014
06/14
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. >> all right, finally tonight, phillies pitcher cliff lee was in the community at holman automotive raising money to send camden kids to summer camp through urban promise. q and a, autographs and photos and cliff will give dozens of kids a summer to remember. thanks for watching "eyewitness news" at 6:00 we will return at ten and we're back here on cbs-3 at the 11:00. >>> "cbs evening news" is next, scott pelley reporting tonight from new york city. >> pelley: tonight, can abortion protesters be barred from clinics. the supreme court ride on that today, and voted to limit the power of the president. reports from jan crawford and bill plante. team u.s.a. proves you can win for losing. elaine quijano at the world cup in brazil. two families who lost children to the santa pash ramass murderer, sit down with ben tracy in their first television interview. >> reporter: what does it mean to you to read those words that somebody wrote about your son. >> here they come! >> pelley: and we sent vanita nair to cape cod. she came back with a whale of a story. >> oh, my gosh! captioning sponsored
. >> all right, finally tonight, phillies pitcher cliff lee was in the community at holman automotive raising money to send camden kids to summer camp through urban promise. q and a, autographs and photos and cliff will give dozens of kids a summer to remember. thanks for watching "eyewitness news" at 6:00 we will return at ten and we're back here on cbs-3 at the 11:00. >>> "cbs evening news" is next, scott pelley reporting tonight from new york city. >>...
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Jun 22, 2014
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. >> when we visited the holman correctional facility in alabama, producers met keith mason, who also a female persona. >> what's your first name again? >> keith. but they call me precious. what makes me a girl? first of all, it's this. again, this is my choice. it's nothing i was forced into like i walked into the door, they slapped me down and said you going to be my bitch. it wasn't like that. when i came in, i came in, the first day i got here, i went out and arched my eyebrows. i did what i did. and i let the camp know, i'm gay. >> having already served an earlier sentence for vag vated assault, precious was doing life on a robbery conviction. and when we met him, he was living in a state of domestic partnership with fellow inmate marquis nobles. >> i'm the wife. he's the male. i got on my band and his. that's mine. that's his. yeah. got that right here. >> this is my partner. this is my friend. this is -- this is, you know, the person that give me strength. you know, like i said, i don't have family or anything. this is the person that helps me out day to day zpl but despite bei
. >> when we visited the holman correctional facility in alabama, producers met keith mason, who also a female persona. >> what's your first name again? >> keith. but they call me precious. what makes me a girl? first of all, it's this. again, this is my choice. it's nothing i was forced into like i walked into the door, they slapped me down and said you going to be my bitch. it wasn't like that. when i came in, i came in, the first day i got here, i went out and arched my...
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Jun 12, 2014
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that's brittany holman from portland, oregon. here's andrew englebrecht, 23 years of age, from new lennox, illinois, $80,000 in debt. this is what andrew writes. "it makes me depressed. i have no hope. nothing will ever get better. i'm scared. i can't go get my master's because my life has already been ruined. i ruined my parent's life. the bank finally was willing to work with us and not take our house. that doesn't mean we can pay the loans back either. i can't move out of the house. i can't propose to the girl i love. i can't live because i can't dream. i'm afraid to have kids because i'm scared they wouldn't have a chance." andrew englebrecht from illinois. here's andrew erics from chicago. $123,000 in debt. eric writes, "my law school debt is astronomical. it will keep me from being a homeowner for a long time. i believe serious efforts need to be made to reduce the cost of attending both college and graduate school." here's from kelly wiener, 27 from brooklyn, new york, $134,000 in debt. "i went to law school because i want
that's brittany holman from portland, oregon. here's andrew englebrecht, 23 years of age, from new lennox, illinois, $80,000 in debt. this is what andrew writes. "it makes me depressed. i have no hope. nothing will ever get better. i'm scared. i can't go get my master's because my life has already been ruined. i ruined my parent's life. the bank finally was willing to work with us and not take our house. that doesn't mean we can pay the loans back either. i can't move out of the house. i...
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Jun 17, 2014
06/14
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university hospital audrey kleet is a vad coordinator at morristown medical center and finally sharon holman is a senior occupational therapist at kessler institute for rehabilitation i want to thank all of you for joining us this is interesting other than the fact that ventricular assist device is a hard thing to say doctor it is huge important and groundbreaking no? absolutely these devices are mechanical circulatory support systems that help support patients with failing hearts you know we - in the united states i think there's about 2000 transplants done a year 2000? 2000 a year 2200 roughly worldwide it's about 5,000 so there's probably about 100,000 patients in the us alone that could benefit from a device like this part of it is getting the word out these patients have failing hearts for a multitude of reasons whether it's mi's heart attacks whether it's idiopathic we don't know the cause or viruses these patients present what we call class three or class four heart failure like mister shukis he said he was kinda doing his living his life canoeing or kayaking and riding his bike and m
university hospital audrey kleet is a vad coordinator at morristown medical center and finally sharon holman is a senior occupational therapist at kessler institute for rehabilitation i want to thank all of you for joining us this is interesting other than the fact that ventricular assist device is a hard thing to say doctor it is huge important and groundbreaking no? absolutely these devices are mechanical circulatory support systems that help support patients with failing hearts you know we -...
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Jun 14, 2014
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elise holman, al jazeera. >> england started it's campaign against italy a little later.hey'll meet for the first world cup ever played in the rain forest, but there are concerns of how the players will play in the hot and humid conditions. we have reports from the amazon 2347 another training day. one of the local teams were temperatures in june hover between 30 and 40 degrees celsius with the humidity. >> it's difficult, and we train every day in this heat. >> the coach knows when opposing out of town players are suffering from the temperatures. >> they start to get fast and after 30 minutes players usually can't take it any more because as we say here, the heat jumps on your back. >> all of these players were born and raised here in the amazon region of brazil, so they tell me over time they've been able to adjust and adapt to the punishing heat and humidity. but that's a luxury that the professional footballers at the world cup won't have. the consequences of the heat on the bodies of athletes as doctors had local players swallow tiny temperature devices. the bodies r
elise holman, al jazeera. >> england started it's campaign against italy a little later.hey'll meet for the first world cup ever played in the rain forest, but there are concerns of how the players will play in the hot and humid conditions. we have reports from the amazon 2347 another training day. one of the local teams were temperatures in june hover between 30 and 40 degrees celsius with the humidity. >> it's difficult, and we train every day in this heat. >> the coach...
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Jun 16, 2014
06/14
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>> since our last visit to holman, warden culliver has left the prison.e commissioner with the alabama department of corrections. but when we traveled to the hillsborough county jail in tampa, florida, we met sergeant sarah herman, who seemed to be cast from the same mold. >> you tearing up my property? one-way trip to charlie, dude, and you're never coming out. quiet. stop talking. you don't tell her what to do. close that new york mouth for a minute. jackson, i don't forget something. don't waste my time. we got time enough to find out how long you been here, okay? don't underestimate miss herman. >> like warden culliver, sergeant herman was known for being both tough, and compassionate. >> have you been drinking any water? come and get a cup and start drinking some water for me, okay? sometimes when you're sick like that and you're not hydrated, it messes with your mind. >> when sergeant herman would walk into a unit, it was almost as if, you know, a sergeant in the army or something was walking into a barracks. people really, they understood that she
>> since our last visit to holman, warden culliver has left the prison.e commissioner with the alabama department of corrections. but when we traveled to the hillsborough county jail in tampa, florida, we met sergeant sarah herman, who seemed to be cast from the same mold. >> you tearing up my property? one-way trip to charlie, dude, and you're never coming out. quiet. stop talking. you don't tell her what to do. close that new york mouth for a minute. jackson, i don't forget...
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Jun 21, 2014
06/14
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sharon holman she was given and $8,200,500 bonus for her performance during the fiscal year 2013 onlyations against her cave to light as a result of this committee's work did a conscientious employee examine whether she received a bonus and 2013 when we questioned the award they determined she was given a bonus due to an administrative error. however documentations in all performance reviews are old and it be reviewed and signed by the secretary. furthermore her direct supervisor susan bauer stated it made that sharon received her bonus for a highly successful breeding and improving access concerns and the wait list. perhaps we should docile question her qualifications these stories do not match up and it brings into question and the transparency and diligence when insuring thousands of dollars in bonuses. although acting secretary gibson has pled of freeze on all bonuses for the time being it is still the committee's responsibility to understand the rationale for awarding five figure bonuses to individuals who have clearly fallen short of the department's mission and their commitment
sharon holman she was given and $8,200,500 bonus for her performance during the fiscal year 2013 onlyations against her cave to light as a result of this committee's work did a conscientious employee examine whether she received a bonus and 2013 when we questioned the award they determined she was given a bonus due to an administrative error. however documentations in all performance reviews are old and it be reviewed and signed by the secretary. furthermore her direct supervisor susan bauer...
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Jun 9, 2014
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. >> thank you, i'm carl holman from the atlantic council. in observation in questions from both bob and kurt, russian convention military power is not particularly good. in a way they're relying more on nuclear weapons to boltle sister up their inferiority which is an interesting turn to the eisenhower years. and i mark that interception between nato and russia which may not be affordable. let me pose a question in terms of two heroic assumptions. suppose, and there's evidence to suggest this will not happen we reach an agreement with iran, in which they will not build weapons of mass destruction. second, suppose in syria, weapons of mass destruction are eliminated so question, they will have weapons with conventional warheads. obviously, the europeans would like to spend far less. one of our particular exit strategies might be to keep the infrastructure in place so if things change we could bring back missile defense? how do you both gain? should negotiations succeed, what does that mean for missile defense in europe. >> bob, do you want to
. >> thank you, i'm carl holman from the atlantic council. in observation in questions from both bob and kurt, russian convention military power is not particularly good. in a way they're relying more on nuclear weapons to boltle sister up their inferiority which is an interesting turn to the eisenhower years. and i mark that interception between nato and russia which may not be affordable. let me pose a question in terms of two heroic assumptions. suppose, and there's evidence to suggest...
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Jun 13, 2014
06/14
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removal operations associate director tom holman and health and human services acting assistant secretary mark greenberging. we're here to update you on the steps we are taking to address the surge in unaccompanied children along our nation's southwest border, focused in the rio grande valley sector. last year cbp encountered over 24,000 unaccompanied children crossing the border. by may of this year the number has already doubled to just over 47,000. this correlates with an overall rise in illegal migration into the rio grande valley sector principally by what we refer to as third country nationals, those from guatemala, el salvador and honduras that represent about three-quarters of this population. i saw this situation vividly for myself on may 11th, which happens to have been mother's day, when i visited mcallen processing center. i approached a 10-year-old girl and asked her, where is your mother? she responded, i don't have a mother. i'm looking for my father in the united states. i returned to washington the next day determined to do something about this situation. as i testified t
removal operations associate director tom holman and health and human services acting assistant secretary mark greenberging. we're here to update you on the steps we are taking to address the surge in unaccompanied children along our nation's southwest border, focused in the rio grande valley sector. last year cbp encountered over 24,000 unaccompanied children crossing the border. by may of this year the number has already doubled to just over 47,000. this correlates with an overall rise in...
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Jun 4, 2014
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>> if you take a look at the list that's there, meg whitman of hp, mike holman of jcpenney, you see aeme emerging. it has to do with the internal activists, how people have ficked out how to build a business for the longer term without having to be shaken down by scare tactics, the sharknado syndrome. these are people who have been building tremendous value but focusing within. the basic theme of the conference is transforming with transparency. investing in innovation amid public scrutiny. how could i don't build for the long term? mayors from some 15 major cities feel short-term pressures. we take a look at financial issues. >> let me ask you about that. even though the activists may not already be in under the tent, clearly there's pressure as you're suggesting for ceos to act as if they are. and the question, therefore, becomes whether that is a good thing for the economy, whether it's a good thing for the markets. >> well, you know, i'm very sympathetic to many people who have been targeted, great firms of great leaders, that i think are being unjustly have a match put to their l
>> if you take a look at the list that's there, meg whitman of hp, mike holman of jcpenney, you see aeme emerging. it has to do with the internal activists, how people have ficked out how to build a business for the longer term without having to be shaken down by scare tactics, the sharknado syndrome. these are people who have been building tremendous value but focusing within. the basic theme of the conference is transforming with transparency. investing in innovation amid public...
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i'd like to wish a happy father's day to my dad, kevin holman in evans, georgia.eah ♪ keeping a billion customers a year flying, means keeping seven billion transactions flowing. and when weather hits, it's data mayhem. but airlines running hp end-to-end solutions are always calm during a storm. so if your business deals with the unexpected, hp big data and cloud solutions make sure you always know what's coming - and are ready for it. make it matter. so i can reach ally bank 24/7 but there...