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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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WJLA
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sonya, everything has been all scrambled and shuffled. are you ready to play?i'm ready to play. >> audience, are you ready? [cheers and apause] let's play millionaire. [dramatic musical flourish] ♪ who told matt lauer in an infamous
sonya, everything has been all scrambled and shuffled. are you ready to play?i'm ready to play. >> audience, are you ready? [cheers and apause] let's play millionaire. [dramatic musical flourish] ♪ who told matt lauer in an infamous
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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39
Feb 18, 2014
02/14
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SFGTV
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. >> sonya and others (calling names). >> good afternoon, commissioners i'm sonya. i'm community advocate with todd could. and i just want to speak very briefly about the public outreach from the project sponsor. it's been very limited at best. and we are requesting that there's more outreach done by the project spornt. i'd like to show a difference in the public meetings this is primarily of last year. of okay of the proposed development and expansion. and if you look at october it is extremely radly different in the expansion of the height it's two stories >> i'm sorry ma'am, are you trying to show us here. can you probable cause can you turn the projector on. sorry when you're ready >> we can see it now. >> the expansion proposal, of course, as things progressed over the months but in the from april of last year at the public meeting and this is from october. the red spacing and bulk creating shadows on the children's playground there needs to be more public hearings and meeting and to have more comments. this stakeholders have stated what they need but we need m
. >> sonya and others (calling names). >> good afternoon, commissioners i'm sonya. i'm community advocate with todd could. and i just want to speak very briefly about the public outreach from the project sponsor. it's been very limited at best. and we are requesting that there's more outreach done by the project spornt. i'd like to show a difference in the public meetings this is primarily of last year. of okay of the proposed development and expansion. and if you look at october it...
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Feb 17, 2014
02/14
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KGO
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from philadelphia, pennsylvania, y'all give it up for sonya kearney. what up? >> hello.ers and applause] >> sonya, now, you usually do this as a job, but you needed a little pep talk from your young son. tell me about this talk. >> i did. i got great advice from my 8-year-old son. he's really into basketball, so his advice--
from philadelphia, pennsylvania, y'all give it up for sonya kearney. what up? >> hello.ers and applause] >> sonya, now, you usually do this as a job, but you needed a little pep talk from your young son. tell me about this talk. >> i did. i got great advice from my 8-year-old son. he's really into basketball, so his advice--
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Feb 23, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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. >> sonya and her husband adopted the children from separate orphanages in ukraine. 12 yooertd daraa left behind a grandmother living outside of kiev. weekly phone calls bring daraa comfort. but they bring anxiety. >> i don't want anything to happen to my grandmother. >> sonya says she walks a delicate line between keeping the kids informed and protecting them from harsh realities. >> at first they couldn't understand what is going on. we tried to explain the best we could to a kid, because it's hard to explain situations like that, so they are asking many questions. >> a mass at a ukrainian church offered sasha and daraa comfort. here the children pray along with others, who share their culture and language. [ speaking foreign language ] >> they also change stories with other kids, like 17-year-old anastasia, who left 13 years ago, but worries about relatives, including a cousin injured during a protest. >> it's difficult to go through, knowing that your family can be hurt, meanwhile knowing they are fighting for something we should have, which is freedom. despite the attachment to
. >> sonya and her husband adopted the children from separate orphanages in ukraine. 12 yooertd daraa left behind a grandmother living outside of kiev. weekly phone calls bring daraa comfort. but they bring anxiety. >> i don't want anything to happen to my grandmother. >> sonya says she walks a delicate line between keeping the kids informed and protecting them from harsh realities. >> at first they couldn't understand what is going on. we tried to explain the best we...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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47
Feb 6, 2014
02/14
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SFGTV
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bringing in over $100 million a major to make sure everybody pace what they on the other hand, and sonya thank you for your work. we process numerous transactions through the mail on line and over the phone and it's our cashiers that bring in the money. our office of financial empowerment mayor we're doing great work. our gross receipts project is led by jenny and that's an exciting project the biggest change to our tax system in the city and we're stepping up. our it groping group is led by richard. our investment portfolio is managed by michelle the average daily processing is round $1100 million. our project group is lead by rebecca thank you for your hard work here doing a grow job. our property tax group led by phil and thank you for your work. our tax paper group the first line of defense is led by grace and our banking group that's handling the transactions is led by janet. that's the team of managers that run the incredibly important jobs and i sincerely want to thank those folks for they're hard work. i want to recognize my senior management team let me introduce our tax collect
bringing in over $100 million a major to make sure everybody pace what they on the other hand, and sonya thank you for your work. we process numerous transactions through the mail on line and over the phone and it's our cashiers that bring in the money. our office of financial empowerment mayor we're doing great work. our gross receipts project is led by jenny and that's an exciting project the biggest change to our tax system in the city and we're stepping up. our it groping group is led by...
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Feb 5, 2014
02/14
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CNNW
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. >> koppel said he knew adrienne and sonya. >> it was that cold feeling that came over me.t to feel or at that moment. i really didn't know. >> we want to make sure that he knows details about the crime and the things he's telling us match up with what we already know about the crime scene. want to make lure it's information that hasn't been released to the media. >> although eric koppel confessed, he wouldn't tell police why he did it. >> he always claimed he didn't know what he did with the murder weapon, which, again, to me always suggested to me that he wasn't telling the truth, because it seemed to me that that would be something he'd be able to tell us. >> eric was very elusive as far as the question of why the crime happened. we could never get him to say i did this because of x, y, and z >>> 25 year old eric koppel walked into police headquarters and confessed to the murders of adrian and leslie. dna tests confirmed that eric koppel's blood was at the crime scene and that his saliva was on the cigarette butts found outside. >> i don't know if i exactly remember the
. >> koppel said he knew adrienne and sonya. >> it was that cold feeling that came over me.t to feel or at that moment. i really didn't know. >> we want to make sure that he knows details about the crime and the things he's telling us match up with what we already know about the crime scene. want to make lure it's information that hasn't been released to the media. >> although eric koppel confessed, he wouldn't tell police why he did it. >> he always claimed he...
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Feb 9, 2014
02/14
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ALJAZAM
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sonya reports. >> reporter: no royal fanfare for the princess.alm, almost cheerful as she entered the courthouse greeting the press on her way inside. on the other side of the building there was little sympathy for her plight. republican demonstrators gathered outside. this is one scandal that has fueled anti-monarchy feeling in the country. >> translator: what spaniards are living say comedy. we are being defrauded by the monarchy, what we need is food and jobs. we as citizens need to take some responsibility. because corruption is a symptom of society's failure to deal with this. >> reporter: this is the outcome of a second attempt to question the duchess about her finances. she is suspected the tax fraud and money laundering at the company she co owned with her husband, he's accused of using his nonprofit organization to em embezzle public funds. investigators have allegedly uncovered payments billed for mayor mansion and private dance classes at their home. her lawyer said she had been looking forward this day to prove her innocence. but one
sonya reports. >> reporter: no royal fanfare for the princess.alm, almost cheerful as she entered the courthouse greeting the press on her way inside. on the other side of the building there was little sympathy for her plight. republican demonstrators gathered outside. this is one scandal that has fueled anti-monarchy feeling in the country. >> translator: what spaniards are living say comedy. we are being defrauded by the monarchy, what we need is food and jobs. we as citizens need...
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Feb 4, 2014
02/14
by
ALJAZAM
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. >> sonya macato is a civil rights attorney who has represented. >> he heard joking about the manual's injuries. >> he was fine. >> he is talking right now. >> if you are difficult in jail, you will be disciplined. everybody assumes that. >> that's right. >> why should we care that these inmates are being disciplined? >> i think that if you are difficult in jail, you should be disciplined, but the punishment does not to be that i just get to beat you. it's not by breaking the probablying on his ankles because you took a flashlight that was 40 ounces and you beat his ankle until it broke in 4 or five different places. >> is not punishment. >> that's brutality. >> after suing the sheriff's department and the officers involved, a jury unanimously awarded the imagine $125,000 in damages. sheriff baka, a former jail house captain and the deputies involved also agreed to pay $165,000 in punitive penalties. the sheriff's department wouldn't comment on that case or mr. figaroa's. the sheriff's office declined a request for an interview. >> the surplus is spent quickly building. >> however, we
. >> sonya macato is a civil rights attorney who has represented. >> he heard joking about the manual's injuries. >> he was fine. >> he is talking right now. >> if you are difficult in jail, you will be disciplined. everybody assumes that. >> that's right. >> why should we care that these inmates are being disciplined? >> i think that if you are difficult in jail, you should be disciplined, but the punishment does not to be that i just get to beat...
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Feb 13, 2014
02/14
by
ALJAZAM
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they didn't even agree on what i should have done sonya, what do you make of the record? >> they used old data using old information we have did i knowitial mammography and good studies recently showing digit al ma'am okay raves is more effect i have especially for younger women, pre-menopausal under the age of 50. so we've got to be aware that the technology has change. wary about the results of that study and how to generalize it to today when the technology has significantly improved. >> we have all heard so often, sonia it's important to detect any cancer early. this study questions even that saying there was no advantage to finding cancers that are too small to feel. do you agree? >> we can offer women treatment options to save their breasts and possibly avoid chemo therapy. the fact that they did not find cancers early is questionable because we know that by having the ability to find it on a mammogram at a time when you can treat it, women have a better prognosis and early detection saves lives. >> doctor, michelle craig, a breast cancer survivor is skeptical of th
they didn't even agree on what i should have done sonya, what do you make of the record? >> they used old data using old information we have did i knowitial mammography and good studies recently showing digit al ma'am okay raves is more effect i have especially for younger women, pre-menopausal under the age of 50. so we've got to be aware that the technology has change. wary about the results of that study and how to generalize it to today when the technology has significantly improved....
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sonya rides quite a bit, and she says it happens to her. >> sometimes it has to be changed out, and we have to sit there for 30 minutes to an hour. >> reporter: and you have had to do that? >> yes, over in philadelphia. >> reporter: and it is those stories that amtrak wants to eliminate altogether, and all loaded up and ready to go. the new amtrak city sprinters are expected to be the new workhorses of the northeast corridor. >> it is a good thing as long as the ride is smooth. as long as, as long as it is on time. >> reporter: and what makes the locomotives different? well, first and foremost, they are new, and amtrak says they are more reliable, and easy to maintain, meaning that they can be turned around faster, and put back into service, and all of this is a way to improve the customer experience. >> much like the updating which is a good thing. >> reporter: and the first of 70 new locomotives make the maiden voyage tomorrow starting in boston and ending in union station. they say that the new locomotives should gradually come on line, and then a few more coming on, and then monthl
sonya rides quite a bit, and she says it happens to her. >> sometimes it has to be changed out, and we have to sit there for 30 minutes to an hour. >> reporter: and you have had to do that? >> yes, over in philadelphia. >> reporter: and it is those stories that amtrak wants to eliminate altogether, and all loaded up and ready to go. the new amtrak city sprinters are expected to be the new workhorses of the northeast corridor. >> it is a good thing as long as the...
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203
Feb 23, 2014
02/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 203
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. >> sonya and her husband adopted the children three years ago. 13-year-old sasha had no family. daraa left behind a grandmother living outside of kiev. weekly phone calls to her bring carria comfort. >> they also bring anxiety. >> i don't want anything to happen to my grandmother. >> sonya says he walks a delicate line between keeping the kids informed and protecting them from harsh reality. >> at first they couldn't understand what is going on. we tried to explain the best we could to a kid because it's hard to explain situations like that. so they are asking many questions. >> ayman at a ukrainian church offers daraa comfort and community. the children pray with others who share their culture and language. >> they exchange stories with other kids like 17-year-old anastasia. she left the ukraine 13 years ago but worries about relatives, including a cows join injured. >> it's difficult to go through, knowing your family can be hurt, but that they are fighting for something we should have, which is freedom. >> despite the attachment neither sasha nor daria want to return there. t
. >> sonya and her husband adopted the children three years ago. 13-year-old sasha had no family. daraa left behind a grandmother living outside of kiev. weekly phone calls to her bring carria comfort. >> they also bring anxiety. >> i don't want anything to happen to my grandmother. >> sonya says he walks a delicate line between keeping the kids informed and protecting them from harsh reality. >> at first they couldn't understand what is going on. we tried to...
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Feb 14, 2014
02/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 78
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book begins -- i don't want to take away the first question but a wonderful panel with me and justice sonya sotomayor who is a good friend of mine and the panel wanted to know how does one become a judge. she was in on the second circuit. first you go to the wonderful law school and do very well. then you work in private practice and have opinions that you care deeply about you are cautious in how you reflect them and you become a judge. and then it was my turn. i said you represent the first accused of killing a police officer you could find. [laughter] that would be your first case on prime time. you go to this law school and clerked for a judge and take every case in the commonwealth of massachusetts and give speeches on the boston common. to the final you marry the legal director of the civil liberties unit of massachusetts and become a judge. [laughter] so it was -- i came to the bench looking very different than my colleagues. how does that make a difference? it makes a difference in so many ways that you don't understand this assertively until you have become a judge. it makes a diff
book begins -- i don't want to take away the first question but a wonderful panel with me and justice sonya sotomayor who is a good friend of mine and the panel wanted to know how does one become a judge. she was in on the second circuit. first you go to the wonderful law school and do very well. then you work in private practice and have opinions that you care deeply about you are cautious in how you reflect them and you become a judge. and then it was my turn. i said you represent the first...