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Apr 4, 2014
04/14
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pete, from sweet pete's, this is debbie. >> hi, pete. >> hi. e to meet you. >> nice to meet you too. >> want to head on into the kitchen? >> sure. >> the entire staff is working around the clock to get this order filled. in the meantime, pete is meeting with potential candy makers to come help. >> want to make some caramel? >> i want to make some caramel. >> okay. >> but it's obvious to me, he struggles to give up control. >> we're gonna need to cook 3/4 of a pound of butter. >> what's the best way to teach somebody? >> probably to have her do it. >> okay. he's gonna have to learn how to let go. how many more candies do we have to make right now? >> it's about 200 in each case. >> oh, my gosh. >> take out three tablespoons-- it's unflavored gelatin. it's on the counter. >> you want me to bloom it or just to chill this right now? >> go ahead and pour it in the cup and chill it. >> we need more clusters. we don't have enough. >> i think you can mix that a little more. >> you want me to try again? >> i think you can keep going. you don't have to st
pete, from sweet pete's, this is debbie. >> hi, pete. >> hi. e to meet you. >> nice to meet you too. >> want to head on into the kitchen? >> sure. >> the entire staff is working around the clock to get this order filled. in the meantime, pete is meeting with potential candy makers to come help. >> want to make some caramel? >> i want to make some caramel. >> okay. >> but it's obvious to me, he struggles to give up control. >>...
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Apr 24, 2014
04/14
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i think abt by pete pete the money coming from the welsh government eu fines and mostly from the european investment bank is expected to generate an oakleigh economy and international business is still on the canvas like one of uncertainty that vice president a p e i t and began by asking him if he knew that sees now need to go beyond pov such funding the ideal is given a new house and was doubled on to the government is again i'm probably in response to the continuing crisis and called in response to the perceived need to invest more in innovation and growth employment and skills that the blog has been not to get used to get to hold objects such as the mom behind us which are aimed at building up momentum investment scale to what was in seeking to do is to move more into that good but the best interests and skills knowledge. at the level of education. a great example of the regeneration project. i mean how important is that for universities to be the center of innovation. i think it's quite cool. this room joint work with industry and with potential employer is that too. i didn't find an
i think abt by pete pete the money coming from the welsh government eu fines and mostly from the european investment bank is expected to generate an oakleigh economy and international business is still on the canvas like one of uncertainty that vice president a p e i t and began by asking him if he knew that sees now need to go beyond pov such funding the ideal is given a new house and was doubled on to the government is again i'm probably in response to the continuing crisis and called in...
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Apr 15, 2014
04/14
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let's bring our tension experts back in shelly and pete. pete, you still have the google -- >> do we have to? melissa: you absolutely do not have to. it would make it easier for me to take you seriously without them. there was leaked memo where apple was internally saving to itself, customers want what we don't have, a bigger screen and cheaper device. this is bigger. do you think till will be cheaper? >> no. >> no. melissa: no. is this pa good answer? >> well, this is apple basically following where the market is going for a while. all the competitors put out phones with larger screens. five inches is really kind of about the norm now. by all reports that is about what apple is going towards. although they will have smaller model go alongside for the more traditional people, people like to operate the phone with one hand. melissa: apple has 30% of the global market. samsung has 33. >> this is galaxy s4 and s5 is about the same size. this is what everybody wants. apple knows it. they are having a little trouble with the screens. having a lot of
let's bring our tension experts back in shelly and pete. pete, you still have the google -- >> do we have to? melissa: you absolutely do not have to. it would make it easier for me to take you seriously without them. there was leaked memo where apple was internally saving to itself, customers want what we don't have, a bigger screen and cheaper device. this is bigger. do you think till will be cheaper? >> no. >> no. melissa: no. is this pa good answer? >> well, this is...
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Apr 21, 2014
04/14
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pete, pete lang. netflix is in one of those very interesting moments of development it could go one of two ways, depending on a lot of things. depending on regulations. depending on competitors, what amazon does in order to compete with it. would you wait for a white to shake out or would you get in right now. >> i don't think so. you have to realize i represent a conservative, high net worth individuals for the most part. so, not really my clients cup of tea so to speak. having said that these are strong earnings. i think it is a good buy signal for the right investor. also one point of emphasis, their total subscriber is about 48 million. they're looking for 100 million. those are really strong growth numbers. liz: and now they're going to come out, this is another headline, guys, they will have to one to $2 price increase for new members. so david asman will not get hit with that because he is already a member, right? david: that is lot lower than it used to be. remember the problems they had when they had the price increase about a year-and-a-half ago, the stock dumped went down like a lead balloon but then came roaring back. i think $2, liz, price increase is really not that much. that is probably a good indicator for markets. liz: let's bring chris into the discussion. whether netflix or other momentum plays do you stave away from those or keep your hand in this market as far as equities is concerned? >> we certainly think the equity market is a great place to be. the tailwind hasn't come out of fixed income where we would be more cautious and we think ultimately that money comes in. we try to avoid high multiple stocks. we think growth stocks repriced the last few weeks. we're getting into the heart of earnings season. it should give us better direction. the month of march was very difficult. there has been rotation to value that plays into our hand where we like value names. stocks trading at 14 times sales, now at 10 times, that is not in the value world yet. so we're finding great opportunities. we see a lost small cap nails that we've been putting money to work and we will be over the next few weeks. david: let me talk, chris, about one of your stock picks. it did extremely well today. super micro computers. companies are refleshing their -- refreshing their computer systems partly to get in on the cloud. does super micro play into this? it was up over 6% today. >> super micro is great company, good management team and significant ownership in company and intel is ramming out new products in the fall we haven't seen delays n we think opportunity end of the summer and second half will be great for companies tied into enterprise spend and super micro's benefiting, we think, from ibm's sale to lenovo that has been tied up some customers have been cautious what they're purchasing. we think super micro has been a beneficiary for that. liz: peter, you're throwing caution into the wind and putting a lot of eggs with the energy basket certainly, halliburton up 3%. came in with better-than-expected numbers about. dominion resources. why the big play here when it comes to energy? >> if you think about it, natural gas will be dominated by the united states. and that industry will be redefine and built. and who better not to invest in but the companies that are building that infrastructure? so, three really strong companies. great earnings. great capital appreciation potential. i my safe money bets are there. david: lincoln, we're very happy about the earnings that have come out as investors are, with regard to netflix. but i have to ask, about a tendency that we've been seeing which are these lower highs. today was a up day. and we had good numbers reporting after-hours, but lower highs and lower lows. that does s seend, tend to be a syndrome we're spilling into right now, right. >> yeah, that's right, david. i think the course of the conversation with chris and your other guest is really spot on. the air has beencoming out of these momentum names. first in the biotech space and then high multiple space. that has to do what you and dick fisher and i talked about a couple weeks ago. when that happens it happens in a cascading fashion. the other peas of the puzzle when you continue to make lower highs, and lower lows, the commodity trading advisor, other kind of high frequency traders will come into these markets and push these markets a little bit lower. going back to these broader based thematics, like energy and other guest were talking about there is value and long term thematic play investors understand and willing to put money into and willing to ride out through the course of an investment cycle that is more interesting idea than finding even our favorite today, netflix at 115 times earnings or our friend at amazon which i don't think they have had earnings for couple years. you choose. david: i call the president of the dallas fed, richard fisher. you call him dick fisher. i didn't know you have a close basis with this guy. >> we have the same similar hair thing happening. david: good stuff, guys. pete, chris, thank you very much. lincoln, we'll come back to you when the s&p futures close shortly. appreciate it. liz: netflix just reported earnings moments ago. they beat on the bottom line. met on revenue, shares, while they're jumping right nowings they have dropped about 23% since their march peak. do these results mean a buying opportunity or is this high-flyer's downfall set to continue? not today, that's for sure. david: also, what is insider trading? you might think they have an answer. they don't. a lot of prosecutors couldn't give you one. pending court case could shed some light exactly what that definition is, and make it harder for the government to prosecute but can insider trading really be defined? we're going to debate that. liz: tell us what you think. is there any way to make insider trading rules less ambiguous? tweet us, @fbnatb or one we put up on the screen good enough for you. we love your answers later this hour. ♪ ♪ [ bell ringing, applause ] five tech stocks
pete, pete lang. netflix is in one of those very interesting moments of development it could go one of two ways, depending on a lot of things. depending on regulations. depending on competitors, what amazon does in order to compete with it. would you wait for a white to shake out or would you get in right now. >> i don't think so. you have to realize i represent a conservative, high net worth individuals for the most part. so, not really my clients cup of tea so to speak. having said that...
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>> good. >> i've brought in a general manager with 30 years of experience to teach pete the car business. this is petein. >> nice to meet you. >> nice to meet you. >> pleasure. >> pleasure. >> john is the new general manager of automatch. >> i'm gonna help you make a lot of money. >> okay. >> the inventory has gone from 20 cars to over 150 in inventory. we're averaging about 90 sales a month. it's only a matter of time before automatch usa is really profitable. >> thank you very much. >> okay, here we go. >> tonight on the profit, i meet michael and tina sena... >> three, one, three. >> experienced trainers who own a fitness studio. >> chest up. atta boy! >> the instruction is first-rate. >> nice, high thighs. >> but the business? well, that needs to be whipped into shape. you're not focusing on everything over here. >> i'm telling you, i did what i thought i could do. >> michael refuses to bring in workout equipment... >> i just don't want to be like every other gym. >> i wouldn't work out there. which holds back membership. >> i may challenge him. >> what we're doing isn't working. >> that's such cr
>> good. >> i've brought in a general manager with 30 years of experience to teach pete the car business. this is petein. >> nice to meet you. >> nice to meet you. >> pleasure. >> pleasure. >> john is the new general manager of automatch. >> i'm gonna help you make a lot of money. >> okay. >> the inventory has gone from 20 cars to over 150 in inventory. we're averaging about 90 sales a month. it's only a matter of time before automatch...
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. >> joining me now from outside the supreme court is nbc news justice correspondent pete williams. petek you so much for being on the show today. >> you bet. >> i want to start you, what kind of legal precedent does this decision set for future of campaign finance reform and finance politics? >> well it's based on the supreme court's 40-plus-year-old holding. that spending and contributions in political campaigns is the equivalent of speech. now what the supreme court said is, under this limit that was struck down today, you could give the maximum to nine candidates for congress, but not ten or eleven. what is the constitutional justification for that? the court's majority asked. and they said that congress can no more tell an individual donor how many candidates he or she can donate to than it could tell an individual neuron editor how many candidates he can endorse in the paper. so there is a free speech restriction. and court said the only justification for this limit would be to curb quid pro quo production. i give you money, you give me a favor. if it stands this way, you don't hav
. >> joining me now from outside the supreme court is nbc news justice correspondent pete williams. petek you so much for being on the show today. >> you bet. >> i want to start you, what kind of legal precedent does this decision set for future of campaign finance reform and finance politics? >> well it's based on the supreme court's 40-plus-year-old holding. that spending and contributions in political campaigns is the equivalent of speech. now what the supreme court...
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and joining me now to explain the details of today's ruling, nbc's new justice correspondent pete williams. pete, explain what in really means today. >> reporter: what it means is that you're right, you said it earlier, a specific individual can now give as much money as that individual wants to all candidates for federal office put together. the limit that was there of about 49 million is gone. here was the court's reasoning. they said that since the 1970s, the supreme court has considered spending with free speech. so they said it's unconstitutional to limit how much speech a person can engage in. the justification for this law was it would limit corruption. i give you law, i give you a favor in return. under the old limit, a person could give the maximum to say, 10 candidates for congress but not 11 or 12. and the supreme court said there was no justification for that. the supreme court can no more limit how much a single person can spend to contribute to federal candidates than it could tell a newspaper how many candidates it can endorse in the paper. the liberals say that this misunderstand
and joining me now to explain the details of today's ruling, nbc's new justice correspondent pete williams. pete, explain what in really means today. >> reporter: what it means is that you're right, you said it earlier, a specific individual can now give as much money as that individual wants to all candidates for federal office put together. the limit that was there of about 49 million is gone. here was the court's reasoning. they said that since the 1970s, the supreme court has...
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conference this morning after reports they reached a contact extension for their head coach pete carroll. petearroll is a marin county native graduated from redwood high school. he reached the top of the nfl last season by leading the sea hawks to their first super bowl title. carroll's original five year deal was due to expire after the 2014 season. >>> your time is 6:27. san francisco police officers on high alert right now. new threats aimed at the police department. and how it's being fueled by the shooting death of a city college student two weeks ago. >> we are live in oakland where a suspicious fire breaks out near a building childrens hospital owns. >>> as you can see it's wet there and the drive time is about 25-30 minutes waiting at the toll plaza too. we'll tell you more about drive times around the bay. >> friday morning rain impacting your morning commute. what about the afternoon commute? is this it? >>> good morning. welcome back to ktvu channel 2 morning news. we are look at the approach to richmond-san rafael bridge. it is wet out there. i just ducked outside our door, it's co
conference this morning after reports they reached a contact extension for their head coach pete carroll. petearroll is a marin county native graduated from redwood high school. he reached the top of the nfl last season by leading the sea hawks to their first super bowl title. carroll's original five year deal was due to expire after the 2014 season. >>> your time is 6:27. san francisco police officers on high alert right now. new threats aimed at the police department. and how it's...
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Apr 3, 2014
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pete williams. pete, could you sum up what we know as of now? >> well, i can tell you what we think we know, lawrence. officials say this does not appear to be any act of terrorism. it appears that the gunman was upset about something. there was some kind of an argument, and he open fired and the casualties are what you renumerated earlier. many sources tell us the name of the gunman, who authorities say killed himself after firing all these shots. they identify him as ivan a. lopez, 34 years old. he's in the army, he was wearing a uniform, people say. people familiar with the military will understand what i mean when they say he was an e-4. that means a low-ranking enlisted person. either a corporate or specialist rank, and he had served in the puerto rican army national guard. we don't have his service record. we don't know how long he had been at ft. hood. we don't know what the nature of argument was, other than to say that this was some kind of argument or some kind of -- some sort of animosity, not something that was preplanned, they say. this is the initial information that we're getting. and not anything that was related to terrorism or anything like the major hasam shooting. they don't appear to have anything in common with each other. >> when do they think they will be able to tell the full story. >> these thing always take time to make sure, you know, what know what you don't know know. they'll certainly be going through his past, searching his house, looking at his writings, looking at his computer, looking at his e-mails, seeing if there's anything that would give any kind of warning that something like this was going to happen. nay eel talk to witnesses, what his grievances were, if he had any disciplinary problems. so probably several days before sufficiently have their arms around it to say with some confidence they know everything there was to know. we're hoping to get some bare bones details here. >> we believe the press conference isless than ten minutes away, pete. there was a period where they were considering the possibility of mor than one gunman. do you know, pete, how they eliminated that possibility? >> i think talking to witnesses is what got them on to the idea that there was more than one person firing shots at the beginning. and subsequently doing searching and talking to more witnesses is probably what got them off of that idea. they seem to be pretty confident now that there was just one single gunman. and pete, as this unfolds, who will have primary jurisdiction over this investigation? >> it's going to be a military investigation because it was on a military base, committed by a person in uniform. if it was a civilian person on a military base, that would be different. if the gunman had survived it would be a military prosecution. the fbi will certainly assist in whatever it can do in off-base investigations, but they will do so at the request of the military. it will be a mail tear case. >> the fbi is standing by to offer suggest
pete williams. pete, could you sum up what we know as of now? >> well, i can tell you what we think we know, lawrence. officials say this does not appear to be any act of terrorism. it appears that the gunman was upset about something. there was some kind of an argument, and he open fired and the casualties are what you renumerated earlier. many sources tell us the name of the gunman, who authorities say killed himself after firing all these shots. they identify him as ivan a. lopez, 34...
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Apr 3, 2014
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pete williams. pete, could you sum up what we know as of now? >> well, i can tell you what we think we know, lawrence. officials say this does not appear to be any act of terrorism. it appears that the gunman was upset about something. there was some kind of an argument, and he open fired and the casualties are what you renumerated earlier. many sources tell us the name of the gunman, who authorities say killed himself after firing all these shots. they identify him as ivan a. lopez, 34 years old. he's in the army, he was wearing a uniform, people say. people familiar with the military will understand what i mean when they say he was an e-4. that means a low-ranking enlisted person. either a corporate or specialist rank, and he had served in the puerto rican army national guard. we don't have his service record. we don't know how long he had been at ft. hood. we don't know what the nature of argument was, other than to say that this was some kind of argument or some kind of -- some sort of animosity, not something that was preplanned, they say. this is the initial information that we're getting. and not anything that was related to terrorism or anything like the major hasam shooting. they don't appear to have anything in common with each e other. >> when do they think they will be able to tell the full story. >> these thing always take time to make sure, you know, what know what you don't know know. they'll certainly be going through his past, searching his house, looking at his writings, looking at his computer, looking at his e-mails, seeing if there's anything that would give any kind of warning that something like this was going to happen. nay eel talk to witnesses, what his grievances were, if he had any disciplinary problems. so probably several days before sufficiently have their arms around it to say with some confidence they know everything there was to know. we're hoping to get some bare bones details here. >> we believe the press conference isless than ten minutes away, pete. there was a period where they were considering the possibility of mor than one gunman. do you know, pete, how they eliminated that possibility? >> i think talking to witnesses is what got them on to the idea that there was more than one person firing shots at the beginning. and subsequently doing searching and talking to more witnesses is probably what got them off of that idea. they seem to be pretty confident now that there was just one single gunman. and pete, as this unfolds, who will have primary jurisdiction over this investigation? >> it's going to be a military investigation because it was on a military base, committed by a person in uniform. if it was a civilian person on a military base, that would be different. if the gunman had survived it would be a military prosecution. the fbi will certainly assist in whatever it can do in off-base investigations, but they will do so at the request of the military. it will be a mail tear case. >> the fbi is standing by to offer suggest
pete williams. pete, could you sum up what we know as of now? >> well, i can tell you what we think we know, lawrence. officials say this does not appear to be any act of terrorism. it appears that the gunman was upset about something. there was some kind of an argument, and he open fired and the casualties are what you renumerated earlier. many sources tell us the name of the gunman, who authorities say killed himself after firing all these shots. they identify him as ivan a. lopez, 34...
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pete domenic, host of "stand-up with pete domenic", he was the warm-up comedian for "the colbert report", for six years. welcome. >> no, i'm pete. she's stephen, and i don't think you're a fan because the first time you said "the colbert report", you hit the "t." >> i did, now i have it. what do you think of this. were you surprised by the move? >> not at all. >> it is the obvious choice amongst executives who program late-night television. anybody inside comedy knows stephen colbert is by far the most talented and in so many different way, and every metric of comedy and performance. i worked there for years, and during the writer's strike in 2007 and 2008, he had no writers. they weren't allowed to put it in the teleprompter and he performed it without the script and remembered it all. he has a genius of memory that he never forgets anything, which can be a curse. it allows him to do more than so many of the rest of the us. >> he's a brilliant guy. if he's not going to be the colbert report, who will he be. most of the people who watch him over a long period of time get used to the dark ter he plays. >> it's a fair and good qu
pete domenic, host of "stand-up with pete domenic", he was the warm-up comedian for "the colbert report", for six years. welcome. >> no, i'm pete. she's stephen, and i don't think you're a fan because the first time you said "the colbert report", you hit the "t." >> i did, now i have it. what do you think of this. were you surprised by the move? >> not at all. >> it is the obvious choice amongst executives who program late-night...
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pete williams. pete, what do you got? >> well, the investigation is on two tracks now. the military going back through ivan lopez's record to see if there's anything that stands out. and now a separate track looking at his computers, his e-mails, interviewing friends, his relatives to try to find out if there's anything in his past that was a warning sign. so far, they say they found nothing. a federal law enforcement official says he had no record of anything in any of the federal files. they have nothing on him. he was not considered any kind of a trouble causer. in terms of his mental health, the secretary of the army told congress this morning that he had sought treatment because of depression, anxiety, and trouble sleeping, although none of those sound like very profound mental issues. he was seen last month by a psychiatrist. the army secretary says, and psychiatrist found no indication of likely violence or suicidal ideals. he bought the gun about a month ago. the question is was that related to this, can they find anything that links those two together. no answers yet, but those are the questions they're asking. >> all right, pete williams, thank you so much. brandon webb is a former navy seal. a result of an eye-opening new poll of america's vets. he's done a lot of work through his in-depth series after the wars. brandon, let me start with you. being a navy seal, you've been in war zones. you have seen the worst of it. here we have yet another fatal shooting on a military base. are you surprised that we're seeing this happen again? >> you know, i'm not surprised. ft. hood in itself has really turned into a symbolic target. you know, we have the shooting in 2009, and a thwarted attempt by an awol soldier in 2011. but i think what this shows you, my community from the special operations community, i think that the special operations folks are much better trained and prepared to deal with what they see in a combat zone. but the american war fighter has been in a sustained combat operation mode for over a decade and i really think you're starting to see the combat force starting to fray at the edges. and listen t
pete williams. pete, what do you got? >> well, the investigation is on two tracks now. the military going back through ivan lopez's record to see if there's anything that stands out. and now a separate track looking at his computers, his e-mails, interviewing friends, his relatives to try to find out if there's anything in his past that was a warning sign. so far, they say they found nothing. a federal law enforcement official says he had no record of anything in any of the federal files....
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pete williams. pete, tell us a little bit more about the charges that cross is facing. >> well, he has been charged by kansas authorities under a law that makes it illegal to engage in premeditated first degree murder. now, interestingly, that count alone does not carry the death penalty. kansas is a death penalty state. if the state wants to pursue a more serious charge, it will have to refile. that's certainly possible. it's theoretically possible they could fit it into the kansas capital murder statute. separately, federal civil rights statutes do carry the death penalty for a couple of crimes. there are a number of ways the federal government could go here. it's punishable by death to interfere with somebody's federally protected right and going to church would certainly be such a right. going to synagogue or church. and, secondly, there's a separate federal statute that makes interfering with someone's religious freedom a federal crime punishable by the death penalty. you have both the state interests here, a community wanting to see justice done, and you have federal interests as well, so both are going to proceed. both the state and federal prosecutors will proceed on independent but parallel tracks and then once they get to the end of those, somebody has to decide who goes to trial first, if there is a trial, and that decision is yet to be made. >> and so, pete, you just made the point that i was actually going to follow-up on you on who would go first in theory. if the state were to modify their charges and go for the death penalty, would that then preclude a separate federal trial or could that trial then proceed as well? >> well, they can't go at the same time. someone has to decide who is going to go first. you can't be in two courthouses at once, and these things happen. there are cases where both the federal and state authorities -- it's because of the strong interest in, you know, preventing crimes against members of congress and federal officials. there was a judge shot there, so there were federal interests there as well. i don't know how this is going to work out, but they will have -- the state and the federal authorities will have to sit down and decide who gets to go first. >> all right. thank you so much, nbc's pete williams. appreciate it. >> you bet. >>> the southern poverty law center is an organization dedicated to tracking
pete williams. pete, tell us a little bit more about the charges that cross is facing. >> well, he has been charged by kansas authorities under a law that makes it illegal to engage in premeditated first degree murder. now, interestingly, that count alone does not carry the death penalty. kansas is a death penalty state. if the state wants to pursue a more serious charge, it will have to refile. that's certainly possible. it's theoretically possible they could fit it into the kansas...
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pete rose. charlie hustle. >> pete rose. >> pete rose. charlie hustle. >> all right.to this. >>> we begin with those powerful storms across the middle of the country that ginger has been showing us all the way from texas to missouri. at least eighth twisters overnight. one family had to be rescued from their demolished home. the storms had walmart shoppers running for cover. check this out. softball-sized hail crashed through the store's skylight and shattered car windows in the parking lot. you see in those pictures we'll be back with ginger in arkansas in just a moment. >>> new details this morning about the army soldier who went on a shooting rampage at ft. hood on wednesday. authorities believe 34-year-old ivan lopez may have argued with another soldier just before the shooting. and a family member in his native puerto rico says lopez was upset that he was granted only a two-day leave to attend his mother's funeral. >>> and encouraging news about the economy. the labor department says 192,000 jobs created last month. that's in line with what wall street is expecti
pete rose. charlie hustle. >> pete rose. >> pete rose. charlie hustle. >> all right.to this. >>> we begin with those powerful storms across the middle of the country that ginger has been showing us all the way from texas to missouri. at least eighth twisters overnight. one family had to be rescued from their demolished home. the storms had walmart shoppers running for cover. check this out. softball-sized hail crashed through the store's skylight and shattered car...
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pete williams at the court. pete, good evening. >> reporter: brian, good evening. the justices went out of their way to say they were not ruling on the constitutionality of affirmative action itself but this decision is new ammunition for those who want to stop it. it's a big victory for the state of much michigan which had affirmative action in school admissions until 2006 when 58% of is state voters passed proposal 2 amending their constitution to ban it. civil rights groups sued saying the ban amounted to discrimination making it harder for minority students to push for favorable admission policies. today voting 6-2 the court upheld the right of michigan voters to pass the ban. justice anthony kennedy wrote while the debate on the issue may be emotional it should not be beyond the reach of voters. michigan's attorney general said the ruling favors political fairness. >> it's a victory for the citizens of who voted in 2006 to require equal treatment in admission to our outstanding colleges and universities. >> reporter: in a passionate dissent, justice sotomayor who said affirmative action affected her life said it rigged it against minorities. while the constitution doesn't guarantee minority groups victory in the political process, she said, it does guarantee them meaningful and equal access to that process. they fear other states may try bans of their own. >> there will be a campaign of disinformation and fear about affirmative action, campaigns that suggest that minority students are taking the place of others. >> reporter: in detroit high school sophomore said today's decision is a setback. >> it complicates things more than they are already. it's creating a new era of racism. it's creating a new jim crow. >> reporter: counting ohio eight states have banned affirmative action starting with california 20 years ago. one other note, justice kagan set this out when she was at the supreme court. >> pete williams at the supreme court building tonight. so that was today's decision by the court. this next issue was argued and presented to the court today and full disclosure right at top. this company is a big player in this case along with a lot of other big names in media who are tonight just like us covering it as a news story. this is about something called aereo, it delivers tv to you by bypassing the usual players. our report tonight from nbc's stephanie gosk. >> reporter: ben allen doesn't pay for cable and he has a message for the cable company. good riddance. >> no more cable. the only thing i'm paying for is internet. >> reporter: he uses the online service aereo. along with several other internet video services. slashing his once $110 tv bill in half. aereo launched last year from a warehouse in brooklyn and now available in 11 cities charging customers $8 a month to watch any broadcast tv network live or recorded. to use aereo you don't have to buy any new gadget. subscribers
pete williams at the court. pete, good evening. >> reporter: brian, good evening. the justices went out of their way to say they were not ruling on the constitutionality of affirmative action itself but this decision is new ammunition for those who want to stop it. it's a big victory for the state of much michigan which had affirmative action in school admissions until 2006 when 58% of is state voters passed proposal 2 amending their constitution to ban it. civil rights groups sued saying...
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Apr 18, 2014
04/14
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pete rouse convinced him. >> charlie: because you were d.c. and he wasn't really interested in d.c. >> i was d.c. he wasn't really interested in d.c., but pete rouse said, trust me. pete rouse. >> charlie: and the president trusted pete rouse. >> he did. he said, okay. >> charlie: i'll take her. i'll take her. >> charlie: i know -- and he called me. he called my cell phone, and i didn't recognize the number, so i didn't pick it up, but it was him. he called me himself, which was such -- that's not something a lot of people do. >> charlie: said something right there. >> he said, alyssa, let's do this. it's obama. call me back. and that was it. >> charlie: now, go forward to the time that you had during the campaign rented at $30,000 a plane. >> mm-hmm. >> charlie: turns out, you rented that plane for the wrong day. >> yeah. that was actually the fall of 2006. >> charlie: yes. during our campaigning for everyone. the whole front political office, it was three or four people, probably, five people, and i was doing the book tour and all the political travel myself and i made a big mistake and i rented the plane for the wrong day and i cried in the office and called robert
pete rouse convinced him. >> charlie: because you were d.c. and he wasn't really interested in d.c. >> i was d.c. he wasn't really interested in d.c., but pete rouse said, trust me. pete rouse. >> charlie: and the president trusted pete rouse. >> he did. he said, okay. >> charlie: i'll take her. i'll take her. >> charlie: i know -- and he called me. he called my cell phone, and i didn't recognize the number, so i didn't pick it up, but it was him. he called...
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Apr 3, 2014
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roberts court has yet to uphold a challenged contribution limit. >> pete williams at the supreme court where today's decision was handed down. pete, thanks. >>> day two of testimony for the new ceo of gm. she came under withering attack for the company's failure to order a recall over a decade ago in time to potentially save at least 13 lives, maybe more. general motors was today accused of criminal behavior by u.s. senators, many of them former prosecutors. but when they demanded more information from the ceo, mary barra, she didn't have much to offer. our report tonight from nbc's tom costello in washington. >> reporter: amy rademaker, natasha wagel, michael sharkey, brooke melton, just a few of the young victims whose deaths have been linked to a defect in half a dozen gm models. >> the families are here. the victims are here. they want to be vindicated. >> reporter: this time in front of a senate committee, the ceo of gm, a 33-year veteran, still could not answer basic questions about gm policies and a decade delay in ordering an ignition switch recall. >> i don't know. i want to know that answer. i don't have the complete fa
roberts court has yet to uphold a challenged contribution limit. >> pete williams at the supreme court where today's decision was handed down. pete, thanks. >>> day two of testimony for the new ceo of gm. she came under withering attack for the company's failure to order a recall over a decade ago in time to potentially save at least 13 lives, maybe more. general motors was today accused of criminal behavior by u.s. senators, many of them former prosecutors. but when they...
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Apr 15, 2014
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pete peterson. pete is a wall street billionaire. and this guy has put hundreds this ex millions into an obses to cut social security. it's a funny story the last time and the first time i was on this campus was i don't know a year ago, year-and-a-half ago, pete peterson group -- he has a group running around talking about the deficit and they came here. so organized a group of seniors from new hampshire vermont and massachusetts to say hello to those folks. and we filled up not this room but another room and it was a very interesting meeting because pete's friends heard mi rom folks they did not necessarily want to hear from. but the point is right now when so many people living on the edge, when poverty among seniors is actually going up. we have waiting lists for the meals on wheels program and meals programs, when many seniors are in trouble, it would be morally grotetesk for anybody to talk about cutting social security. our job in fact working on legislation right now is to expand social security. and when anybody tells you in a lot of i'll use a nice word misinformation out there about social security going broke i think you all know that social security can pay out every benefit owed to every eligible american for the next 19 years. a
pete peterson. pete is a wall street billionaire. and this guy has put hundreds this ex millions into an obses to cut social security. it's a funny story the last time and the first time i was on this campus was i don't know a year ago, year-and-a-half ago, pete peterson group -- he has a group running around talking about the deficit and they came here. so organized a group of seniors from new hampshire vermont and massachusetts to say hello to those folks. and we filled up not this room but...
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Apr 11, 2014
04/14
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. >> either pete's a ringer. pete says he never plays. us, he had a swing. >> i really appreciate that. i'm terrible. >> i wasn't in that video. i was driving the cage around. >> it was easy to see why -- that was funny. >> murph looked like he was ready for "caddyshack." >> i knocked down the weiss face down the first time. mark rolfing joins us from augusta. you've seen the tape, who is the best golfer? >> you know, all week long here at augusta, people have been asking me to pick which players will win. i've got no chance doing that. there's probably 30 or 40 players that could win this masters, but to pick the best golfer among that group? that's easy. there is no doubt it's stephanie. as a matter of fact it's not even close. stephanie all the way. >> you know what, mark? stephanie is a pretty darn good golfer. >> she is. >> i don't know what her number is, handicap, but it's pretty low. mark, who is going to win out there? i'm looking at the leaderboard as we speak here, and i i see kevin stadler is 4 under. he not only looks like hi
. >> either pete's a ringer. pete says he never plays. us, he had a swing. >> i really appreciate that. i'm terrible. >> i wasn't in that video. i was driving the cage around. >> it was easy to see why -- that was funny. >> murph looked like he was ready for "caddyshack." >> i knocked down the weiss face down the first time. mark rolfing joins us from augusta. you've seen the tape, who is the best golfer? >> you know, all week long here at...
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Apr 26, 2014
04/14
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babe, pete from mashable and i are sitting on the air talking with you along with millions of other people. >> hi, debbie. >> pete says -- did you hear pete? but, anyway. she says how are you doing. and the fact is, babe, i'm going to get off this phone before i get in trouble on national television. and love you and i'll talk with you soon. see you soon. love you, babe. >> so that's great. you managed to do that without ever dialing anything on a phone. you could have done all that without ever even touching it. you had to fall back on that when it sort of wasn't working. but it's all hands free which is pretty amazing. >> so is this going to work? i mean, i'm charmed by it. i'm entranced by it. you know, it's a challenge part. i want to use it as it can be used. is it going to be successful? >> that's the million dollar question that is still to be determined. and i think in order for it to be successful on the scale google wants, they clearly want to position this as a mainstream advice. they're going to have to rethink the design. i think it's pretty amazing to have all these notifications and thing right on your face whenever you nee
babe, pete from mashable and i are sitting on the air talking with you along with millions of other people. >> hi, debbie. >> pete says -- did you hear pete? but, anyway. she says how are you doing. and the fact is, babe, i'm going to get off this phone before i get in trouble on national television. and love you and i'll talk with you soon. see you soon. love you, babe. >> so that's great. you managed to do that without ever dialing anything on a phone. you could have done...
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Apr 9, 2014
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pete w williams, and pete, why would the fbi be involved here? >> at the request of the local police, and they are called in to provide two types of assistance according to the officials. one is to go through the crime scene and reconstruct what is going on, and that is critical for the police in building a criminal case against this student, and secondly, the provide counselling for victims, a and that is another resource that the fbi has available, and so those are the two things that they are doing, and obviously a local crime and not a federal crime, and so that the fbi is there to simply provide assistan assistance. and in terms of the motive of what led to this, we have not heard anything about that, and there are no firm details that have reached the officials here about the motives, and they waiting to find out with the rest of us as is so often with the cases of violence in the school, whether it was a student who was bullied or whether something else set that person off. >> all right. pete, thank you very much. joining me now, it is former fbi proviler clint van zandt, and, clint, you have been on air this morning, and to pete's point, we do not know a motive here, but from the information, in is about 15 minutes before school started, and this individual is a 16-year-old walked in armed with at least two knives. >> two knives. >> and i don't know if he attended school there, but if there was a new security system in place that required you to be buzzed in, but as a student, he would be allowed to walk into the school, and no metal detectors and the knives perhaps obviously undetected here. >> yeah. yeah, again, the knives could have, i think been easily undetected, and we normally prepare for the events that guns are used inside of the school, but, you know, it was eight years ago in japan that a in that case an adult male went into the japanese school and killed eight and wounded 21, and then just last year in september of last year, another high school student in spr
pete w williams, and pete, why would the fbi be involved here? >> at the request of the local police, and they are called in to provide two types of assistance according to the officials. one is to go through the crime scene and reconstruct what is going on, and that is critical for the police in building a criminal case against this student, and secondly, the provide counselling for victims, a and that is another resource that the fbi has available, and so those are the two things that...
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Apr 3, 2014
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pete. the next morning, wilbur was eliminated, leaving barbara and pete. so that means that, as of this morning, we're down to two people here. petey had a winner of the "tonight show's fingers on a a 4x4" contest. [ drum roll ] pete porzio from frankfort, illinois! ♪ [ cheers and applause ] frankfort, illinois. over 38 hours he had his hands on the truck. but he's going to be on the show tomorrow to talk about his experience. but what a great guy. [ cheers and applause ] i don't know how you did it, buddy. stick around, we'll be right back, everybody. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ [ cheers and applause ] >> jimmy: our next guests are a a grammy-winning bluegrass group who are celebrating their 25th year together. tonight they are performing on tv for the first time in seven years. here with "destination" from the new album "a dotted line," please welcome nickel creek. [ cheers and applause ] ♪ ♪ you don't owe me one more minute of your wasted time ♪ ♪ you act like it's all fine but all the years i gave you thinking you knew that you wanted me ♪ ♪ and i wanted to believe i've gotta make a destination find where i belong ♪ ♪ this tim
pete. the next morning, wilbur was eliminated, leaving barbara and pete. so that means that, as of this morning, we're down to two people here. petey had a winner of the "tonight show's fingers on a a 4x4" contest. [ drum roll ] pete porzio from frankfort, illinois! ♪ [ cheers and applause ] frankfort, illinois. over 38 hours he had his hands on the truck. but he's going to be on the show tomorrow to talk about his experience. but what a great guy. [ cheers and applause ] i don't...
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Apr 9, 2014
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pete and to watch pete's mom run the marathon. when the first explosion went off, they were ten feet away. rebekah, peteies were much more severe. >> i had a 90% achilles tendon tear in my right leg, multiple fractures in both of my feet, and shrapnel wounds pretty much from head to toe. >> reporter: after almost six weeks of treatment, pete was able to go home to new york. rebekah, who was eventually airlifted to a hospital in her hometown of houston, would spend a total of 56 days in treatment. >> recovery's been very tough. my leg was basically destroyed from my knee down. i had chunks taken out of it from the bomb. all of my bones were completely broken. i'm missing bones in my toes, my foot, and my leg. >> reporter: rebekah was in constant pain and says being 1,600 miles away from pete only made things worse. >> one night she said, you know, i really just need you down here right now. i had just had eardrum reconstructive surgery so i couldn't fly, so that was kind of out of the question. the next morning i jumped in my car and i started driving, and it took me about three days and 1,700 miles late
pete and to watch pete's mom run the marathon. when the first explosion went off, they were ten feet away. rebekah, peteies were much more severe. >> i had a 90% achilles tendon tear in my right leg, multiple fractures in both of my feet, and shrapnel wounds pretty much from head to toe. >> reporter: after almost six weeks of treatment, pete was able to go home to new york. rebekah, who was eventually airlifted to a hospital in her hometown of houston, would spend a total of 56 days...
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Apr 15, 2014
04/14
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pete benson over at beacon. pete, tell me what you're doing at a time where monday and tuesday, we've seen, yes you could say volatility but not as dramatic what we saw thursday and friday last week but people get a little anxious and nervous. would you recommend them sitting on sidelines until things calm down or diving in. >> thanks, liz for having me on today. some are calling this turn-around tuesday. it sure turned upside down today. my grandchildren would like it because they love roller coasters and that is the kind of day it was but, you know, we're telling our clients to just stay the course, not to panic. we're getting a lot of information thrown at us each day. a lot of it is negative. a lot of it is positive. we're seeing earnings numbers in some companies much better than what people expected even though they were expecting them to be fairly disappointing. what we're telling folks, get into some quality companies and stay the course and just don't get as nervous as the market was allow us to be if we actually followed every headline. rich: brian, let me throw this to you looking at the international picture here. how much has ukraine played into what we've seen with the volatyay and last cle weeks? seems like it is flaring up again. do you think that is to be playing in the markets? how significantly what happens with ukraine to investors? >> i definitely think it is important. we're definitely watching it. we're staying away from international and emerging markets right now. there is too much volatility. rich: hang on one second. we have i can't hoare earnings. -- yahoo! earnings. adam shapiro we'll head to you for yahoo! earnings. go 6 go for it. >> this is. 3 cents per share. acquisitions came in 1.09 billion. street was expecting 1.08 billion. click increased 6% compared to same quarter 2013. quarterly number of ads sold increased approximately 7%. rich, back to you. liz: price per click increased approximately 8%, compared year-over-year. and i know the analysts are going to certainly like that. search revenue ex-tax was 144 million first quarr of 2014. marisa mayer has a lot to prove. people say this company is nothing without alibaba and the stake in the chinese internet giant. rich: the question is what does the company want want to be howh alibaba will -- alibaba will play into it. liz: who did we interrupt? brian, go ahead. >> we're talking about ukraine is that big after concern and i think it is. since all the ukraine stuff started recently. that is when the all the volatility started. is that the reason momentum stocks finally cracked? i don't think so. price willing to pay is bottom line a lot of these momentum names yes they bounced today but still bigger picture as guest before me said, stay the course. don't go overboard momentum names. there will be a lot of other sectors we get into next that look beaten down and maybe start to rise. liz: mark, give me your thoughts on what you feel is the flow for trading starting tomorrow? we did have people on the show, our traders, teddy weisberg, who has been a long-time trader very concerned about high frequency trading. he think it is was a culprit in today's volatility. i know you guys have your opinion certainly on the floor of the cme but you get no indication how any day is going to go these days. >> yeah, especially on these light volumes days. it is passover and easter. every spring break, every is out of town. light volume days. al go trading can move things around. if we want to go away with high frequency trading we could do away with it pretty simply. sec should rule out payment for order flow which is probably the driver of, good 90% of hf. i don't think the stuff that moves market back and forth is that big of a deal. i think some stuff where you see people step in front one way or another of an actual order that is owl payment for order flow based. on a day like today, you know, it is really got to look really what continues to happen in the broader picture of the market. we continue to see momentum stocks, the russell, russell 2000 which is really u.s.-based companies, looking really weak. you know when i look at the vix about 15 1/2 right now, historically it is normally around 20, if you look at other metrics, maybe 18, insuring a portfolio is still relatively cheap historically and we're not that far off all-time highs. i have no problem being long the market. we like the approach of going out buying puts and going long the market to at same time creating an upside hedge and protecting yourself on the downside. that is kind of the way i'm looking at the market right now. rich: thank you, pete benson, ryan dietrich and mark sebastian we'll come back to you shortly for the s&p futures close. >>> from espn to vogue to wwe, aol is partnering with big names to bring web users new and exclusive content. what can we expect and what is behind this online makeover? we'll talk to aol.com's president in a fox business exclusive next. liz: intel is moving higher after reporting earnings just moments ago. the stock, it is about a 3% gain give or take. we know the past quarter's numbers but what has been happening so far this quarter? some granular discussions and data in the dirt with intel cfo stacy smith. will they hit the tablet goal of being 40 million of them this year? >> what is going on in biotech? we'll have the ski 6 ceo of a cord deyawn therapeutics. its stock is up 21% this year. liz: tell us what you think. is the biotech bubble here or time to go bottom fishing in the sector? when i say bubble, i mean bubble pop. tweet us @fbnatb. we would love to hear from you. ♪ [ male
pete benson over at beacon. pete, tell me what you're doing at a time where monday and tuesday, we've seen, yes you could say volatility but not as dramatic what we saw thursday and friday last week but people get a little anxious and nervous. would you recommend them sitting on sidelines until things calm down or diving in. >> thanks, liz for having me on today. some are calling this turn-around tuesday. it sure turned upside down today. my grandchildren would like it because they love...
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Apr 29, 2014
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he received endorsements from pete will sond -- pete wilson and mitt romney.trails well behind tim done anily, a fave -- donnelly, a favorite of the tea party, and jerry brown, a popular democrat widely expected to win re- election. >>> big changes in where to go to find a job. during the early years of the recession, the best places to look for a job were cities where there were a lot of job opportunities in the government or the military. but today it's a very different picture as forbes releases the list of best cities to find a job in 2014 and how about the bay area make out? well, extremely well. here are the top three places. first, silicon valley, san jose, sunnyvale and specifically. the number two spot went to the metropolitan regent and the third went to austin, round rock and san marcos, texas. >>> just hours ago, six people were wounded in a shooting at a fed-ex plant in georgia. what we're learning about the shooter and how witnesses describe when he started shooting. >>> and the controversial swirling around l.a. clippers' owner donald sterling h
he received endorsements from pete will sond -- pete wilson and mitt romney.trails well behind tim done anily, a fave -- donnelly, a favorite of the tea party, and jerry brown, a popular democrat widely expected to win re- election. >>> big changes in where to go to find a job. during the early years of the recession, the best places to look for a job were cities where there were a lot of job opportunities in the government or the military. but today it's a very different picture as...
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Apr 21, 2014
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pete williams is going to join us with more on this. and pete, obviously, the first question beyond how did he survive which is a litany of questions there, but how did he get through security? >> well, they say that he hopped a fence at the san jose airport. he is from santa clara, california, which is in the area, and then they say he climbed into the wheel well of what turned out to be hawaiian airlines flight 45 and then he had no idea where the plane was headed. it is a 767 jet that left san jose and then landed in maui five hours later, and then another hour after after that, the witnesses say they saw him hop down from the wheel well, and the authorities say that he was unconscious for most of the flight, and then he was found by the airport workers, and he claims he was in an argument with his family and wanted to run away from home. and the airline says that our primary concern is for the well-being of the boy who is exceptionally lucky to have survived. he has been given a medical checkup and turned over to the hawaii child welfare department, but the questions that the fbi want wants the know is how he was able to breach airport security in san jose, and am moong them the senator who represents the bay area, and he said, the way this teen has exposed vulnerables that need to be address addressed. >> and it was not long ago, petewhaen man we-- when a man left a restaurant and then took an exit to go on to the runway. >> well, hopping a fence is pretty simple to do, and it is not a great trade krachlt so they have some explaining to do in san jose about how that happened, and how they, at the very least, how it was not spotted. >> well, as a person who cannot hop the pence, pete, i'm sorry it is not a trade craft. thank you, pete. >> okay. >> and a high school commencement ceremony in kansas that will feature first lady michelle obama is sparking criticism. she has accepted an invitation to commemorate the 60th anniversary of the brown versus board of education. and last week the school district said in order to accommodate the first lady they would consolidate five separate high school ceremonies into one at a local arena, but now some of the students and parents have said that the first lady's participation will decrease the number of seats for each graduate. and now they are asking the district to reconsider
pete williams is going to join us with more on this. and pete, obviously, the first question beyond how did he survive which is a litany of questions there, but how did he get through security? >> well, they say that he hopped a fence at the san jose airport. he is from santa clara, california, which is in the area, and then they say he climbed into the wheel well of what turned out to be hawaiian airlines flight 45 and then he had no idea where the plane was headed. it is a 767 jet that...
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. >> pete townshend just walked out. >> jimmy: pete tonwshend, yeah. -- like, i'm leaving.inutes. maybe 50 minute because kurt was so intense, you know? and he'd be up there intense for like, 45, 50 minutes and we could get off if we smashed everything. then we play live shows like two hours. >> jimmy: that's true. you can't play an encore if everything's broke. [ laughter ] >> that's right. >> jimmy: genius! >> genius. >> jimmy: genius idea! >> it was kind of a shtick. but then we played live shows for like, two hours. >> there was one -- we were on tour in chicago and kurt had been chopping at my drums all tour. and my drums have holes in them. and they sounded like crap because there were holes in them. they didn't sound good. and i kept asking our tour manager, could i please get a a new drum set and this is before we were playing big place. we're in clubs. he's like, let's wait another week. and he'd chop more holes in it. wait another week. and finally i said to kurt at the metro in chicago. i said, "hey man. at the end of the gig, we have to smash drum set to splinte
. >> pete townshend just walked out. >> jimmy: pete tonwshend, yeah. -- like, i'm leaving.inutes. maybe 50 minute because kurt was so intense, you know? and he'd be up there intense for like, 45, 50 minutes and we could get off if we smashed everything. then we play live shows like two hours. >> jimmy: that's true. you can't play an encore if everything's broke. [ laughter ] >> that's right. >> jimmy: genius! >> genius. >> jimmy: genius idea! >>...
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i think to your question to pete, which was a good one, and pete's answer was right on the spot, generally is that the committees, like the rnc, the individual candidates, we disclose the most to the public, to the s.e.c. every month. every stamp we buy, every dollar we bring in is disclosed every month. and we're the most restricted and we have the most limitations on what we can raise. but a lot of these outside groups have no restrictions, but they're unlimited in what they can raise. and so the reason we're excited is that it brings the political parties -- i think the most accountable groups in america a little bit closer to exercising our first amendment rights, just like everybody else. >> in fact, one of the criticisms of what sheldon adelson and on the other side some of the other wealthy democrats do is that it has really supplemented the impact of parties. that the committees are far less important when you've got billionaires running around on both sides financing people and doing so without disclosure. >> well, to me, in my own personal opinion is that the political parties an
i think to your question to pete, which was a good one, and pete's answer was right on the spot, generally is that the committees, like the rnc, the individual candidates, we disclose the most to the public, to the s.e.c. every month. every stamp we buy, every dollar we bring in is disclosed every month. and we're the most restricted and we have the most limitations on what we can raise. but a lot of these outside groups have no restrictions, but they're unlimited in what they can raise. and so...
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Apr 3, 2014
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pete who is an iraq war vet. pete, your thoughts on that? we're not trying to put blame on anybody other than the shooter here but we want to look at how we can better protect our men and women on the >> i think the colonel is on to something here. you talk about the marine corps that brought this idea up late in 2013 after the navy yard shooting, that you have assigned people within a unit that has a firearm. you want to maintain discipline order within your unit and who is carrying and who is not and most of the time you're assigning weapons to go out to the range or to a military operation. you're under avail of protection on a base where it's -- it's an honor system. there's guards at the front gate protecting who can come in and who cannot. otherwise, it's the military police or other guards who are charged with providing that safety and otherwise you are, as the colonel said, sitting ducks if someone decides to go rogue. >> i understand how people worry about arming everybody on board on these bases and a lot of these guys are suffering from ptsd and so on. there are potential issues there and really the notion of not trusting the vast majority of our men and women in uniform to whom we give guns, to not use them on one another raises a lot of questions for folks, pete think it does. we trust young 18, 19-year-olds to go into combat and defend us on our behalf and we give them a great deal of responsibility and i think we recognize with that responsibility there is a lot that comes with that responsibility. here on post in the united states, sometimes -- and we've seen this, the colonel has seen it, too, we want to dial back any risk whatsoever and even on post and sometimes on deployment. ammunition is withheld more than it should be. i think we need to be entrusting junior leaders and others to make the tough decisions on site. i'm not saying that you arm everybody. but sometimes risk mitigation can go too far, which means you have a bunch of unarmed people in particular situations that can't fend themselves. >> colonel, what is your last thought as we await this news conference at ft. hood? >> well, i can tell you at the command level, every single person is being asked whether there were indicators or warnings that you saw, they are looking at h
pete who is an iraq war vet. pete, your thoughts on that? we're not trying to put blame on anybody other than the shooter here but we want to look at how we can better protect our men and women on the >> i think the colonel is on to something here. you talk about the marine corps that brought this idea up late in 2013 after the navy yard shooting, that you have assigned people within a unit that has a firearm. you want to maintain discipline order within your unit and who is carrying and...
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nbc news justice correspondent pete williams joins us live from the supreme court with the details. peteline for us. >> by a 5-4 vote, the supreme court struck down the limits on how much any individual person can give to all federal candidates put together and all political parties and pacs put together. these are what are called the aggregate limits. the court left intact how much a person can give to any specific candidate, still $2,600 per campaign, per election, but you can now give to as many candidates as you want. there is no limit on how much total money any individual person can spend. the court's majority opinion, written by the chief justice john roberts said,
nbc news justice correspondent pete williams joins us live from the supreme court with the details. peteline for us. >> by a 5-4 vote, the supreme court struck down the limits on how much any individual person can give to all federal candidates put together and all political parties and pacs put together. these are what are called the aggregate limits. the court left intact how much a person can give to any specific candidate, still $2,600 per campaign, per election, but you can now give...
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pete williams. he is outside the supreme court. pete, break down this ruling and how significant it is for us. >> so, it's well to bear in mind that the root limit here on how much you can give to a candidate remains. what the court has struck down is how much you can give to all candidates put together, which was about 49,000, and how much you can give to all political parties and packs put together, which was about $75,000. what the supreme court said is, money -- relying on rulings that are four decades old, a person's money, what you contribute, amounts to speech and you can't limit it without a really good reason. and the only really good reason the court said is avoiding quid pro quo corruption. i give you something, you give me something in return. as long as the individual limit stands, the court said, it doesn't make any difference how much you give to all candidates put together. the chief justice writing for the majority said the congress can no more limit how many candidates you can contribute to than it could limit how many candidates a newspaper could endorse. it's all about speech. the dissenters here said no, that misreads how it works in the real world, that this is going to allow a greater influence for big money in politics and allow the big money voices, the people with a lot of cash to drown out ordinary people and further distorting the political process, and they say it's doubly damaging given that just four years ago, the supreme court and citizens united sort of unleashed corps rat and union money into the political world as well. so those are the guts of the ruling. it's really a disagreement here between what happens with this money. the supreme court said there's no constitutional way to say people with a lot of money should have a limited role in politics because that would violate the first amendment. the dissenters say that you're going to drown out the small voices. >> pete, this is the latest in a series of supreme court decisions that seem to be slackening restrictions on campaign contributions of various types and contributions to political causes in the name of those first amendment rights. do you see that trend continuing? >> reporter: i do, although i think it's fair to say that the republican party who supported this case and helped to bring it here was really hoping that what the court would do is do away with the legal justification for any limits on contributions whatsoever. that comes from a post-watergate ruling in the 1970s when the court said that you can limit contributions, but you can't limit spending by candidates. i think the conservatives were hoping the supreme court would do away with that altogether. the court said there's no way to do that. so the contribution limits on individual candidates, the 2,600 you can give to any candidate or any primary in general, that stands and the court didn't have any desire to revisit that. >> we a
pete williams. he is outside the supreme court. pete, break down this ruling and how significant it is for us. >> so, it's well to bear in mind that the root limit here on how much you can give to a candidate remains. what the court has struck down is how much you can give to all candidates put together, which was about 49,000, and how much you can give to all political parties and packs put together, which was about $75,000. what the supreme court said is, money -- relying on rulings...
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Apr 7, 2014
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pete is the bull and joe is the bear. pete, you're up, make your case. >> i think goldman is a little late for this story. this has been playing out for six months. this is an area i've been in and love. i continue to like it. i don't love it but i like it. they put it to attractive. i think what's really important here they have improving demand, they have pricing power, we talked about that. the big majors as they've been integrating become more profitable. look at earnings per share and revenue numbers, outstanding. you look at the load factors, that continues. i see all of this can continue and this is why i'm still bullish. i don't know it has the same sort of lead time to get to the upside now much further than they are now but i think they all have 10%. >> i think correlating rising to the gdp and wealth effect trade. i'm concerned about that over the next three months. i like the airline industry have not done as well with it as peteas. >> because you think the market will correct over the next three months? >> i think the airline industry has gotten a little bit ahead of itself. let me walk you through some things. confidence is returning in airlines industry. so they build more in their order books. the overall industry has a 46% order growth. they want new planes, new planes. they have to fill those planes. you look at the recent statistics, the transatlantic, premium flyer, fares down 4% out of nowhere the last quarter. the expectations for the entire industry so high. what's the expectations eps, 200% for delta. 175% for southwest air. the model where i think you're seeing the evidence already happening, what i'm talking about is latin america. latin america is a little bit of concern. the airlines reached for that demand and capacity. oversupply is present. >> this was going on so long the clock got tired. >> that's all right. >> we maho makes a more compell argument on the airlines? >> i like they have pric
pete is the bull and joe is the bear. pete, you're up, make your case. >> i think goldman is a little late for this story. this has been playing out for six months. this is an area i've been in and love. i continue to like it. i don't love it but i like it. they put it to attractive. i think what's really important here they have improving demand, they have pricing power, we talked about that. the big majors as they've been integrating become more profitable. look at earnings per share...
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they say he was probably taking his daly store to pete's coffee -- daily stroll to pete's coffee. witnesses say he got out of the car, looked at bill and drove away. >> it's unhue humane. the vehicle is described as a white audi suv. police are not confirming the details of this case. they stay they are still investigating all of the leads. >>> 7:42. new information on a mystery along some train tracks in the east bay. coming up at 8:00ing what we've learned about -- 8:00, what we've learned about the possible explosion that critically injured two people. >>> banned for life and fines millions. what's next for l.a. clippers' owner donald sterling? up next, we'll explain his options. >>> there's gonna be record highs today. it's already very warm for some, especially along emeryville, berkeley, oakland. no doubt about it. we'll take a look at those coming up. staand the speed readingsng incrare off the chart!appiness. paradise found! luscious locks! great glittering galaxies. the happiest place on earth keeps getting happier! save up to 20% on rooms at a disneyland resort hotel on
they say he was probably taking his daly store to pete's coffee -- daily stroll to pete's coffee. witnesses say he got out of the car, looked at bill and drove away. >> it's unhue humane. the vehicle is described as a white audi suv. police are not confirming the details of this case. they stay they are still investigating all of the leads. >>> 7:42. new information on a mystery along some train tracks in the east bay. coming up at 8:00ing what we've learned about -- 8:00, what...
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Apr 22, 2014
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pete williams joins me now from the supreme court. pete, the ramifications of this case, pretty big? >> well, it could embolden other states, seven states like michigan have banned affirmative action and now the supreme court said when a state does this by amending its constitution it is not violating the u.s. constitution. other states considering this may say it's a supreme court says we can do it maybe we should. the argument here is not about affirmative action itself and the justices and majority today went out of their way to say they were not expressing a view on whether colleges can have affirmative action. the question is if they do, can states then ban it? that's what happened in michigan in 2006. the supreme court here in 2003 upheld affirmative action and school admissions in michigan then voters went to the polls and 58% supported this constitutional amendment. so it was banned. now the opponents of the ban argued that the vote in essence changed the political rules that before the constitutional amendment, if somebody wanted to advocate for a change in how schools do admissions, for example, do away with legacy admissions or change the rules on grade points or you should admit all fencers, all had it to do is go to the school to get it changed. after the amendment passed that raised the hurdle meaning they have to amend the state constitution and their claim was that was restructuring the political process and unconstitutional. that idea got only two votes on the supreme court. ruth baden ginsburg and sonia sotomayor, made no secret of the fact she was a beneficiary of affirmative action in getting her in colleges and says the court is way off base and we have to have an honest and open discussion about the fact racial discrimination still exists. at the same time, the court says if they want to ban it they can. >> in reading from justice kennedy, he wrote that deliberative debate on racial preferences may shade into rancor but that does not justify removing certain court determined issues from the voters reach. democracy does not presume that some subjects are either too divisive for public debate. >> reporter: before that he said there's no authority in the constitution that set aside laws that permit this to the voters. for the six justices who voted, there was no common rationale here. there's a set of interlocking positions. ele ele elena kagan sat this one out. >> the big argument on the way we watch television, this involves little antennas and the invention that could circumvent the way we see tv shows. >> reporter: those arguments are going on right now. it's a software program called aerio and it allows a user to watch over the air broadcast television on a mobile device. what it does is no different than a homeowner taking an antenna from the roof and connecting into a digital video recorder, we're moving all of that to a central facility and it's legal. the broadcasters say it violates copyright laws and they are taking their over the air programs and for a fee making them available without paying copyright fees. the broadcasters say when those programs are put on cable tv or satellite, those providers do pay a copright fee and they are stealing their signal. >> nbc universal is part of that case. >> reporter: indeed so. >> thank you, peteliams, we'll look for all of this throughout the day. in kiev, vice president joe biden had harsh words for russia while urging ukraine's new government to root out the corruption that he said helped lead to the ouster and pat trons in moscow. jim maceda joins me now in donetsk. biden said there's no question who the masked men are. you've been covering the issue from eastern ukraine where a local mayor says it's not moscow ordering the men in, but i have to tell you, american intelligence saying they have plenty of evidence well beyond these pictures of actual command and control coming from moscow. this is going to remain a big issue. >> reporter: absolutely, it's going to remain a big issue and it's not surprising that the on fis indication continues, neither russia it self nor the pro-russian insurge enlts here are convinced by the photos showing again, allegedly the same russian special operators and later here in east ukraine. as you say, the kremlin repeated today that it has no
pete williams joins me now from the supreme court. pete, the ramifications of this case, pretty big? >> well, it could embolden other states, seven states like michigan have banned affirmative action and now the supreme court said when a state does this by amending its constitution it is not violating the u.s. constitution. other states considering this may say it's a supreme court says we can do it maybe we should. the argument here is not about affirmative action itself and the justices...
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. >> : pete carroll this will but jim harbaugh pete carroll with one year left on his contract got ayear extension today. he making 6 1/2 million after winning the super bowl you figure it went up to eight. course harbaugh had two years left on his extension and appears the forty-niners are gullible on met jim whitley week when the super bowl the won't be. on >> : max always happy that peat is insecure. jim is >> : jim missed a making 5 million year. are people saying we listen the real trouble why they disrespecting jim. essays making a $5 million a year and has two years left on the deal. >> : the warriors game time decision there enough was the king. tonight and oakland. wayne gretzky's daughter in the middle of a big controversy on the cover of golf digest did and why this provocative pose of golf digest. well what people are saying what you have a regular pga golfer or woman lpga golfers yavlinsky. polio she is engaged to a player on the pga tour. dustin johnson. nonetheless people are up in arms. i hate to say it more about than what's on the cover of golf digest but never mind
. >> : pete carroll this will but jim harbaugh pete carroll with one year left on his contract got ayear extension today. he making 6 1/2 million after winning the super bowl you figure it went up to eight. course harbaugh had two years left on his extension and appears the forty-niners are gullible on met jim whitley week when the super bowl the won't be. on >> : max always happy that peat is insecure. jim is >> : jim missed a making 5 million year. are people saying we...
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pete williams they have no connection because they use this quote we know who that guy is. >> absolutely. you know, they probably know where he is located and probably checked on him. i think pete's reporting would be spot on. i think they are not concerned about it or would probably have said something different to pete it. it is unlikely that is involved. you notice information about stuff like that all the time. >> explain that. people are looking at it and going fbi put out a lookout notice for somebody who said this. how often is a lookout notice put out? >> we call it be on the lookout. they come across the teletype, the n.c.i.c. computer all the time. there are lookouts for suicidal people, mentally unstable people. there are all kinds of lookouts all the time. yes, this is related to fort hood but fort hood is huge. it's the biggest military base. i have been on the base, it is like a city patrolled by its own civilian police force and military police. you have to consider it like a city. there are businesses. there are military functions, armor, all kinds of stuff going on there. so, you know, you can have multiple criminal activities like a guy who made a threat and separately a shooting, as well. >> let me just reset things a little bit. this shooting took place sometime before 5 p.m. it wa
pete williams they have no connection because they use this quote we know who that guy is. >> absolutely. you know, they probably know where he is located and probably checked on him. i think pete's reporting would be spot on. i think they are not concerned about it or would probably have said something different to pete it. it is unlikely that is involved. you notice information about stuff like that all the time. >> explain that. people are looking at it and going fbi put out a...
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pete hegseth from %oncerned veterans for america. pete, good morning. >> good morning. >> the state department didn't want us to know they're not ready. we're pouring a lot of money over there and they can't do it. >> it's the worst-kept secret in washington and afghanistan that the afghan government is not capable of the central governance we set up and is required to administer the government now. the security forces still need a substantial amount of support. anyone who has been there and experienced the afghan government understands this fact. the question is how can we shepherd it along so we don't create a vacuum going forward. >> why was the state department trying to pretend everything is fine, it's going to work out? >> why are we pretending there was an internet video in benghazi? there is a lot of going on to paper over real incidents. let's be honest about it. >>ç you mentioned the benghazi video. there is a new terrorist video, an actual terrorist video of about 100 al qaeda guys in yemen and it looks like al qaeda core is back. despite what the president and his cabinet and his supporters said, where al qaeda is decimated, they're on the run, they're not on the run. they're back and bigger than ever. >> they're not on the run. they are on the march. this is an extraordinary video. 15 minutes high-definition video that is clearly a propaganda video, a demonstration of capability. you've got al qaeda's number two open and brazen talking about attacksç against america. as someone who studied insurgency, this is a demonstration they feel more capable to take it to the next level, do more than train locally but try to project power. al qaeda, far from being on the run feels emboldened and it's because of the policies we pursued. >> let's talk about this. here in new york city the mayor, mr. de blasio, ended the surveillance program of muslims. what's interesting, it was just a couple of months ago i believe a court here in new york city said there's no real problem with it and yet they've ended it because some, from the aclu and what not said you can't go into mosques, you can't target muslims. what are your observations about this? >> they were very careful in crafting the program originally. obviously perceived by many as a controversial program but what it does is it monitors the muslim community in new york city because, i mean, here's the difficult reality. we live in aç p.c. world. no one wants to say it. it's not that 100% of muslims are terrorists. it's that 100% of terrorists who tried to blow up buildings in new york are muslims. 99.99% of the muslim community are peaceful people who want to do well in this country but it is smart for the police department to a -- allocate assets where the threat might come from. in boston betterç surveillance could have routed out that problem. i think they're taking a lot of risks, i think they're taking away an asset. >> new york city the number-one terror target in the world. peteiful naples, florida, today. pete, thank you very much. >> can't beat it. >> you're lucky. time for some news with clayton. >> quick look at headlines. disgraced former presidential candidate john edwards is back in court as an attorney representing a four-year-old virginia boy in a medical malpractice case. this is the first court appearance for edwards since being acquitted for accepting illegal campaign contributions to cover up his affair during a 2008 presidential campaign. >>> a 74-year-old man is hoping for jail time. he says he robbed a chicago area bank because he was homesick for prison. in 50 years, he spent just 6 out from behindç bars. and he just might get his wish. he's facing 30 more years behind bars. >> a breakthrough for breast cancer patients. johns hopkins researchers developed a blood test that examines a patient's d.n.a. and accurately detects a patient's risk for breast cancer. the test had a 95% success rate. how to explain how this works is an associate from
pete hegseth from %oncerned veterans for america. pete, good morning. >> good morning. >> the state department didn't want us to know they're not ready. we're pouring a lot of money over there and they can't do it. >> it's the worst-kept secret in washington and afghanistan that the afghan government is not capable of the central governance we set up and is required to administer the government now. the security forces still need a substantial amount of support. anyone who has...