SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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Apr 16, 2015
04/15
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mr. clark, the reason he thinks of this amendment is because we believe the amendment is blank because we are -- the title is stating that the board of supervisors will be approving all actions previously taken by city employees and those actions were not in the legislation. therefore, it is advised that that language be removed from the legislation. >> all right. so let me suggest this. first of all, i appreciate if this was a clerk thing or whatever but we need to have these things resofd before we go to committee hearing. i don't want to start dleeth things if it's the last time you come before the committee. i don't appreciate this is going on right now. let me suggest this, i would like to have a motion to continue this item and we'll go on recess until 1:00. so when we gafl down for our full board meeting, we can solve it this. this seems to be a little bit less subs then et but i don't want to trip any wires here. we'll come back and really regret it. so let me suggest that as a course o
mr. clark, the reason he thinks of this amendment is because we believe the amendment is blank because we are -- the title is stating that the board of supervisors will be approving all actions previously taken by city employees and those actions were not in the legislation. therefore, it is advised that that language be removed from the legislation. >> all right. so let me suggest this. first of all, i appreciate if this was a clerk thing or whatever but we need to have these things...
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Apr 4, 2015
04/15
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mr. clarke: welcome. i'm tim clarke and i'm the museum's deputy director and we are spending time on the civil war medicine exhibit and special other things to show you. the national museum of health and medicine was founded in 1862 and known as the army medical museum and the mission was to collect specimens of morbid anatomy and send them to washington to study to improve the care of the soldier. at the time of the civil war the museum's staff were doing the business of lessons learned. they were trying to understand the nature of battlefield medicine, and trauma and share it with their counterparts on the battlefield. this museum and its collection started during the war and in the early days, the museum was housed in the surgeon general's office. the first artifacts were on a shelf and in a building that we know as the riggs bank building near the white house. but wasn't until after the tragic events of the assassination of president lincoln that the museum moved into its first long-term residence and
mr. clarke: welcome. i'm tim clarke and i'm the museum's deputy director and we are spending time on the civil war medicine exhibit and special other things to show you. the national museum of health and medicine was founded in 1862 and known as the army medical museum and the mission was to collect specimens of morbid anatomy and send them to washington to study to improve the care of the soldier. at the time of the civil war the museum's staff were doing the business of lessons learned. they...
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Apr 8, 2015
04/15
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the whole point the defense attorney like mrs. clark had to do was maintain her own credibility. the jury would listen to her in the penalty phase. and to come up with evidence begin in the guilt phase as she has done. lay the frame work. call your client an adolescent. blame the dead brother for as much as you can. only because you have to get to at least one juror and say, knowing he's going to spend the rest of his life in jail can we do something other than kill him as well is this. >> they're not going to find sympathy in the defendant. if you can get to the jury is and and is -- to the jury and say we have to be better than the attackers 19 years of age. it's always to convince one juror not to kill him. you've done the best you can. the only job is to avoid the dealt penalty-- the death penalty. this breaking news just in. dzhokhar tsarnaev is kurnltcurrently standing as the counts are read. 15 of 15 guilty so far. we're a waiting the verdict on the other 15 counts. this is significant. dzhokhar tsarnaev is going to be eligible for the death penalty. count 16 now. 16 of 16
the whole point the defense attorney like mrs. clark had to do was maintain her own credibility. the jury would listen to her in the penalty phase. and to come up with evidence begin in the guilt phase as she has done. lay the frame work. call your client an adolescent. blame the dead brother for as much as you can. only because you have to get to at least one juror and say, knowing he's going to spend the rest of his life in jail can we do something other than kill him as well is this....
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Apr 17, 2015
04/15
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KRON
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person is making the allegations that is because the name is blocked out something that bothered mr. clark shares office they believe the allegations were made by a former employe p who was now being held for murder he says they also with the visitation and records and found evidence to back up their suspicion coming up a lawsuit against the owner of sfo cisco part of a building under fire of we would tell you why they're calling the apartment and apartment from-- not the place. you wish your dog could fight off fleas and ticks. but since he can't... you rely on frontline plus. because frontline plus unleashes a deadly killing force to kill fleas and ticks, plus flea eggs and larvae, preventing a new infestation. its protection lasts a full 30 days. no wonder frontline plus is the #1 choice of vets for their pets and yours. after all, your dog is a lover not a fighter. frontline plus. the vet's #1 choice. i like fun as much as anyone. but we need to talk about - whoa! what was that? - about mustache safety. my blazin' chicken sandwich has ghost pepper ranch sauce. you crave it. but you nee
person is making the allegations that is because the name is blocked out something that bothered mr. clark shares office they believe the allegations were made by a former employe p who was now being held for murder he says they also with the visitation and records and found evidence to back up their suspicion coming up a lawsuit against the owner of sfo cisco part of a building under fire of we would tell you why they're calling the apartment and apartment from-- not the place. you wish your...
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Apr 4, 2015
04/15
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mr. clarke: welcome. i'm tim clarke and i'm the museum's deputy director and we are spending time on the civil war medicine exhibit and special other things to show you. the national museum of health and medicine was founded in 1862 and known as the army medical museum and the mission was to collect specimens of morbid anatomy and send them to washington to study to improve the care of the soldier. at the time of the civil war the museum's staff were doing the business of lessons learned. they were trying to understand
mr. clarke: welcome. i'm tim clarke and i'm the museum's deputy director and we are spending time on the civil war medicine exhibit and special other things to show you. the national museum of health and medicine was founded in 1862 and known as the army medical museum and the mission was to collect specimens of morbid anatomy and send them to washington to study to improve the care of the soldier. at the time of the civil war the museum's staff were doing the business of lessons learned. they...
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Apr 30, 2015
04/15
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. >> hi mr. clark. the public suggests -- >> did you say prime minister clegg? mr. clegg. i thought you said prime minister clegg for a moment. >> the public says they can't forgive that one thing. in hindsight would you go into coalition in 2010 again? >> yes, absolutely. the more i look back the more i think it's a brave decision for the liberal democrats. it's come at a political cost. but it's clear in my mind -- we could have been greece. our deficit was almost as big as greece's. our banking crisis was a whole lot worse. and i certainly wouldn't have wanted on my conscience higher interest rates higher unemployment higher youth unemployment, which i'm absolutely sure would have happened if we hadn't stepped up to the plate to create a stable government without which an economic recovery is not possible. and my great concern at the moment is that having got this far over five years, and millions of people across the country having made huge sacrifices to get us this far after that terrible heart attack in our economy back in 2008 that we undo it all by lurching off --
. >> hi mr. clark. the public suggests -- >> did you say prime minister clegg? mr. clegg. i thought you said prime minister clegg for a moment. >> the public says they can't forgive that one thing. in hindsight would you go into coalition in 2010 again? >> yes, absolutely. the more i look back the more i think it's a brave decision for the liberal democrats. it's come at a political cost. but it's clear in my mind -- we could have been greece. our deficit was almost as...
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Apr 23, 2015
04/15
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mr. clark stepped outside and said, it's cold. it is. we have the low cloud deck in place for some. i will tell you, the westerly breeze is cranked up. you get 49, 50 degrees and a westerly wind and that cuts right through you. yesterday was our best opportunity i think for thunderstorms coming off the sierra. they are being driven by this system up there. that's increasing the wind. it's also going to increase coastal clouds by tonight -- lent me say that again. it will increase the coatal cloud cover by tonight. [laughter] >> want to snow a definition of a runon sentence that was it. 42 in santa rosa. that's a chill. you get a pretty good breeze. these are double. i just want to show you this real quick. it's really cold and there's snow from detroit, toronto, buffalo, cleveland, pittsburgh, almost to new york and philadelphia. i mean, just -- look at that. incredibly cold. for us, after the fog, it will be mostly sunny but breezy and a little cooler. here's mr. castanedo now. >>> a lot of slow traffic in san jose, a lot of slow traffic in pittsburg. we're having kind of a slow da
mr. clark stepped outside and said, it's cold. it is. we have the low cloud deck in place for some. i will tell you, the westerly breeze is cranked up. you get 49, 50 degrees and a westerly wind and that cuts right through you. yesterday was our best opportunity i think for thunderstorms coming off the sierra. they are being driven by this system up there. that's increasing the wind. it's also going to increase coastal clouds by tonight -- lent me say that again. it will increase the coatal...
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Apr 10, 2015
04/15
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mr. noah clark ran by oh excitement, and i don't believe he knows who he is or where he is.idge passing. aldri so i rushed to the window and he waved his hat. i raised the window and asked him what was the matter. he came to the front door where em wha i met him and he almost shook my hand off. the war is over.hook we have lee's surrender. with his own name signed.ned. five days later caroline ri richards looked out thech same window and saw a group of men gathered around someone reading the morning paper. i feared from their silent inter motionless interest that thing something dreadful had happened. that afternoon, just days after of the bells had rung in the ung aftermath of appomattox the bells rang again to mark the death of america's president. bells have always been a werful powerful form of f public expression. they mark oursion celebrations, and our joys, our triumphs, and our tragedies. today in america, bells will toll again.ag at 3:15 the liberty bell will be struck.k and and bells across minnesota, and in downtown chicago, and in richmond, at the state capital,
mr. noah clark ran by oh excitement, and i don't believe he knows who he is or where he is.idge passing. aldri so i rushed to the window and he waved his hat. i raised the window and asked him what was the matter. he came to the front door where em wha i met him and he almost shook my hand off. the war is over.hook we have lee's surrender. with his own name signed.ned. five days later caroline ri richards looked out thech same window and saw a group of men gathered around someone reading the...
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Apr 17, 2015
04/15
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mr. bates attorney clark brewster issued a statement saying that mr.s full fullifully certified but he hasn't given anyone any copies can of those certifications. david harris, the additional element here to the possibility that this very carefully written statement to the police has something deliberate lit false in it, possibly relating to his certifications, that opens up the possibility of additional charges here. >> yes, it does. now, in order to be charged with something like perjury, you'd have to be under oath. and there's no indication at that time statement to the police was under oath. but if he gave certifications or spoke about having certifications that he had not actually earned, there are penalties for falsely certifying, falsely saying you qualified. things like that. he may be looking at some additional charges indeed. the problem here in my estimation is that everybody knew, this guy ran the sheriff's re-election campaign. he gave big-time gifts to the department like cars and computers. who is going to call him out? it's only becaus
mr. bates attorney clark brewster issued a statement saying that mr.s full fullifully certified but he hasn't given anyone any copies can of those certifications. david harris, the additional element here to the possibility that this very carefully written statement to the police has something deliberate lit false in it, possibly relating to his certifications, that opens up the possibility of additional charges here. >> yes, it does. now, in order to be charged with something like...
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Apr 12, 2015
04/15
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mr. noah clark ran by all excitement and i don't believe he knows who he is or where he is.dridge passing, so i rushed to the window and he waved his hat and i raised the window and i asked them what was the matter and he almost shook my hand off the war is over. we have lee's surrender with his own name signed. five days later caroline richards looked out the same window and saw a group of men gathered around someone reading the morning paper. i feared from their silent, motionless interest that something dreadful had happened. that afternoon, just days after the bells of canondegua had rung in the aftermath of appomattox the bells rang again to mark the death of america's president. bells have always been a powerful form of public expression. they mark our celebrations and our joys, our triumphs and our tragedies. today in america bells will toll again. at 3:15, the liberty bell will be struck and bells across minnesota and in downtown chicago and in richmond, at the state capital in delaware california kentucky, in georgia and many more, at ebenezer baptist church in atla
mr. noah clark ran by all excitement and i don't believe he knows who he is or where he is.dridge passing, so i rushed to the window and he waved his hat and i raised the window and i asked them what was the matter and he almost shook my hand off the war is over. we have lee's surrender with his own name signed. five days later caroline richards looked out the same window and saw a group of men gathered around someone reading the morning paper. i feared from their silent, motionless interest...
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Apr 15, 2015
04/15
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major clark: mr., attempted to flee from capture and when he was attempting to be subdued and still in a ground combat with deputies, this deputy bates approached and attended to use a less lethal device. inadvertently, he uses handgun instead. amy: robert bates has been charged with second-degree manslaughter. he was released on $25,000 bond. if convicted he faces a maximum of four years in prison and a fine of $1,000. on tuesday, andre harris questioned the police version of his brother eric's death. andre: if he had as much training as he supposedly had he would definitely know a 357 from a taser. he did not have to. this is something that either he did not really think about or he just decided that he wanted to shoot, and he would worry about it later. amy: robert bates is a wealthy executive and heavy donor to the police department who gets to volunteer on the force as a reserve. meanwhile the south carolina police officer charged with murder for fatally shooting walter scott will probably not fa
major clark: mr., attempted to flee from capture and when he was attempting to be subdued and still in a ground combat with deputies, this deputy bates approached and attended to use a less lethal device. inadvertently, he uses handgun instead. amy: robert bates has been charged with second-degree manslaughter. he was released on $25,000 bond. if convicted he faces a maximum of four years in prison and a fine of $1,000. on tuesday, andre harris questioned the police version of his brother...
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Apr 9, 2015
04/15
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mr. noah clark ran by all excitement and i don't believe he knows who he is or where he is.ssing, so i rushed to the window and he waved his hat and i raised the window and i asked them what was the matter and he almost shook my hand off the war is over. we have lee's surrender with his own name signed. five days later caroline richards looked out the same window and saw a group of men gathered around someone reading the morning paper. i feared from their silent, motionless interest that something dreadful had happened. that afternoon, just days after the bells of canondegua had rung in the aftermath of appomattox the bells rang again to mark the death of america's president. bells have always been a powerful form of public expression. they mark our celebrations and our joys, our triumphs and our tragedies. today in america bells will toll again. at 3:15, the liberty bell will be struck and bells across minnesota and in downtown chicago and in richmond, at the state capital in delaware california kentucky, in georgia and many more, at ebenezer baptist church in atlanta bells
mr. noah clark ran by all excitement and i don't believe he knows who he is or where he is.ssing, so i rushed to the window and he waved his hat and i raised the window and i asked them what was the matter and he almost shook my hand off the war is over. we have lee's surrender with his own name signed. five days later caroline richards looked out the same window and saw a group of men gathered around someone reading the morning paper. i feared from their silent, motionless interest that...
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Apr 14, 2015
04/15
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clark: thank you, mr. speaker, and thank you to my colleague from massachusetts. congress often talks about strengthening the middle class and growing our economy. for many years now, we have had an opportunity to pass a commonsense bill that will actually help us do just that. it was the very first bill that i co-sponsored, the paycheck fairness act ensures equal pay for equal work and will help us end wage discrimination for half of our work force. recent reports tell us that given current trends, pay equity between women and men will not be achieved until 2058. we shouldn't have to wait until our children are ready to retire before women are finally paid what they're worth. women are losing hundreds of thousands of dollars over their lifetime due to wage discrimination and for women of color, it's an even worse situation. african-american women on average earn only 64 cents and latinas earn only 6 cents for every dollar earned by white men. when women aren't paid what they are worth, it means less money for their families, less money for child care, less money
clark: thank you, mr. speaker, and thank you to my colleague from massachusetts. congress often talks about strengthening the middle class and growing our economy. for many years now, we have had an opportunity to pass a commonsense bill that will actually help us do just that. it was the very first bill that i co-sponsored, the paycheck fairness act ensures equal pay for equal work and will help us end wage discrimination for half of our work force. recent reports tell us that given current...
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Apr 14, 2015
04/15
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let me bring in clark brewster attorney for robert bates. mr. brewster great to have you on tonight. let's begin with what exactly your client -- we heard about how mr. bates was supposed to be backup. he was that last patrol car, almost ran into this man heading toward him. walk me through what happened. >> well, mr. bates and the team was briefed that mr. harris was a six-time felon. he had armed robbery conviction assault and battery on police officers escape from a penal institution. he had been known to be selling drugs and weapons. and it was arranged to do an undercover buy. mr. bates was merely part of the containment team two blocks away. he wasn't intended to be pressed into any kind of action other than to provide observation and containment. >> i know he'd been with the violent crime unit from 2008 but can you explain to me about his role as a reserve deputy. i understand he had donated some weapons to the sheriff's department had been involved with them for some time. how often had he been out on an operation like this? >> mr. bates
let me bring in clark brewster attorney for robert bates. mr. brewster great to have you on tonight. let's begin with what exactly your client -- we heard about how mr. bates was supposed to be backup. he was that last patrol car, almost ran into this man heading toward him. walk me through what happened. >> well, mr. bates and the team was briefed that mr. harris was a six-time felon. he had armed robbery conviction assault and battery on police officers escape from a penal institution....
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Apr 15, 2015
04/15
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. >> joining us now is clark, the attorney representing reserve deputy robert bates. mr. brewster thank you very much for joining us tonight. i really appreciate it. >> you're welcome, lawrence. >> now, you have said that you believe your client should not be charged with anything. >> correct. >> what is the basis for that? >> well the shooting wasn't -- was just a mistake. i mean he was attempting to render aid through a taser and drew his weapon by mistake. before shooting he alerted the other deputies that he was going to use the taser. he said taser, taser. as soon as he shot he sxlamd he had made a mistake. he has been transparent throughout. it was a -- it was a mistake. it was an error. it was not intentional. there was no criminal intent. >> well, if the mistake was a defense against man slaughter charges, then the thousands of people we have around the country who are in jail serving time tonight for automobile accidents that resulted in deaths wouldn't be there. every one of those was a mistake. >> no. many of those are duis or some kind of recklessness. that do
. >> joining us now is clark, the attorney representing reserve deputy robert bates. mr. brewster thank you very much for joining us tonight. i really appreciate it. >> you're welcome, lawrence. >> now, you have said that you believe your client should not be charged with anything. >> correct. >> what is the basis for that? >> well the shooting wasn't -- was just a mistake. i mean he was attempting to render aid through a taser and drew his weapon by mistake....
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Apr 7, 2015
04/15
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mr. ethics journalist. it wasn't until years later that i found out from clark that they leaned on him so hard that he felt he had to do that and that's one of the reasons he left pretty early. so my antenna wasn't fully activated but i was watching it very early from this first assignment. >> could you give us a work picture, please, of murray chalkner? what did he look like? >> chalkner was a -- had he dark hair, a little schlwarthy looking prominent figures. he was large-nosed heavy eyebrows, black hair. very bright. i'm told that murray quit school at 15 but yet six years later had a law degree. so he's clearly a very bright man. he had run into nixon in local california politics and had -- was of the school of politics of playing pretty hardball. in other words, you take no prisoners, negative campaigning and help nixon get elected to congress the first time and then worked on his senate race again. so he was a man not of -- he wasn't a tall man. he was fairly short stocky never saw him overweight in the years i knew him. he -- if i had to put him in the neighborhood -- and i don't know if this is cor
mr. ethics journalist. it wasn't until years later that i found out from clark that they leaned on him so hard that he felt he had to do that and that's one of the reasons he left pretty early. so my antenna wasn't fully activated but i was watching it very early from this first assignment. >> could you give us a work picture, please, of murray chalkner? what did he look like? >> chalkner was a -- had he dark hair, a little schlwarthy looking prominent figures. he was large-nosed...
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Apr 30, 2015
04/15
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mr. mcgovern: i yield two minutes to the gentlewoman from massachusetts, ms. clark. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady is recognized for two minutes. ms. clark: thank you mr. speaker. and thank you to the gentleman from worcester for yielding. mr. speaker, i rise today in strong opposition to this rule and its assault on americans' reproductive health rights. all women should have the right to make their own health care decisions without fear of loosing -- losing their jobs. with reports of women being fired for undergoing in vitro fertilization and being fired for being a single mom, the city council of washington, d.c. passed a resolution to ban workplace discrimination based on personal reproductive health care decisions. this joint resolution does not ink fringe on religious liberty. it ensures the freedom to practice individual religious and moral beliefs. this decision of the d.c. council will protect women and ensure that reproductive health decisions are made by women and not their employers and not corporations. it is 2015, and i would love for congress
mr. mcgovern: i yield two minutes to the gentlewoman from massachusetts, ms. clark. the speaker pro tempore: the gentlelady is recognized for two minutes. ms. clark: thank you mr. speaker. and thank you to the gentleman from worcester for yielding. mr. speaker, i rise today in strong opposition to this rule and its assault on americans' reproductive health rights. all women should have the right to make their own health care decisions without fear of loosing -- losing their jobs. with reports...
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Apr 21, 2015
04/15
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clark. >> good morning, i'm pam cook. time is 5:30. right on the dot. let's check in with steve. mr. drizzle is out. >> mr.>> are we going to see sun? >> not much. >> moments. moments of sun. >> we do have low clouds and higher clouds. some areas will get the sun. i'll tell you it's not going to be very warm. ly be breezy. if you have sunshine it will be down right windy. the low cloud deck is large and in charge. you can see the cloud cover off the sierra. that is heading north. still some of that is over us. it's a big fog bank over us. overcast and drizzle. cooler inland today. couldn't get much cooler than 58 out on the coast. oakland around the bay. downtown 62 with a no doubt about it westerly breeze in place and san jose coming down, down, down. we will go 56 today and it will be breezy as well. that is the remains of the cloud cover over the sierra. they will pop up again. 50s on your temps. 29 gusts to 36 out at fairfield. 60s for many. all right sal, good morning to you. >>> good morning, to you. we have a problem in contra costa county. we will start there and take a look at highway 4. we do hav
clark. >> good morning, i'm pam cook. time is 5:30. right on the dot. let's check in with steve. mr. drizzle is out. >> mr.>> are we going to see sun? >> not much. >> moments. moments of sun. >> we do have low clouds and higher clouds. some areas will get the sun. i'll tell you it's not going to be very warm. ly be breezy. if you have sunshine it will be down right windy. the low cloud deck is large and in charge. you can see the cloud cover off the sierra....
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Apr 12, 2015
04/15
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. >> i'm charlie clark with government executives media group. could you talk about mrs.nton's attorney. he has asserted that no laws were violated. could you analyze his arguments? jason: it is clear there has been inconsistent action with the underlying expectations of the federal records act and the narrow regulations in several respects. good lawyers can attempt to parse language well. the 2009 regs say that e-mails have to be kept in an appropriate record-keeping system. everyone understood that to mean by the time that an individual -- either contemporaneously sends the messages or by the last day in office of that individual. there is an inconsistency with the regs. the fact that 30,000 or so e-mails have been sent back cures the defect in substantial part but there are questions about whether we have gotten all of them and whether the actions were appropriate at the time. the larger point -- i agree with much of what tom says. i think all of us in government have treated the e-mail with -- effectively that it is like groundhog day, the movie with bill murray. ever
. >> i'm charlie clark with government executives media group. could you talk about mrs.nton's attorney. he has asserted that no laws were violated. could you analyze his arguments? jason: it is clear there has been inconsistent action with the underlying expectations of the federal records act and the narrow regulations in several respects. good lawyers can attempt to parse language well. the 2009 regs say that e-mails have to be kept in an appropriate record-keeping system. everyone...
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Apr 9, 2015
04/15
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. >> i'm charlie clark with government executives media group. could you talk about mrs.clinton's attorney. he has asserted that no laws were violated. could you analyze his arguments. ? jason: it is clear there has been inconsistent action with the underlying expectations of the federal records act and the narrow regulations in several respects. good lawyers can attempt to parse language well. the 2009 regs say that e-mails have to be kept in an appropriate record-keeping system. everyone understood that to mean by the time that an individual -- either contemporaneously sends the messages or by the last day in office of that individual. there is an inconsistency with the regs. the fact that 30,000 or so e-mails have been sent back cures the defect in substantial part but there are questions about whether we have gotten all of them and whether the actions were appropriate at the time. the larger point -- i agree with much of what time says -- i think all of us in government have treated the e-mail with -- effectively that it is like around holiday, the movie with -- groun
. >> i'm charlie clark with government executives media group. could you talk about mrs.clinton's attorney. he has asserted that no laws were violated. could you analyze his arguments. ? jason: it is clear there has been inconsistent action with the underlying expectations of the federal records act and the narrow regulations in several respects. good lawyers can attempt to parse language well. the 2009 regs say that e-mails have to be kept in an appropriate record-keeping system....
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Apr 26, 2015
04/15
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mr. stalin. she currently lives in lake while florida. i started working over a decade ago when she was working on her first fdr and stalin book. .. [applause] >> i want to thank bob clark. i do remember very well. i was trying to figure out whether roosevelt and stalin had seen the messages before they replied to each other's messages and it was all greek to me. and bob interpreted it so that i could figure out what was going on. and that book came out in 2005 and i have been really, i guess talking about and thinking about and writing about roosevelt and stalin for at least ten years and this book has been the result of all i learned when i was putting together the messages but this book, roosevelt and stalin, is really roosevelt's book. it's about how roosevelt really went been winning the war organizing the postwar world and making stalin and churchill fit in with hi licenses. they were both a tough sell. what is notable is how he kept changing stalin's mind. i thought i might find the opposite but i found that stalin did his bidding. we think of world war ii as the last good war and have woven myths about it, which is natural. it's very hard for all of to us be obj
mr. stalin. she currently lives in lake while florida. i started working over a decade ago when she was working on her first fdr and stalin book. .. [applause] >> i want to thank bob clark. i do remember very well. i was trying to figure out whether roosevelt and stalin had seen the messages before they replied to each other's messages and it was all greek to me. and bob interpreted it so that i could figure out what was going on. and that book came out in 2005 and i have been really, i...
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Apr 16, 2015
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mr. president if you'll allow me i just want to read their names into the record. ross almadine. jamie bishop brian bloom ryan clark austin michelle kloid, josselin nowak daniel alejandro cueva matthew gwaltney jeremy herbstreet emily hillshire, matthew laporte, henry lee liviu lebrecue lauren mccain, daniel o'neill juan ramon ortiz aaron peterson, michael polley julia pride mary karen reed, reamos ramaha, leslie sherman, maxine turner, and nicole white. 32 precious, precious people of amazing accomplishment and even more amazing promise. 17 others were shot that day and wounded. six others were not shot but were injured leaping from windows in a classroom building to escape the carnage. and so many others were affected mr. president first responders pastors counselors the entire hokie nation is what we call the virginia tech community. i know there has been a presentation on the floor about mental health issues and first responders, some of the most painful discussions i had in the aftermath of this shooting and i had many with family members and students who were injured but some of the most painful were first re
mr. president if you'll allow me i just want to read their names into the record. ross almadine. jamie bishop brian bloom ryan clark austin michelle kloid, josselin nowak daniel alejandro cueva matthew gwaltney jeremy herbstreet emily hillshire, matthew laporte, henry lee liviu lebrecue lauren mccain, daniel o'neill juan ramon ortiz aaron peterson, michael polley julia pride mary karen reed, reamos ramaha, leslie sherman, maxine turner, and nicole white. 32 precious, precious people of amazing...