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May 26, 2014
05/14
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MSNBCW
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look at sampson playing with his toys. boy, like a kid in a toy store, huh?s is all stainless steel. >> how many needles did you have coming out of that? >> ten. this is the ferrari right here. plugs right in there. >> when he got his hands on his tattoo gun again, he was so excited that his hands were actually shaking. >> that's my baby. i'm shaking. i lost this about three months ago, but you can see i made the frame and then i tied it all down with dental floss and glued it so that it's nice and hard. feel that, it's not -- there's no movement in this. this is one solid piece. >> and that was your razor? >> this came out of a razor, electric razor. man. >> you almost look like you're in love. >> oh, man. all right, buddy. you're going to have to go back to the crate. >> painful? >> oh, not as painful as it was the first time. >> while sampson strives to be a pioneer in the world of prison tattoos, two other inmates we met at limon had taken the art to shocking dimensions. i don't just make things for a living i take pride in them. so when my moderate to se
look at sampson playing with his toys. boy, like a kid in a toy store, huh?s is all stainless steel. >> how many needles did you have coming out of that? >> ten. this is the ferrari right here. plugs right in there. >> when he got his hands on his tattoo gun again, he was so excited that his hands were actually shaking. >> that's my baby. i'm shaking. i lost this about three months ago, but you can see i made the frame and then i tied it all down with dental floss and...
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May 26, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN2
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his turnout was the last public hanging in sampson county north carolina. newspapers all over the country took note of the execution. headlines announced that it hadn't gone as planned. for example, the "washington post" titled its article murderer hanged twice and described what it called a ghastly gallows scene. almost a century later in march of 1997, american newspapers carried stories of another botched execution. this time the electrocution of pedro a 39-year-old cuban immigrant convicted and condemned for stabbing to death a florida high school teacher. after the current was turned on at his execution as one newspaper put it the flames leapt from the come down and it was horrible, the witness was quoted as saying. the flame covered his whole head from one side to the other. and it left the impression of someone being burned alive. the medina execution, like the console's execution before it made headlines because it suggested that the request for the payments effective and reliable and allegedly humane technology of death was by no means complete. bo
his turnout was the last public hanging in sampson county north carolina. newspapers all over the country took note of the execution. headlines announced that it hadn't gone as planned. for example, the "washington post" titled its article murderer hanged twice and described what it called a ghastly gallows scene. almost a century later in march of 1997, american newspapers carried stories of another botched execution. this time the electrocution of pedro a 39-year-old cuban immigrant...
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May 16, 2014
05/14
by
FBC
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we're not here to cast political aspersions one day or another, adam sampson, foxbusiness.com seniorn with the run-up, i got to get in, something must be going on, the market doubled since '09. they're still out night is incredible. neil: why? >> i think it is financial crisis and i think that's what most experts say. the headlines of markets collapsing over and over. neil: remember their experiences too. >> dot-com bubble. that is exactly it. neil: a lot of them, when i hear, these new valuations for some hot new internet companies, the modern day bubble as we call it ironically young people are into this. >> a report today from ubs, young people are conservative as those who lived in the great depression. they're getting not into this new game at all. neil: tracy are they running republicans? the same people polled are equally cynical of both parties? >> i think as you say, pox on both houses all the time. i don't think they want anything to do with anybody. unfortunately the way everyone is portrayed these day, wall street evil, d.c. is evil, i will keep my money under my futon i
we're not here to cast political aspersions one day or another, adam sampson, foxbusiness.com seniorn with the run-up, i got to get in, something must be going on, the market doubled since '09. they're still out night is incredible. neil: why? >> i think it is financial crisis and i think that's what most experts say. the headlines of markets collapsing over and over. neil: remember their experiences too. >> dot-com bubble. that is exactly it. neil: a lot of them, when i hear, these...
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89
May 31, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN2
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eye 89
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on september 28, 1900, the state of north carolina hanged this man for a murder committed in sampson county. he was born in accounting in 1865 and lived there his entire life. even though he weighed only 110 pounds, he was said to be as tough as iron and he had the unfortunate habit of getting into violent arguments and carrying on a running feud with a neighbor, john herring. one night an argument again and in a fight broke out. he reached into the vbox and got a sharp butcher knife and stabbed him to a certain extent that he died during the night. brought to trial in october of 1899, he was found guilty of murder and sentenced to hang. on the surface it is nothing remarkable about what north carolina wanted to do. hanging had been the primary measure of execution in the founding of the american colony. it was an anything alice then on an expensive way of putting people to death. he could be handled at the local level and not elaborate execution protocol. on the day of hanging hundreds of people traveled from all over the country to witness it. as in all of the executions, the count
on september 28, 1900, the state of north carolina hanged this man for a murder committed in sampson county. he was born in accounting in 1865 and lived there his entire life. even though he weighed only 110 pounds, he was said to be as tough as iron and he had the unfortunate habit of getting into violent arguments and carrying on a running feud with a neighbor, john herring. one night an argument again and in a fight broke out. he reached into the vbox and got a sharp butcher knife and...
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135
May 14, 2014
05/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
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. >> peter sampson and crew. >> they had paid $340 million to settle this, but in the middle of the processfinancial services and the u.s. banking regulators threatened to pull them and that, to me shows that they can really affect the pressure on us to get the settlement to where they want to get, maybe move it forward quicker. but pulling the license of a bank in new york state would be a pretty serious thing that would hurt business. >> the critical distinction is criminal charges. typically this is negotiated. as it was pointed out to us -- there is a whole cascade if a bank is guilty of criminal charges. what has changed with a bank in that? >> i don't think anything has changed with the bag, what changed is what prosecutors want to show, that they can go after a bank and what eric holder said is that the banks are not too big to jail. cracking down hard and showing that they can do this. to your point we don't know what the effects will be. we talked about this before and this is an unknown entity. we don't know what the collateral damage is. what the market is telling me is that the
. >> peter sampson and crew. >> they had paid $340 million to settle this, but in the middle of the processfinancial services and the u.s. banking regulators threatened to pull them and that, to me shows that they can really affect the pressure on us to get the settlement to where they want to get, maybe move it forward quicker. but pulling the license of a bank in new york state would be a pretty serious thing that would hurt business. >> the critical distinction is criminal...
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recently apple was awarded one hundred twenty million dollars in damages in a patent suit against sampson but that was only five percent of what apple was asking for maybe they want to buy beats you know now i asked alex what he thought of the of the patent wars and where they were leading anywhere for apple and we're going to our bad here's what he had to say. something about patent wars are really leading anywhere it is at the end of the day the patent wars for apple are about trying to defend its entrenched market share companies like samsung have been eating apple from the bottom in the top on phones for a little while apple has very high margin devices they sell them for a very high premium samsung spends a little bit more money on each of their phones they're working into the markets in places like china and korea and working up from the bottom with cheap smartphones in the united states that have future lead with smartphones coming down from the top and really apple hasn't had any major innovation on the i phone or i pad platform going on two plus years now you're not seeing dead s
recently apple was awarded one hundred twenty million dollars in damages in a patent suit against sampson but that was only five percent of what apple was asking for maybe they want to buy beats you know now i asked alex what he thought of the of the patent wars and where they were leading anywhere for apple and we're going to our bad here's what he had to say. something about patent wars are really leading anywhere it is at the end of the day the patent wars for apple are about trying to...
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1.0K
May 21, 2014
05/14
by
KNTV
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sampson?ast two years. so far, it's appearing in the united states. we know of three cases. two from travelers from saudi arabia who arrived here in the states and one person contracted mers from that person. one of the persons from saudi arabia that traveled from saudi arabia. >> dr. peterson, if there are only three cases, why is it getting so much attention? should we be concerned about it? >> the concern is that there have been cases of death in saudi arabia and in some other countries throughout the world. right now, in terms of how well it's contagious, we think it's less contagious than a flu or cold. it is transmitted through coughing or sneezing. however, the case that was brought to this country from saudi arabia was not necessarily transmitted to the second person that was identified here very easily. so we don't think it's that contagious. but it can cause death if it's an advanced case, so that's why there's a lot of concern around it. >> dr. davis, new research that suggests a la
sampson?ast two years. so far, it's appearing in the united states. we know of three cases. two from travelers from saudi arabia who arrived here in the states and one person contracted mers from that person. one of the persons from saudi arabia that traveled from saudi arabia. >> dr. peterson, if there are only three cases, why is it getting so much attention? should we be concerned about it? >> the concern is that there have been cases of death in saudi arabia and in some other...
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33
May 30, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 33
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we can't go on pretending that they don't exist like the sampson funded groups want us to do. until the 1960s virtually all mental health expenditures were spent on the most seriously ill because expenditures went to state psychiatric hospitals. after that at the request of the mental health industry the funds are now spent on all others. as a result of this shift from focusing on the seriously mentally ill to trying to improve the mental health of all others 164,000 are homeless and 300,000 incarcerated. the disproportional number of them are people of color who cannot get treatment. i get calls from people that they can plead for treatment for their adult children known to have serious mental illness but the mental health system turns them away. we know how they fund everything else. we do know how to treat the most seriously mentally ill to see that they get treatment. we have to prioritize spending. this is one of those issues where it may not be that we are not spending enough. we spend 130 billion and the amount is supposed to go up to to -- what we have to do is start s
we can't go on pretending that they don't exist like the sampson funded groups want us to do. until the 1960s virtually all mental health expenditures were spent on the most seriously ill because expenditures went to state psychiatric hospitals. after that at the request of the mental health industry the funds are now spent on all others. as a result of this shift from focusing on the seriously mentally ill to trying to improve the mental health of all others 164,000 are homeless and 300,000...
251
251
May 10, 2014
05/14
by
CNNW
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eye 251
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that was the first time that sterling was recorded saying some racist remarks in regards to ralph sampsonessentially, this guy has been saying and dropping and doing racist things for the past 30 years, and players have still been signing with this man and with this team. so i'd be wanting to know, why wasn't the agents informing players of this, and why wasn't the players association informing members about this man so they wouldn't have signed with him in the first place? i just want to add one final thing. >> okay. >> and that is, i understand that magic johnson, you know, may be upsociety, the players are upset, but it's important to realize some of the true victims in all of this haven't been talked about, and those are the people that have had -- were discriminated against because of housing. trying to move into nice areas where the violence is low, trying to move into areas where education would be better for their children. they were discriminated against, and we don't talk about the victimization happening back then, but talking too much about millionaires who at the end of the d
that was the first time that sterling was recorded saying some racist remarks in regards to ralph sampsonessentially, this guy has been saying and dropping and doing racist things for the past 30 years, and players have still been signing with this man and with this team. so i'd be wanting to know, why wasn't the agents informing players of this, and why wasn't the players association informing members about this man so they wouldn't have signed with him in the first place? i just want to add...