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May 5, 2014
05/14
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he was a moir fin addict and a drunk and he was dying. and that was why he was in the house.ut that didn't matter. the press just went wild. there were newspapers in the days called the sporting news and they were the equivalent of the tabloids later. they wrote everything you could think about. these women. making up a lot. >> what is a spiritualist? how do you define that? >> somebody who believes that there is some way of communicating with somebody on the other side of the world, in other words, somebody who is dead. and has been deceased. and there are various perm youtations of that. it can be people who can feel you can talk to them. people say there is evidence of it. for a long time people were very interested in it. but because of all the ho couple and stuff that began to gravery the music, the people ay at say aunses with people talking and having the table move and all of this made it seem like there was no possibility that this could be true. but it really was a religion even after all this was discovered there was something like 300 churches in america at the tu
he was a moir fin addict and a drunk and he was dying. and that was why he was in the house.ut that didn't matter. the press just went wild. there were newspapers in the days called the sporting news and they were the equivalent of the tabloids later. they wrote everything you could think about. these women. making up a lot. >> what is a spiritualist? how do you define that? >> somebody who believes that there is some way of communicating with somebody on the other side of the...
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68
May 31, 2014
05/14
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was he was given a lot of information. people would talk to him and he piled up the information about what was happening in the newspapers. one reason his papers, he kept them all together and got them finally to a library is he had even more good material in his files that he couldn't use in the book. he was completely trust worthy. people would give him things and know that it wasn't going to ruin their own careers. it was just going to be information that he could include in the story was telling. >> i was just wondering about the long-term plans for at tech, if there was any vision to turn those factories and farms over to the people or how long he envisioned the state would maintain control. >> he thought the factories and farms would be of finally by the people. they would be financed not by state money but buy bonds, savings bonds people would buy from the state of california. once farms and factories were pass the point of supporting the people and began to sell the things they were producing, money would pay back
was he was given a lot of information. people would talk to him and he piled up the information about what was happening in the newspapers. one reason his papers, he kept them all together and got them finally to a library is he had even more good material in his files that he couldn't use in the book. he was completely trust worthy. people would give him things and know that it wasn't going to ruin their own careers. it was just going to be information that he could include in the story was...
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964
May 12, 2014
05/14
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that was not what was going on. >> no. it was more like a connective friendship.ng. >> she says she e-mailed keith several warnings and tried to reach her husband throughout the next day, but her calls went straight to voice mail. >> i was just thinking i was going to get a phone call from the police, saying your husband was acting like an idiot, but i didn't hear anything from anybody. >> mary says rob returned home saturday morning, telling her keith had been out of town. >> instantly, i was like, oh, good. i was so happy. like, i was so relieved. >> relieved, she told the detectives until four days later when she ran an internet search to see what her husband could have found out about the superintendent. >> there it was. keith's picture, saying 51 year old keith reed, shot to death. >> i couldn't believe it, like i lost my breath. and i was shocked. and i knew right away that it had to be rob. >> to investigators looking for the killer in upstate new york, mary's husband made more than a lot of sense. there was keith reed's cell phone found off this bridge in
that was not what was going on. >> no. it was more like a connective friendship.ng. >> she says she e-mailed keith several warnings and tried to reach her husband throughout the next day, but her calls went straight to voice mail. >> i was just thinking i was going to get a phone call from the police, saying your husband was acting like an idiot, but i didn't hear anything from anybody. >> mary says rob returned home saturday morning, telling her keith had been out of...
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196
May 26, 2014
05/14
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he said -- he was so upset. he was verbally ranting. he was like a bull. he was so angry. >> the idea took root early. jeremy killed michelle because he was a hot head who verbally abused michelle in their tumultuous relationship. michelle's sister had seen trouble between the boyfriend and their kid sister since shortly after they met. >> right away red flags. clothing she could wear and couldn't wear. degrading her. she was 100-something pounds. told her she looked chubby. >> relationships have ups and downs. but this is more torment. verbal torment that she went through. >> it got physical too, according to the family. play wrestling between the couple had on at least one occasion resulted in jeremy injuring michelle. she eventually made up her mind. she was going to leave him. >> does she tell you, i'm going to pack up, i'm going to split up with him? >> she said it's bad and i knew that when she said it was bad, i figured she was coming back to me. because i had said that -- i said just come home. >> to her sisters, there was something else that didn'
he said -- he was so upset. he was verbally ranting. he was like a bull. he was so angry. >> the idea took root early. jeremy killed michelle because he was a hot head who verbally abused michelle in their tumultuous relationship. michelle's sister had seen trouble between the boyfriend and their kid sister since shortly after they met. >> right away red flags. clothing she could wear and couldn't wear. degrading her. she was 100-something pounds. told her she looked chubby....
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May 25, 2014
05/14
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he was frustrated with where the movement was. when proposition 8 past and lesbians were zero for 30 at the ballot box. they had been targeted more often than any group in america by these ballot initiatives. there was sort of a low point and a feeling among this group of people who i followed and that's absolutely what i did for five years, i followed that group of people and their frustration but there are also moments in this book that certainly are not in the scripted telling. for instance you find out it's hollywood put together. they don't say to people turned ted down to people who are towering figures in the movement they said i don't want any part of your case. i think it's terribly risky. >> host: part of what made me want to ask you the question is there risk of losing perspective when you're embedded is there are certain points in the book that suggests chad griffin or human rights campaign came up with certain ideas and let me give you two examples. at one point you say, you tell quite nicely about the right partisan
he was frustrated with where the movement was. when proposition 8 past and lesbians were zero for 30 at the ballot box. they had been targeted more often than any group in america by these ballot initiatives. there was sort of a low point and a feeling among this group of people who i followed and that's absolutely what i did for five years, i followed that group of people and their frustration but there are also moments in this book that certainly are not in the scripted telling. for instance...
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49
May 12, 2014
05/14
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he was studying ancient greek. he was studying latin. he was deeply literate.is room was this personal library that he had assembled. yet it had not made him instinctively affectionate towards the west. what it had done was heightened his sense of the ways in which china was either being drawn into are excluded from the international system. that had become for a whole generation of talented, successful young chinese people, a dominant fact of their interpretation of the world. china could only go so far. tang jie.es, we are going to show some of it. i have broken it into three. how many people -- do you have any sense of how many people have seen this in china? >> millions. by that time i got interested, it was already up to one million. that was a couple weeks after it happened. it is still on the web today. it remains a manifesto for this community that calls itself the angry youth. the angry youth is a stripe of that is angryy for all kinds of reasons. the thing that draws them together is that they are proud of china and frustrated by their own sense that
he was studying ancient greek. he was studying latin. he was deeply literate.is room was this personal library that he had assembled. yet it had not made him instinctively affectionate towards the west. what it had done was heightened his sense of the ways in which china was either being drawn into are excluded from the international system. that had become for a whole generation of talented, successful young chinese people, a dominant fact of their interpretation of the world. china could only...
551
551
May 18, 2014
05/14
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eye 551
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i mean, every detail was planned, obviously, to the t, because it was sarah, and she was gorgeous. >> it was probably the most fun wedding we've ever been to, ever. >> the newlyweds went to costa rica for their honeymoon and had a great time. then it was back to cincinnati to begin their journey together at mr. and mrs. ryan witmer. >> they worked really hard, built a beautiful deck on the back of their house. had a trip planned to cancun. they had everything to live for. >> so august 11th should have been just another day on the calendar in their young marriage? >> it should have been, yes. >> ryan remembers being downstairs watching monday night football. sarah had gone upstairs to her bath and was in trouble. >> 911, what's your emergency. >> my wife, she fell asleep in the bathroom, i just came up here she was laying face down in the bathroom. >> i got a call. it was ryan. something's happened to sarah. >> the emts were rushing sarah to the hospital. by then they'd worked on her for 40 minutes but hadn't gotten a response. minutes later jill witmer was with her son waiting anxious
i mean, every detail was planned, obviously, to the t, because it was sarah, and she was gorgeous. >> it was probably the most fun wedding we've ever been to, ever. >> the newlyweds went to costa rica for their honeymoon and had a great time. then it was back to cincinnati to begin their journey together at mr. and mrs. ryan witmer. >> they worked really hard, built a beautiful deck on the back of their house. had a trip planned to cancun. they had everything to live for....
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126
May 18, 2014
05/14
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it appeared everything was headed towards more so why was he was surprised? >> not everyone franken roosevelt put an attack two days before on pearl harbor so you want dash so he probably knew that they would attack probably monday december 8. he thought they would strike south indonesia indonesia, philippines, sing apore but pearl harbor was our real sharks that they could project that far that early. that was a surprise but when macarthur heard about it he said they have attacked pearl harbor that is the strongest point. so i correct myself. not everyone was surprised but when i say surprised that they had the military capabilities that they did. if you studied the combat logs, what shocks is how fast to the pace of the war was. world war i was a brutal and bloody but world war ii was not. and apprised maneuver. that is what shocked the united states. i say in the book it took six or seven months to get inside the temple of war. one officer approached macarthur and said the fighter planes are not flown by japanese. they're flown by the germans. why would yo
it appeared everything was headed towards more so why was he was surprised? >> not everyone franken roosevelt put an attack two days before on pearl harbor so you want dash so he probably knew that they would attack probably monday december 8. he thought they would strike south indonesia indonesia, philippines, sing apore but pearl harbor was our real sharks that they could project that far that early. that was a surprise but when macarthur heard about it he said they have attacked pearl...
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May 26, 2014
05/14
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but change was coming and the question was how fast? it was important.so what really concerned lot of people but also the doma litigation they can remember the terrible setbacks that occurred when the supreme court handed down the decision of course, it was of a terrible setback when it was the slow building effort. >> host: and they were bringing marriage to quality suits when the law was bad. and talking about these issues over a long time developed a strategy. but you start to the book. this is hagel a revolution begins. when rosa parks refused his to give up her seat to a white man in the segregated south but in this man the 35 year-old political consultant at the st. francis hotel election night 2008. it is not a secret rosa parks did not start a revolution even been she herself covered one year ago >> guest: it was a deliberate act. >> host: but part of the organized social movement that was timed. but i was surprised to see that and is that because they thought she started the of revolution? >> guest: what i was trying to say there are bowmans in
but change was coming and the question was how fast? it was important.so what really concerned lot of people but also the doma litigation they can remember the terrible setbacks that occurred when the supreme court handed down the decision of course, it was of a terrible setback when it was the slow building effort. >> host: and they were bringing marriage to quality suits when the law was bad. and talking about these issues over a long time developed a strategy. but you start to the...
63
63
May 11, 2014
05/14
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 63
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was.homas jefferson said he had a most commanding presence. >> he is also known by his friendships and his wife. dolly madison became a well-known figure in her own right. >> he fell in love with her. he saw her on the streets of philadelphia and fell in love with her. of all people, he asked aaron burr to arrange an introduction. he did and they were married shortly after. it was one of the great political marriages. maybe it wouldn't be now but then what dolly's skill was was to bring people together and make them feel warm and congenial and appreciate her husband. in those days, the congress, the caucuses of the congress, chose the presidential nominees so there is testimony of how dolly's ability to bring people together helped her husband become the presidential nominee. >> he was secretary of state to thomas jefferson who was his longtime friend. >> it was a friendship of many years. they had first known one another when madison -- known one another well -- served on what was called
was.homas jefferson said he had a most commanding presence. >> he is also known by his friendships and his wife. dolly madison became a well-known figure in her own right. >> he fell in love with her. he saw her on the streets of philadelphia and fell in love with her. of all people, he asked aaron burr to arrange an introduction. he did and they were married shortly after. it was one of the great political marriages. maybe it wouldn't be now but then what dolly's skill was was to...
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59
May 3, 2014
05/14
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MSNBCW
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eye 59
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it was huge.we were gone. >> debbie is working the grill. >> that was the day i thought i was going to die. >> the car explodes right in front of her and her customers. >> the front and the front tire went through that building there. >> patrons from the diner check on the driver of the truck that was clipped before the explosion. >> i remember seeing people coming out of the restaurant. it was just a flurry of activity. >> the police try to extinguish the fire, but it spreads. >> too much fire. the fire was too big. we even ran in here and got our fire extinguisher. it just wasn't enough. >> somehow, everyone at the diner escapes injury. >> imagine if you had a group of people walking into the restaurant on the sidewalk at that hour. it was just sickening to think what the consequences could have been. >> the driver of the mini van and the truck in the parking lot both suffer minor injuries. >> i felt so relieved at least that no one innocent was injured severely as a result of this person's tota
it was huge.we were gone. >> debbie is working the grill. >> that was the day i thought i was going to die. >> the car explodes right in front of her and her customers. >> the front and the front tire went through that building there. >> patrons from the diner check on the driver of the truck that was clipped before the explosion. >> i remember seeing people coming out of the restaurant. it was just a flurry of activity. >> the police try to extinguish...
1,196
1.2K
May 26, 2014
05/14
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i was driving like an idiot. i was turning the corner, and my wife was in the back seat. and she fell onto the floor. and it's hard to drive and reach back there and hold the body. >> he said when he saw the ambulance he rolled down his window and pulled over to the curve. >> maybe that's what happened. >> at that time, yes. we didn't know. >> but there was something about the way scott was acting that didn't pass the detective smell test. >> why don't you let me the send an ambulance to try cpr. >> i'm an ex-responder. i tried cpr. >> some things make your nose twitch. >> then he was asked fwt state of his marriage. >> how was your relationship with lisa. >> is there ever a perfect marriage? >> i don't know. >> they'd been married for 13 years, scott said, but just a few months ago they'd filed for divorce. >> when you say "we", you or her? >> i. >> why were you going to divorce her? >> i had an affair. >> an affair. but he insisted the relationship with the other woman was over. in fact, the divorce with lisa was on hold. he said they'd had a change of heart and had bee
i was driving like an idiot. i was turning the corner, and my wife was in the back seat. and she fell onto the floor. and it's hard to drive and reach back there and hold the body. >> he said when he saw the ambulance he rolled down his window and pulled over to the curve. >> maybe that's what happened. >> at that time, yes. we didn't know. >> but there was something about the way scott was acting that didn't pass the detective smell test. >> why don't you let me...
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83
May 14, 2014
05/14
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 83
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>> they say, it was hard. it was complicated. a lot of the stuff that was damaging was not illegal.t was a big fraction of the system that was the wild west, no rules. they have to be guided by the evidence of lawbreaking behavior. bad, itaws were weak or was their prerogative to prove that. it got -- they get to make those judgments. >> you think that prosecutors could not find laws broken, and nobody had to go to jail? >> i am not saying that. they should be working hard at it, and they are working hard at it. we did something that was as important in many ways as creating a strong enforcement response. we changed the rules of the game. that, in thes practical impact over time, will make americans much less vulnerable to that risk. with respectable parole, people change their minds. you, for example. and what could come out of dodd-frank. and the volcker rule. they ended up in a good place. is messy. but at its core, very powerful, very important. they will endure for a long time. >> did you leave anything else out? anything too interesting to tell, looking like you had assassinat
>> they say, it was hard. it was complicated. a lot of the stuff that was damaging was not illegal.t was a big fraction of the system that was the wild west, no rules. they have to be guided by the evidence of lawbreaking behavior. bad, itaws were weak or was their prerogative to prove that. it got -- they get to make those judgments. >> you think that prosecutors could not find laws broken, and nobody had to go to jail? >> i am not saying that. they should be working hard at...
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114
May 26, 2014
05/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 114
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>> i think it was both. i think it was a tactic certainly. obviously it was a real thing. he grew up in a catholic home and his mother was quite religious in a sense of mexican catholicism that has its own culture. when the strike starts in 1965, the catholic search in california is not supporting the farm workers union. now we think of the church being on their side, but the financial pillars of the search were for growers. so they were really loathed to do anything over it. and there are a lot of great files that the archdiocese kept that show all of the letters the growers are writing to the bishop saying get these people out of here. so lacking support from the church and trying to convince very poor mexican farm workers who are scared to speak out because they are risking their jobs and home and livelihoods. and that embraces the church and having the support was really important. and he does this brilliant thing of using the banner of the gaudalupe. and in the march you walk up the spine of the valley through the farm worker town and every night there is a rally and
>> i think it was both. i think it was a tactic certainly. obviously it was a real thing. he grew up in a catholic home and his mother was quite religious in a sense of mexican catholicism that has its own culture. when the strike starts in 1965, the catholic search in california is not supporting the farm workers union. now we think of the church being on their side, but the financial pillars of the search were for growers. so they were really loathed to do anything over it. and there...
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100
May 5, 2014
05/14
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eye 100
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was he better? was he treated better because he was a man? >> yes. i have a story. i was at a table -- several sports people. i said something and they said, we are not interested in what you think. you are only here because of mo. as far as i am concerned, all broads are a piece of raisin cake. i said something i will not repeat. i pushed out the table and walked away. this great sportswriter, he said -- let's not go. i walked in, and the first thing he said was, "myra, how are you?" i had distinguished myself by being enough of a male to tell him off, that he was respectful. you saw an awful lot of that. the baseball dinners were always stag. after we got married, i said, you are just not going to do that. he said, "i am going to have a surprise." his keynote speaker was liz carpenter. some of the old guys were grumbling about it, really grumbling about it. it was an incredible thing. my daughter became a three-time emmy award-winning espn producer. when i meet young men and young women in sports, they are aghast. they can't believe that you couldn't get into the
was he better? was he treated better because he was a man? >> yes. i have a story. i was at a table -- several sports people. i said something and they said, we are not interested in what you think. you are only here because of mo. as far as i am concerned, all broads are a piece of raisin cake. i said something i will not repeat. i pushed out the table and walked away. this great sportswriter, he said -- let's not go. i walked in, and the first thing he said was, "myra, how are...
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143
May 12, 2014
05/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 143
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we wrote about, there was a guy that was very, he was a mafia guy, but he was protected by the fbi.e way i know, the massachusetts state police who attended some of the best work going after whitey, they were trying to target this guy. his name was mark. in fact, before the launch the investigation and put the book up on him, they called an fbi supervisor and said listen, curtis, we're going after him and we believe he is your guy, meaning he's your informative no, no. he's not our guy, not at all. okay, just wanted to give you a heads up. first conversation when they turn on the blog is mark talking to his fbi handler. and so -- i think the state police are coming after me, you've got to help me. and so they finally do make the case on him and they lock you announce he's doing 12 years for all sorts of crimes. so the fbi supervisor who had been given the heads up called the stake up on no ssa, that was a great pinch you guys me. you want to roll them together? roll from? were going to put him in prison. we're not going to use them as an informant or just because you guys -- were no
we wrote about, there was a guy that was very, he was a mafia guy, but he was protected by the fbi.e way i know, the massachusetts state police who attended some of the best work going after whitey, they were trying to target this guy. his name was mark. in fact, before the launch the investigation and put the book up on him, they called an fbi supervisor and said listen, curtis, we're going after him and we believe he is your guy, meaning he's your informative no, no. he's not our guy, not at...
81
81
May 4, 2014
05/14
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eye 81
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it was in the center of the block and it was built in 1893.belle london hired a local construction firm to build a grand parlor house for her right with this parking lot is. it was called number 10 electric alley. the alley itself into the interior of the block from grand avenue, and on both sides it was flanked richards was an early official of the church. and the problem with that was being perceived as more men was keeping outside businesses from coming to our gang. he wanted to bring outside into ogg in an americanized ogden. so what he did is change the name of the city the first year he was in office two names after the president said the united states. he named washington blvd. after president george washington. he changed grand avenue from yonge street and there's the lincoln avenue now. we actually have 17 streets and towns named after the former president of the united states. the one he did not change as while avedon front of union station about five blocks from here because that was named for the early pioneers built to keep unions
it was in the center of the block and it was built in 1893.belle london hired a local construction firm to build a grand parlor house for her right with this parking lot is. it was called number 10 electric alley. the alley itself into the interior of the block from grand avenue, and on both sides it was flanked richards was an early official of the church. and the problem with that was being perceived as more men was keeping outside businesses from coming to our gang. he wanted to bring...
805
805
May 24, 2014
05/14
by
KICU
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eye 805
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and that was it. that was the last -- that was it.e. >> and that's the last you see her? >> yes. >> reporter: travis was cool, calm, even contrite about leaving kenia with that strange fellow at the gas station. >> if she had made the choice to -- to go back home or to get right in, i would have taken her home. i would not -- i mean, and if i had felt any sort of -- any sort of weirdness about her walk over with that guy, i would have done something. >> he was really worried about this whole, very about this missing girl. but we believe you. he didn't do anything. >> reporter: in fact there, was no evidence travis did anything wrong. he certainly wasn't a suspect. barely a person of interest. he even had an alibi for his whereabouts after he dropped off kenia. >> he said he'd gone to his girlfriend's house. at the time that we knew that she had disappeared. and then his girlfriend came in. but she supported his statement. >> yeah. >> reporter: of course they let him go. had to. but what about that mysterious man travis said he left ke
and that was it. that was the last -- that was it.e. >> and that's the last you see her? >> yes. >> reporter: travis was cool, calm, even contrite about leaving kenia with that strange fellow at the gas station. >> if she had made the choice to -- to go back home or to get right in, i would have taken her home. i would not -- i mean, and if i had felt any sort of -- any sort of weirdness about her walk over with that guy, i would have done something. >> he was...
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62
May 17, 2014
05/14
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MSNBCW
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eye 62
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i was 80% nervous. but with 100% odor protection, i had nothing to worry about. [ female announcer ] only secret offers clinical strength antiperspirant in your 2 favorite forms, with 100% odor protection. secret clinical strength. fearlessness. apply daily. >>> out of control hoarding. >> you think, wow, why am i doing this? i need to stop. >> leaves a mother and daughter overwhelmed. >> it's very chaotic and stressful. >> this is hoarding. >> a real estate investor finds a real steal. >> there was no way anyone could live in the house. >> and gets more than he bargained for. >> you couldn't walk around. huh to climb over it. >> a race against the clock. >> turned out to be 700 cats on the property. >> to save hundreds of lives. >> they were really, really sick and really malnourished. >> and when the experts step in -- >> a stinking rotten mess. >> -- even they can't believe their eyes. >> what i saw would make anybody want to vomit. >>> "caught on camera" -- hoarding. >>> hello. i'm contessa brewer.
i was 80% nervous. but with 100% odor protection, i had nothing to worry about. [ female announcer ] only secret offers clinical strength antiperspirant in your 2 favorite forms, with 100% odor protection. secret clinical strength. fearlessness. apply daily. >>> out of control hoarding. >> you think, wow, why am i doing this? i need to stop. >> leaves a mother and daughter overwhelmed. >> it's very chaotic and stressful. >> this is hoarding. >> a real...
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73
May 3, 2014
05/14
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MSNBCW
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eye 73
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was in shock.oment of total oh, my god. what do we do? >> dennis is not out of danger. he struggles to get free of the wreckage before dripping fuel can ignite the helicopter. >> i'm going to die if i don't get out of this quickly, if it catches on fire. >> he quickly shuts off the fuel lines, then amazingly, he crawls out of the chopper, shaken but only slightly hurt. >> he actually wasn't even hurt that bad. a few cuts on the face and couple of teeth knocked out, i understand. >> the chopper has not fared as well. >> the helicopter was totaled, completely totaled. unusable. >> within an hour, a rueful dennis is not just walking and talking, he's giving the news conference he had always hoped to avoid. dennis, the safety evaluator, has to assess his own performance and realizes where he had gone wrong. he had forgotten one adjustment to his program and had fallen victim to the high-density altitude at the airfield that day. >> as soon as i started the maneuver, i thought this helicopter is perform
was in shock.oment of total oh, my god. what do we do? >> dennis is not out of danger. he struggles to get free of the wreckage before dripping fuel can ignite the helicopter. >> i'm going to die if i don't get out of this quickly, if it catches on fire. >> he quickly shuts off the fuel lines, then amazingly, he crawls out of the chopper, shaken but only slightly hurt. >> he actually wasn't even hurt that bad. a few cuts on the face and couple of teeth knocked out, i...
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105
May 27, 2014
05/14
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CSPAN2
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eye 105
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i was born in lincoln nebraska and she was born in casper wyoming. 1954 when i was 13 years old my dad the family to caspar wyoming. he had a choice between there or montana. we grew up together and i took her out when she was 16 and we will celebrate our 50th wedding anniversary. [applause] butted dad picked montana instead of wyoming of course, i never would have mary lynn she would have married someone else and she said then he would have been vice president of the united states. [laughter] [applause] >> i don't recall that was one of the jokes. >> now i am freelancing. we are here to talk specifically about a magnificent book she has written about james madison with great reviews and we are on the book to our high has been to the nixon even before when i had other books to publish. but now it is an opportunity for her to present her as. it is superb about the nation's fourth president and the plan is devil ask her questions and she will respond at the end of the period we will open to questions from the audience. but why madison? >> before you get there i want to say i am so gratef
i was born in lincoln nebraska and she was born in casper wyoming. 1954 when i was 13 years old my dad the family to caspar wyoming. he had a choice between there or montana. we grew up together and i took her out when she was 16 and we will celebrate our 50th wedding anniversary. [applause] butted dad picked montana instead of wyoming of course, i never would have mary lynn she would have married someone else and she said then he would have been vice president of the united states. [laughter]...
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119
May 18, 2014
05/14
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CNNW
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eye 119
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there was a wallet on the nightstand that was not taken. and she was not sexually assaulted in any way. >> investigators also found some personal items in michaelrately's possession that raised questions about the couple's marriage. >> there was a portable dvd player, a bottle of personal lubricant, and several dvd movies that contained adult male gay important graphic material on it. >> it did lead to theories about motive you know, he had a boyfriend somewhere and maybe he wanted to do away with effie to live that lifestyle and just breakaway. >> in addition, michael's phone records indicated he had been making frequent phone calls to a 35-year-old man who had been one of his teachers in high school. although this was suspicious, was it a possible motive for murder? blups someone set up a bogus hotspot, stole her identity and opened some credit cards in her name. but she's not worried. checking her credit report and score at experian.com allowed her to better address the issue... ...and move right in. experian. live credit confident.™ . >
there was a wallet on the nightstand that was not taken. and she was not sexually assaulted in any way. >> investigators also found some personal items in michaelrately's possession that raised questions about the couple's marriage. >> there was a portable dvd player, a bottle of personal lubricant, and several dvd movies that contained adult male gay important graphic material on it. >> it did lead to theories about motive you know, he had a boyfriend somewhere and maybe he...
40
40
May 24, 2014
05/14
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CSPAN2
tv
eye 40
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was the good? >>guest: he was patient.hter] kind i'd like lincoln he had trouble with general's. in 1812 they served in the revolution. favor getting long in the tooth. they were not as brave may be as they had been in their younger years but one general was to invade canada year detroit became so alarmed at the rumors that turned out to be true that the british form to us strong alliance that the americans might have to face this that he turned around not only to not invade canada but gave them a choice so that was a problem. not so with admirals'. said navy the british had more than 100 ships but the navy trained all that time to bring new and young bird blood. you cannot just mothball the navy to build it up again. summit capped going and as a result there was a magnificent disk trees of naval victories. while people were fleeing from allies, and when he was indeed related and to commend the constitution and of course, the uss constitution most famously encountered the british career and lights are out. parts of the rea
was the good? >>guest: he was patient.hter] kind i'd like lincoln he had trouble with general's. in 1812 they served in the revolution. favor getting long in the tooth. they were not as brave may be as they had been in their younger years but one general was to invade canada year detroit became so alarmed at the rumors that turned out to be true that the british form to us strong alliance that the americans might have to face this that he turned around not only to not invade canada but...
87
87
May 10, 2014
05/14
by
CNNW
tv
eye 87
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the marriage was short-lived. to a much racier relationship. >> i'm going to tickle you to death, do you understand me? >> this time with actress jenny shimizu, female co-star from "foxfire." angelina was matter of fact about the relationship. >> i thought she was the greatest woman. i had so much fun with her. i found myself loving her and wanting to express that physically. >> do you think you can remember that? >> in what would become a common theme of angelina's art imitating life, she channeled her affinity for experimentation into one of the most captivating roll roles of her career, as the heroin-addicted lesbian gia. >> it was this kind of story this small town girl's great face became a supermodel but lost her way and turned to drugs. >> angelina said that heroin was so close to her life at one point that if she wasn't careful, she could have ended up like gia. >> well, now i don't know what to say. >> when angelina played her, it was like who is this girl, this actress? >> this actress garnered a golden
the marriage was short-lived. to a much racier relationship. >> i'm going to tickle you to death, do you understand me? >> this time with actress jenny shimizu, female co-star from "foxfire." angelina was matter of fact about the relationship. >> i thought she was the greatest woman. i had so much fun with her. i found myself loving her and wanting to express that physically. >> do you think you can remember that? >> in what would become a common theme of...
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26
May 18, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 26
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there was how bad all of the equipment was.i mean, you know? [laughter] none of the microfilm readers worked, and they were all broken down. and there was -- >> [inaudible] >> this, of course, is part of the national archive system, and they were putting out appeals for money from the average person. [laughter] >> [inaudible] >> well, yeah. to preserve the collection. one thing about fdr that i wanted, i want to move into sort of the next phase of our discussion. fdr, of course, had a lot of depends friends. he had grown up in great wealth. he had a lot of friends from the 1% really. there's a great moment that i came across when he was, he had written a speech or prepared a fireside chat that was going to be about how he was going to raise the taxes on the wealthiest people, and he was going to raise them up to marginal rate of 90% or so, and he was reading, he was giving a dramatic reading with hairlsic keyes -- haroldic keyes, i think, who was his interior secretary and a republican, by the way, but a very progressive one. a
there was how bad all of the equipment was.i mean, you know? [laughter] none of the microfilm readers worked, and they were all broken down. and there was -- >> [inaudible] >> this, of course, is part of the national archive system, and they were putting out appeals for money from the average person. [laughter] >> [inaudible] >> well, yeah. to preserve the collection. one thing about fdr that i wanted, i want to move into sort of the next phase of our discussion. fdr, of...
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44
May 26, 2014
05/14
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 44
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that was his hope. that was what he was working for when he was killed.was among the poor and calling upon the country to look and see the condition of the poor in order that we might see the possibilities of a new america. >> dr. harding, any last thoughts? >> i think that i am fascinated by the fact that 40 years after martin's assassination there should come on the scene someone who, when he's at his best, is making his theme "let us create a more perfect union." that, for me, was the essential message of king: let us work together against all the things that keep us from creating a more perfect union. i think that if my friend and brother, obama, can keep in our mind and keep in his mind the thing that we need most is to have a vision of the possibilities of a new america for us all, if that can happen, then we are on our way to something that martin king would be very, very glad to see: the pathway to a truly new america. >> the historian, diligent, civil rights activist vincent harding, speaking april 1, two thousand eight. he died in philadelphia t
that was his hope. that was what he was working for when he was killed.was among the poor and calling upon the country to look and see the condition of the poor in order that we might see the possibilities of a new america. >> dr. harding, any last thoughts? >> i think that i am fascinated by the fact that 40 years after martin's assassination there should come on the scene someone who, when he's at his best, is making his theme "let us create a more perfect union." that,...
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52
May 18, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 52
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it was not an amendment that i drafted. it was not an amendment i was familiar with. it came up on the floor of the house in the routine of handling the business of legislature for that day. i supported measures like that and including that because those issues were very important to the people that i represented. my constituents as a state that is later were 38,000 citizens in one county in southeast georgia for the first two years i served. the district grew a little larger than that. but that district is a very conservative and a very conservative and very pro-life constituency. i believed it was the obligation of a legislator to vote come listen to, and for the will of the constituency. those issues were very important to my constituents, and that is why supported that amendment. >> that amendment came within a few years after and before attacks on doctors who provided abortions or visits. would you agree with me that it was a mistake to support the kind of amendment? >> in light of what i subsequently learned, yes, sir, i do not think it would be appropriate to b
it was not an amendment that i drafted. it was not an amendment i was familiar with. it came up on the floor of the house in the routine of handling the business of legislature for that day. i supported measures like that and including that because those issues were very important to the people that i represented. my constituents as a state that is later were 38,000 citizens in one county in southeast georgia for the first two years i served. the district grew a little larger than that. but...
185
185
May 3, 2014
05/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
eye 185
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was talking to him, he was where? >> i don't know. i don't have a tracking device on him. >> the president was not in the situation room? >> not in the room i was in. >> he makes the pajama boy look like the terminator. >> there are critical issues going on around the country and the world that we need to deal with. there were 19 people killed in -- >> i want to get dana in here. why does the messaging seem to be all over the place? it's like my last weekend twister thing, where i had an elbow there and a leg there and a shoe in the corner. why? >> i think it's partly because they redacted the information, it came out through different means. it looks like they were covering up a cover up. if you agree they made up the story about the video in order to protect their politics in the situation, not that it it would -- i think president obama was going to win the election anyway. regardless of this. but let's just say they were worried enough that they came up with this story. so they used politics to cover up a policy f
was talking to him, he was where? >> i don't know. i don't have a tracking device on him. >> the president was not in the situation room? >> not in the room i was in. >> he makes the pajama boy look like the terminator. >> there are critical issues going on around the country and the world that we need to deal with. there were 19 people killed in -- >> i want to get dana in here. why does the messaging seem to be all over the place? it's like my last weekend...
369
369
May 4, 2014
05/14
by
KNTV
tv
eye 369
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it was fun. >> it was their last conversation.5th, 2009, comeau's body was discovered in her home lying on her bed. >> i was told on the 26th. >> told only that she was dead, nothing more. with a heavy heart and 100 questions he went to brighton to find out for himself, what happened to the woman he still loved? horror awaited. >> that's when i found out she was murdered in her house. >> what was it like to hear that? >> i was in shock, but how to describe that? >> there were no words in any language, the man would learn. comeau's murder was brutal. a sexual homicide. former fbi investigator craig ackley examined this case at "dateline's" request. he had no role in the investigation. >> what was clear is that somebody had raped her and killed her. somebody had spent time in the home. >> which, again, in the dismal business of investigating this sort of thing, suggested it's an organized criminal as opposed to a disorganized criminal? >> sure. it suggests somebody who spent some time planning the offense, understanding he had time
it was fun. >> it was their last conversation.5th, 2009, comeau's body was discovered in her home lying on her bed. >> i was told on the 26th. >> told only that she was dead, nothing more. with a heavy heart and 100 questions he went to brighton to find out for himself, what happened to the woman he still loved? horror awaited. >> that's when i found out she was murdered in her house. >> what was it like to hear that? >> i was in shock, but how to describe...
22
22
May 14, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN
tv
eye 22
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he was more than an icon. he was a hero.he is the reason that many of us chose this career and chose to be trial lawyers or prosecutors. because of his conscience and conviction and courage standing up to ostracism, physical threat, and violence. i hope that you will take this responsibility -- i know you will take it seriously because you are truly going to be the voice and face of justice for people coming to your courtrooms. i want to thank you for the long hours you will spend, willing to serve here today. their leadership making nominations possible and the president of the united states for his faith in your ability to serve. with that, i will adjourn this hearing and the record will be kept open for one week. thank you all for attending. >> >> susan rice will sit down to talk about policy. eastern.rrow at 1:00 then president obama's choice to head the health and human services department will take questions at the senate finance committee. eastern.rage at 2:13 >> a lot of time coming you you can attribute it to a whit
he was more than an icon. he was a hero.he is the reason that many of us chose this career and chose to be trial lawyers or prosecutors. because of his conscience and conviction and courage standing up to ostracism, physical threat, and violence. i hope that you will take this responsibility -- i know you will take it seriously because you are truly going to be the voice and face of justice for people coming to your courtrooms. i want to thank you for the long hours you will spend, willing to...
726
726
May 31, 2014
05/14
by
KNTV
tv
eye 726
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he was panicking. he was shaking.eporter: remember, only alex was in colorado at the time, and, thinking back, he got angry about the way he and his dad were treated. >> they separate us, like you would with criminals. separate myself from my dad, put us in separate vehicles. >> reporter: to the kids, it all pointed to a rush to judgment that turned into an obsession. >> if you go into it looking for trouble, you're going to find it. >> we were also as a family never informed what they were doing at cottonwood creek, that they were paying for experts, doing all kinds of -- >> we didn't know what was going on. >> -- tests on the water and all these different things like that. but this was all like a closely guarded secret that they never felt they should share with either him or the family, of the victim, of my mother. >> reporter: fred mueller spent the next year in jail in gunnison, colorado, awaiting trial. >> he sunk into such a deep depression right after mom died, and he kind of sank back into it while he was sit
he was panicking. he was shaking.eporter: remember, only alex was in colorado at the time, and, thinking back, he got angry about the way he and his dad were treated. >> they separate us, like you would with criminals. separate myself from my dad, put us in separate vehicles. >> reporter: to the kids, it all pointed to a rush to judgment that turned into an obsession. >> if you go into it looking for trouble, you're going to find it. >> we were also as a family never...
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75
May 28, 2014
05/14
by
BLOOMBERG
tv
eye 75
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he was 48. >> was about success? >> it was. the lack of success. frustration at not being -- he was an actor. his frustration at not being a star. he wanted to be a star. like a lot of people. he didn't handle it well when he was getting to be a certain age -- i am sure there are deeper convocations i was not privy to. he is of a generation where ,evealing those inner thoughts men would rather go to their admit what they consider weakness. >> not being a star is a weakness. >> or to be able to say, i felt this. nearingday, and he is 90 -- >> he is seen everything good that happened to you. relationship,the all of us want to say, i did ok, dad. >> he is extremely proud. extremely proud. and he has changed. as men do three tough him a old guard guys soft and. -- as men do. soften.ld guard guys >> lyndon johnson went back to the texas health country after saying he would not run for another term. he started smoking again. caro.t this from robert nailew he was nailing a into his coffin. what was that about? >> there was a certain amount of -- he was a
he was 48. >> was about success? >> it was. the lack of success. frustration at not being -- he was an actor. his frustration at not being a star. he wanted to be a star. like a lot of people. he didn't handle it well when he was getting to be a certain age -- i am sure there are deeper convocations i was not privy to. he is of a generation where ,evealing those inner thoughts men would rather go to their admit what they consider weakness. >> not being a star is a weakness....
264
264
May 25, 2014
05/14
by
CNNW
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eye 264
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it a matter he was so excited he was overcome or was it that he psychologically was so appalled by his act that he got sick? >> inexplicably the man waited until dark, went close to shore and allowed the woman to swim to safety. investigators are fairly certain it was the same man who murdered the rogers family. >> the parallels were eerie. >> unfortunately the victim took a shower before reporting the crime so no dna was recovered. but her description of the man enabled police to create this composite sketch which was distributed to the local media. the victim said jason wilcox was not the man who assaulted her and wilcox was also eliminated as a suspect in the rogers case. >> and in the end he was given a polygraph test and was clear and had alibis to where he was at the time. >> the composite sketch prompted hundreds of leads, all of which had to be followed up. the description of a blue and white boat generated plenty of hits. >> we had close to 800 men called in. a lot of them had to do with blue and white boats. that was a big, big job to eliminate all of these persons of interes
it a matter he was so excited he was overcome or was it that he psychologically was so appalled by his act that he got sick? >> inexplicably the man waited until dark, went close to shore and allowed the woman to swim to safety. investigators are fairly certain it was the same man who murdered the rogers family. >> the parallels were eerie. >> unfortunately the victim took a shower before reporting the crime so no dna was recovered. but her description of the man enabled...
66
66
May 26, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 66
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he was the paradox -- the paradox of writing for him was he was better without a text. he wasn't a guy of the text. mr. bush had these wonderful contra varieties to use a word my dad would use. he was the most athletic of people and captain of the yale baseball team and he had this sort of funny karma where after he left the whitehouse in '93 it would have been he was an avid g golfer and we went out to play in a pro-am celebrity golf tournament where clinton was there and clint eastwood and others. it was being televised and he hit and spliced it off into the female spectator. and the woman is lying there and the medics are applying pressure bandages. and mr. bush is a nice man and me runs over and he is apologizing and saying sorry. but because it was televised they had to keep going. so a couple hours later he is lining up his putt on the 17th hole, i guess it is called. and he looks over and there is a woman in a wheelchair with her head swabbed and in bandages and he runs over and starts apologizing to her and says i am sorry. and the woman is looking up and someon
he was the paradox -- the paradox of writing for him was he was better without a text. he wasn't a guy of the text. mr. bush had these wonderful contra varieties to use a word my dad would use. he was the most athletic of people and captain of the yale baseball team and he had this sort of funny karma where after he left the whitehouse in '93 it would have been he was an avid g golfer and we went out to play in a pro-am celebrity golf tournament where clinton was there and clint eastwood and...
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47
May 25, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 47
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weird thing was that the real jews there at the temple rejected me was i was, like, this geek jew from the next town that they looked down on that had had no bar miss -- mitzvah, couldn't speak hebrew and had a very bad attitude. so after a little bit of trying, i sort of gave up and went back to being a regular american. but through this whole era growing up i was looking around for any other guy for, like, role models. what jews are out there that i can relate to, and this is the '50s and the early 'of 0s, so i thought, w456s this, molly goldberg or something like that? there was just nothing that i could relate to. so i never could quite get with the program. .. should i've never done anything about my own people. not to mention the fact that the sick day war is in the ranks with gettysburg or anything like that. but beyond that, it's a great story because it is a story of return from exile and the whole climactic western wall. i don't know if you know about that but i will get into that. so i decided this was about three years ago. paul knows about it because he was with me. so i d
weird thing was that the real jews there at the temple rejected me was i was, like, this geek jew from the next town that they looked down on that had had no bar miss -- mitzvah, couldn't speak hebrew and had a very bad attitude. so after a little bit of trying, i sort of gave up and went back to being a regular american. but through this whole era growing up i was looking around for any other guy for, like, role models. what jews are out there that i can relate to, and this is the '50s and the...
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125
May 31, 2014
05/14
by
MSNBCW
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eye 125
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that was a lot of fun. okay. where was i? >> paro went on to tell us that in order to survive in cochran he had to understand cochran. >> you know, at the beginning when i was facing the 41 months, i thought how in the helm i going to make it? i didn't see myself as being a part of this community. it is a community as no matter how dysfunctional it is, no matter how bizarre and asinine and ridiculous and stupid. it is very stupid. there's a lot of rules here that are enforced by inmates. >> many of those inmate enforced rules revolve around racial politics. >> a lot of the people here have affiliation to gangs. but they asked me who i run with. well, you know, i run with teachers and librarians usually. and when i find them, then i'll run with them. but sort of haven't found too many of them yet. >> paro must also deal with racial politics in his prison job as a housing clerk. >> i got a message that you called over here. >> usually i come in the morning i see who is paroled, if there have been roll-ups, there are beds open.
that was a lot of fun. okay. where was i? >> paro went on to tell us that in order to survive in cochran he had to understand cochran. >> you know, at the beginning when i was facing the 41 months, i thought how in the helm i going to make it? i didn't see myself as being a part of this community. it is a community as no matter how dysfunctional it is, no matter how bizarre and asinine and ridiculous and stupid. it is very stupid. there's a lot of rules here that are enforced by...
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299
May 18, 2014
05/14
by
CNNW
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eye 299
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she was going to end her marriage. she was going to leave bart. amid rumors bash corbin was also having an affair with one of his dental assistants, the corbins separated and filed for divorce. on december 4, 2004, the corbin's seven-year-old son found his mother dead of apparent suicide. a .38 caliber miss stall was at her side. >> when i woke up this morning i went to go see my mom and there was a gun right by her. >> there was no suicide note but the divorce papers were underneath her body. >> she was served or found out about the divorce filing she had shot herself. it looked like a lot of indicators that were consistent with suicide. >> it wasn't completely outside the realm of possibility that a woman who was facing the loss of her children because of an online affair could have been afraid that she was going to lose custody of her sons, lose her home, lose everything. >> bart corbin had an alibi for the night of jennifer's death. he was out at friends at a bar a half hour's drive away. >> credit card statements showed about 14 beers had bee
she was going to end her marriage. she was going to leave bart. amid rumors bash corbin was also having an affair with one of his dental assistants, the corbins separated and filed for divorce. on december 4, 2004, the corbin's seven-year-old son found his mother dead of apparent suicide. a .38 caliber miss stall was at her side. >> when i woke up this morning i went to go see my mom and there was a gun right by her. >> there was no suicide note but the divorce papers were...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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42
May 6, 2014
05/14
by
SFGTV
tv
eye 42
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the vote was 3-2, was sorry, the vote was 2-3, and there was no finding of a non-willful violation. and i mean, that i do think that we need a motion as to whether there is a willful violation, since that was... don't we since that was the basis of the referral in >> you could say that there was no violation. you could say, the motion could be that there was a willful violation, or that there was no violation, or that you want to refer to back to the task force. >> and my two cents here is that i am not prepared to find that there is no violation, i think that there is a sunshine violation, what i am not prepared to do is to find that mr. ginsburg is the right person in light of our discretion, and so while i am not prepared to vote that he had a non-willful violation, i am prepared to resolve the issue in some way and let it go back to the task force and i am trying to look for your guidance on the correct procedural mechanism for that. >> and i guess what i am saying is that you could, i don't think that you necessarily have to vote that there has, or that there has been no willfu
the vote was 3-2, was sorry, the vote was 2-3, and there was no finding of a non-willful violation. and i mean, that i do think that we need a motion as to whether there is a willful violation, since that was... don't we since that was the basis of the referral in >> you could say that there was no violation. you could say, the motion could be that there was a willful violation, or that there was no violation, or that you want to refer to back to the task force. >> and my two cents...
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176
May 5, 2014
05/14
by
LINKTV
tv
eye 176
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this was the first issue that i was subjected to in abu ghraib prison. a remained without clothing from 5:00 him until 5:00 a.m. of the following day. >> was a good place or plastic bag placed over your head? >> yes, i had a black hood on my head and my hands were tied upward and a remained in the state for long hours. i had medical issues in my stomach. some excretion was going out of my mouth and voluntarily and falling to the ground. but all of this was of no consequence to the guards. they were laughing and even at midnight or after midnight, i heard some people saying in english, of course, happy birthday, al jazeera. the message is clear, you're with al jazeera, so you will celebrate your birthday here -- or something of this kind. >> were you forced, salah hassan , to stand for many hours at a time ,hooded and naked? >> of course. i was helpless and could not object or not comply because a military man. they had more power than me. they forced me. at the beginning and asked me to take off my clothes, i refused and told them i will not take my clot
this was the first issue that i was subjected to in abu ghraib prison. a remained without clothing from 5:00 him until 5:00 a.m. of the following day. >> was a good place or plastic bag placed over your head? >> yes, i had a black hood on my head and my hands were tied upward and a remained in the state for long hours. i had medical issues in my stomach. some excretion was going out of my mouth and voluntarily and falling to the ground. but all of this was of no consequence to the...
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145
May 28, 2014
05/14
by
CNNW
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eye 145
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>> john was in his bed. he was lying there lifeless. he was dead. i gave all of my attention to ann, who was very upset. she hugged me saying i tried to stop it. i tried to stop it but i could not. >> ann says she called her older brother, ken, to deliver the news. >> phone rang, i think it was about 2:00 a.m. eastern time. >> i called him and i don't remember what i said. >> the first thing she said to me was he finally did it. >> the police arrived and began processing the scene. eventually, ann was taken to a police station. >> when i got there the first thing they did was test my hands for gun powder residue. and i remember they unbagged my hands and they were commenting about stuff that was underneath my fingernails. >> what did you tell police that night? >> what i remembered. >> did you ever tell them i did not shoot him. i did not kill him? >> yes. i said i didn't -- i said i lunged for the gun and the gun went off. >> after being questioned, ann was released. pizzaro then urged her to go to the hospital because he said she was emotionally a
>> john was in his bed. he was lying there lifeless. he was dead. i gave all of my attention to ann, who was very upset. she hugged me saying i tried to stop it. i tried to stop it but i could not. >> ann says she called her older brother, ken, to deliver the news. >> phone rang, i think it was about 2:00 a.m. eastern time. >> i called him and i don't remember what i said. >> the first thing she said to me was he finally did it. >> the police arrived and...
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67
May 25, 2014
05/14
by
ALJAZAM
tv
eye 67
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there was a crying, there was a lot of laughter... >> finding her voice >> i was not a ham, i was hamheese... >> and turning it around... >> you don't have to let your circumstance dictate who you are as a person >> talk to al jazeera only on al jazeera america >>> good afternoon to you. this is al jazeera america. live from new york city, i'm morgan radford with a look at the top stories. >>> u.s. troops in afghanistan given a rousing welcome to president obama as he pays them a surprise visit. >> exit polls in the ukraine shows a sweet victory for chocolate king petero poroshenko. >>> the pope presses for
there was a crying, there was a lot of laughter... >> finding her voice >> i was not a ham, i was hamheese... >> and turning it around... >> you don't have to let your circumstance dictate who you are as a person >> talk to al jazeera only on al jazeera america >>> good afternoon to you. this is al jazeera america. live from new york city, i'm morgan radford with a look at the top stories. >>> u.s. troops in afghanistan given a rousing welcome to...
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May 27, 2014
05/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
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what dock ran was an expert at was infuriating minority injuries.at's what happened. >> we the jury, find the defendant not guilty of the crime of murder. >> should the american people be furious at the defense for driving a railroad train through the racial divide in this country, for raising the specter of racist cops? it's obvious o.j. simpson had murdered his wife? >> both could be true. you can have racist cops and you could have a guilty defendant. it was the obligation of the defense to try to get jurors who would be understanding of the possibility that the police planted evidence. >> i tell people that the reason i was acquitted in my criminal trial is that the jury didn't believe the police. >> did the dream team reveal the racial divide in this country or did it exacerbate it? >> i think a little of both. >> are you bitter? >> i am bitter as the day is long. i had 20 years taken from me. and i thought for a long time, okay, we'll get through this, i'll take my lumps, you know, i'll bear burden. and then people move on. but here we are 20
what dock ran was an expert at was infuriating minority injuries.at's what happened. >> we the jury, find the defendant not guilty of the crime of murder. >> should the american people be furious at the defense for driving a railroad train through the racial divide in this country, for raising the specter of racist cops? it's obvious o.j. simpson had murdered his wife? >> both could be true. you can have racist cops and you could have a guilty defendant. it was the obligation...
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May 26, 2014
05/14
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KPIX
tv
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looks like this was something that was targeted. >> reporter: and it was brazen. just before 8 p.m., a man wearing a mask pulled up in a car alongside along car driven by a 23-year-old woman, then started shooting at her and her 36-year-old male passenger. first from his car and then -- >> he got out, shot several more times into the passenger side of the vehicle, which is where the male was sitting. >> reporter: the two who were shot were coming back from an all-day concert at concord pavilion. police got so many 911 calls, the system was overwhelmed. they're hoping witnesses will call back with information today. >> i think it's horrifying. >> reporter: a real shock in a quiet city like walnut creek. >> i've been out here 30 years. first time anything like that has ever happened. >> reporter: the two people who were shot were taken here to john muir medical center, the man in critical condition. the woman was treated and released. the shooter is described as african-american, in his early 20's, a medium build, driving a light-colored sedan. in addition to the ma
looks like this was something that was targeted. >> reporter: and it was brazen. just before 8 p.m., a man wearing a mask pulled up in a car alongside along car driven by a 23-year-old woman, then started shooting at her and her 36-year-old male passenger. first from his car and then -- >> he got out, shot several more times into the passenger side of the vehicle, which is where the male was sitting. >> reporter: the two who were shot were coming back from an all-day concert...
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May 17, 2014
05/14
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KQEH
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[laughter] he was dancing. he was fair. i wanted to be -- i was terrific.ghter] everyone is doing mammy. i was doing the other jokes. weet ♪ you are s ♪ sweet 16 they do not know that. they wanted "mammy." majorette gets that three times. the fat guy with the buttons flying all over. three prizes. i got nothing. but i was determined. i went into the resort in the mountains. i was a bus boy and a waiter. i was all kinds of things. and iy someone got sick was the utility after. -- itunately, the part was a district attorney who is about 70 years old and they put a wig and a weird on me. i'm supposed to say, they're there. tell me in your own words exactly what happened that night. i can do that. i've got to do it older. this.idn't like -- i did it like this. [gruff voice] there, there, harry. tell me in your own words exactly what happened that night. the glass breaks. i do not know what to do. it is all quiet. i take off my wig and my beard. i'm only 14. i've never done this before. and i knew then that i was in comedy. i got pretty big laughs. [laughter] >>
[laughter] he was dancing. he was fair. i wanted to be -- i was terrific.ghter] everyone is doing mammy. i was doing the other jokes. weet ♪ you are s ♪ sweet 16 they do not know that. they wanted "mammy." majorette gets that three times. the fat guy with the buttons flying all over. three prizes. i got nothing. but i was determined. i went into the resort in the mountains. i was a bus boy and a waiter. i was all kinds of things. and iy someone got sick was the utility after. --...
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May 3, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN
tv
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when i was in ann arbor, the one election i was there was the 1984 election. vice president bush spoke at the steps of the michigan union on the anniversary -- i guess the peace corps was announced by john f. kennedy. maybe 1984, 1983. i remember him being heckled. i remember him being completely appalled that everyone in that office -- being completely appalled that anyone in that office would be heckled. i was not politically active at all, i remembered being struck by the level of passion and emotion and rudeness that could prevail in an environment on a politically active campus. >> the cantankerous liberal appropriator retired in 2010. tell us about richard. >> he is someone who is an elected official, congressman, presidential candidate. one of the most passionate, seemingly sincere people you would ever see. one of my favorite political events was seeing him on the eve of the caucuses in 2004 at a teamsters rally in marshalltown, iowa. all these huge trucks came in. they would get him into his windbreaker. he is the son of a milkman driver. it was a gre
when i was in ann arbor, the one election i was there was the 1984 election. vice president bush spoke at the steps of the michigan union on the anniversary -- i guess the peace corps was announced by john f. kennedy. maybe 1984, 1983. i remember him being heckled. i remember him being completely appalled that everyone in that office -- being completely appalled that anyone in that office would be heckled. i was not politically active at all, i remembered being struck by the level of passion...
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May 4, 2014
05/14
by
FOXNEWSW
tv
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she was prepped. there was a call. there was explanation. emphasis entirely is on a protest that did not happen in benghazi. on the demonstration that didn't happen in benghazi, that became this attack. and the fact that they pushed this and they had rice say it, and when we had gregory hicks, who was number two in libya say under testimony that his jaw dropped when he heard this, that was the first electrical moment. this is the second electrical moment. >> not only gregory hicks, but mike morrell, the former deputy director of the cia said when he saw susan rice said he understood the protest part. but they had nothing to do with the video. >> right, they're making a major distinction with the set of talking points that the intelligence community provided and which charles notes heavily edited after input from the state department and the white house. but that set of talking points did not mention the video, was not about the video. and susan rice's story was all about the video in concert with the e-mails we've now seen from ben rhodes an
she was prepped. there was a call. there was explanation. emphasis entirely is on a protest that did not happen in benghazi. on the demonstration that didn't happen in benghazi, that became this attack. and the fact that they pushed this and they had rice say it, and when we had gregory hicks, who was number two in libya say under testimony that his jaw dropped when he heard this, that was the first electrical moment. this is the second electrical moment. >> not only gregory hicks, but...
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May 4, 2014
05/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
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there was a lot of amendments been presented was strong but it was feared demon to process even when the bill this important is debated there's a huge number of members of the floor and the votes for only recorded by totaled not name see would not be held responsible on the particular amendment you could say i support the bill but that was standard operating procedure. one thing the movement act did for young labor organizers they organized teams with the groups of young people every time there was an important vote live ago to the friendly representatives you need to get out to the house floor right now it is not as important to vote the right way of this bill. they're very aggressive and ultimately they would tell it down but the idea the there was one woman a union organizer just the image just grabbing the very powerful men. and that to me talks about what that bill was about. >> that leads to another question. we'll understand why black americans those that are assassinated or chased from home it is understandable why not a southerner but black american that why we are very inte
there was a lot of amendments been presented was strong but it was feared demon to process even when the bill this important is debated there's a huge number of members of the floor and the votes for only recorded by totaled not name see would not be held responsible on the particular amendment you could say i support the bill but that was standard operating procedure. one thing the movement act did for young labor organizers they organized teams with the groups of young people every time there...