56
56
Oct 27, 2014
10/14
by
WCAU
tv
eye 56
favorite 0
quote 0
prosecutor keely said at some point josh became distracted, either by his phone or by the tv.said, is when amber took her husband by surprise, shoving him into a window she knew could easily break. >> i heard a woman screaming, "no, no, no." >> reporter: neighbor nathan mcgowan had been listening to the couple arguing. but what he heard just moments before that fatal crash became vital to the state's case. >> then, i heard running like i've never heard before in that building, i heard running coming from the left going all the way to the right and a crash. >> reporter: to the state, those footsteps revealed a key point, that amber had charged toward her husband, who was standing near that window, totally unaware. and that wasn't the only evidence given to support that theory. >> the witness that saw him coming down was standing about where we're looking up. >> reporter: remember, there were two eyewitnesses who testified they saw josh come out of that window. one offered a chilling, detailed description, recounted by officer don holloway. so the witness says he saw him coming
prosecutor keely said at some point josh became distracted, either by his phone or by the tv.said, is when amber took her husband by surprise, shoving him into a window she knew could easily break. >> i heard a woman screaming, "no, no, no." >> reporter: neighbor nathan mcgowan had been listening to the couple arguing. but what he heard just moments before that fatal crash became vital to the state's case. >> then, i heard running like i've never heard before in that...
91
91
Oct 24, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 91
favorite 0
quote 0
tonight he is hospitalized in isolation, with a high fever, courtney keely joins us now with more, courtney. >> city officials have named this doctor ever craig spencer. he recently returned here to new york city after treating ebola patients. he is now in quarantine at beliveau hospital. law enforcement officials say he called 9-1-1 with after he began to feel fever rich. he reportedly had a fever of 103-degrees and was rushed by ambulance from upper manhattan to beliveau hospital. which has isolation rooms standing by. meanwhile, mayor bill debels owe has assured new yorkers that the situation with is under control. the patient is in good shape, and has gone into great deal of action as to his actions in the last few days so we have a lot to work with. >> the rooms have sliding glass doors that allow him to be monitors without them entering the room. they will also wear several layers of protective clothing. any blood test can also be isolated and conducted near the isolation units so the samples won't have to travel to the hospital, and risk infecting others. john, we aren't likely to kn
tonight he is hospitalized in isolation, with a high fever, courtney keely joins us now with more, courtney. >> city officials have named this doctor ever craig spencer. he recently returned here to new york city after treating ebola patients. he is now in quarantine at beliveau hospital. law enforcement officials say he called 9-1-1 with after he began to feel fever rich. he reportedly had a fever of 103-degrees and was rushed by ambulance from upper manhattan to beliveau hospital. which...
63
63
Oct 12, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 63
favorite 0
quote 0
our courtney keely. of joins us. this begs the question, is this enough? >> well thomas critics say it's not enough. and they say not only more measures need to be put in place but these screenings may not be fail-proof. people may lie on the screening forms, take temperature reducing drugs p before traveling. passengers will be screened for signs of illness, high temperatures regardless whether they were checked on departure. they will leave contact details so they can be contacted earlier if necessary. at a press conference at jfk many a top official at centers for disease control said this is only some measure of what must be taken. >> one part of a multilayered approach. already there's 100% of the travelers are being screened on exit. no port of exit or port of entry or airline response procedure will supplant the need for state and local public health departments clinics, hospitals to be prepared to detect a case might it occur and to rapidly identify, respond, isolate and prevent transmission. >> reporter: any patients suspected of infection will be
our courtney keely. of joins us. this begs the question, is this enough? >> well thomas critics say it's not enough. and they say not only more measures need to be put in place but these screenings may not be fail-proof. people may lie on the screening forms, take temperature reducing drugs p before traveling. passengers will be screened for signs of illness, high temperatures regardless whether they were checked on departure. they will leave contact details so they can be contacted...
53
53
Oct 13, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 53
favorite 0
quote 0
courtney keely explains. >> nobody discovered seattle, washington. >> seattle city council has vo votednimously. berkeley california has been doing it since 1992. christopher columbus has long been described as discovering the new world 500 plus years ago. but indigenous populations say that's impossible, people were already living there. >> it internalizes genocide in our are population. i felt it myself growing up it's time to change it so they can be proud of themselves and not honor a man that murdered their family. >> in 1492 columbus arrived on hispaniola his own journal describes the enslaving of the local population. but italian americans argue that the day is the recognition ever columbus as an explorer and changing it is an insult to their culture and heritage. >> italian americans everywhere are intensely offended. >> the city of seattle is actually named for a native american leader but the effort to celebrate as different holidays was shot down. the italian american group features, not to recognize columbus day on the state level. it's still a federal holiday meaning that m
courtney keely explains. >> nobody discovered seattle, washington. >> seattle city council has vo votednimously. berkeley california has been doing it since 1992. christopher columbus has long been described as discovering the new world 500 plus years ago. but indigenous populations say that's impossible, people were already living there. >> it internalizes genocide in our are population. i felt it myself growing up it's time to change it so they can be proud of themselves and...
90
90
Oct 11, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 90
favorite 0
quote 0
. >> cot knee keely live from jfk in new york. i am joined by dr. debby neferumple.appreciate you joining us. so let's pick up on what courtney is talking about and dig in a little deeper. they are screening at these airports. right? taking temperatures? doing all of this type of thing. what's the next step if someone has a sky high temperature right there at the airport? what next? >> so they have to ace light them, which i am glad they have these rooms at bellevue at a hospital because i was a little bit concerned before that if you just take people who might have a fever, they may not have ebola. but if you put them in these rooms and don't clean them in between, the standards that you need, people could get sick from this whole process, you know, catch something else in the process. so, if they take them to these isolation wards, they can observe them to see if they develop symptoms. the people who go into those rooms afterwards should be safe. >> how do you predict this going? because often people have fevers. it's not that uncommon. >> exactly. so, i think we a
. >> cot knee keely live from jfk in new york. i am joined by dr. debby neferumple.appreciate you joining us. so let's pick up on what courtney is talking about and dig in a little deeper. they are screening at these airports. right? taking temperatures? doing all of this type of thing. what's the next step if someone has a sky high temperature right there at the airport? what next? >> so they have to ace light them, which i am glad they have these rooms at bellevue at a hospital...
47
47
Oct 4, 2014
10/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 47
favorite 0
quote 0
covered knee keely, al jazeera. >> for more on the life and legacy of john claud "baby doc" a spoekszson for them. what was -- i think courtney did a great job on this. i want to drill down on this. what was life like for the average haitian under baby doc? >> baby doc duvalier controlled the political life of haiti. he used a network of para military groups, the famous tonton makuts, section chiefs, the army, basically to ensure that there was no dissent in haiti. known tried to form a political party faced danger. newspapers were shut down. journalists were tortured. many were thrown into exile. so there was no political life under john claud duvalier. >> it seems his legacy continues to linger over haiti, in particular because the current president, president martelli released a statement that made no remarks about what baby doc did to their country. what does that say about where he fits in the history of haiti? >> well, unfortunately, martelli, the current president, has brought in a lot of people from the duvalier administration. when duvalier came back in between -- >> why do y
covered knee keely, al jazeera. >> for more on the life and legacy of john claud "baby doc" a spoekszson for them. what was -- i think courtney did a great job on this. i want to drill down on this. what was life like for the average haitian under baby doc? >> baby doc duvalier controlled the political life of haiti. he used a network of para military groups, the famous tonton makuts, section chiefs, the army, basically to ensure that there was no dissent in haiti. known...
97
97
Oct 16, 2014
10/14
by
CNBC
tv
eye 97
favorite 0
quote 1
kate keely, how you doing? >> doing well, silly, sully, i mean. ken griffin thinks that even though we have been through a couple of rough days here for sure, a lot of what's going on in the markets is really just traders being distracted essentially by noise, you know, concerns of macroweakness, for instance, outside of the u.s., not that it's a non-issue, but not a new issue. he thinks the growth story here is really pretty much intact. and what we are experiencing really is a disappointment, he said, in the gap between expectation and reality more than anything else. well, what does he mean by that specifically? new signs of weakness in peripheral europe. fierce of underwhelming growth in japan and a long period of what he called very, very immediate yoke irgrowth in the developed economies, all dragging market sentiment down. he said the u.s. economy is relatively strong and expects to see an interest rate hike by the fed relatively soon, didn't put a date on it but said it is a question of when, not if. one overarching concern would be the im
kate keely, how you doing? >> doing well, silly, sully, i mean. ken griffin thinks that even though we have been through a couple of rough days here for sure, a lot of what's going on in the markets is really just traders being distracted essentially by noise, you know, concerns of macroweakness, for instance, outside of the u.s., not that it's a non-issue, but not a new issue. he thinks the growth story here is really pretty much intact. and what we are experiencing really is a...