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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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this was the persona that he was building as he was making his way. so he is establishing what we call his bona fides for american consumption. a fake dissident, fake anti-communist, and a fake religious zealot. how is that for a package? i have to say it worked. because, after several years, he was hired by the cia. there was another side to karl koecher. there was not so much for public consumption. but it was very much about his job as a check is about in intelligence officer collecting -- as a czechoslovakian intelligence officer putting out a dragnet to see how many contacts he could make that work in high places or at least places where the information he wanted was and one of the tacks athat he and hana took was the swinging 1960's sexual underworld that was going on in washington, d.c. it is interesting. i was telling peter before. during this time that they were having all of these parties and these group sex clubs, and there is more to come, i was working at the cia. and the koechers say that cia employs, at least 10 of them were very much i
this was the persona that he was building as he was making his way. so he is establishing what we call his bona fides for american consumption. a fake dissident, fake anti-communist, and a fake religious zealot. how is that for a package? i have to say it worked. because, after several years, he was hired by the cia. there was another side to karl koecher. there was not so much for public consumption. but it was very much about his job as a check is about in intelligence officer collecting --...
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Feb 8, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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he was unsure what the mission was so it was really what was called a northern ireland days eight -- just to go out there and be seen and reassured those local population which was nonsensical in the holman context at that point. the big ambush and what i found out which is the revelation in the epilogue to the u.s. edition i found out very recently was that he was in all likelihood the bullet that killed him. he was mortally wounded in what happened to him was he was mortally wounded. her row at gallantry medals supported from those who got them back to the base but it was groups with helicopters and he got back to the hospital they are well outside the golden hour and basically bled to death and the life support machine was turned off by his family. but the tragic postscript that i was able to find out about published in the epilogue was it was a nato round that killed him. almost certainly by welsh guardsman in the heat of battle from the base itself. one of the hardest moments in all the research and writing of this book was to break the news i had to break the news to some of th
he was unsure what the mission was so it was really what was called a northern ireland days eight -- just to go out there and be seen and reassured those local population which was nonsensical in the holman context at that point. the big ambush and what i found out which is the revelation in the epilogue to the u.s. edition i found out very recently was that he was in all likelihood the bullet that killed him. he was mortally wounded in what happened to him was he was mortally wounded. her row...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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it was the way she was. >> great work on tv. knowing this is a time of great change i wonder if you have any insight into how the other astronauts on the shuttle flight accepted her. they were certainly openly accepting but how did they really -- >> i have spoken to all of them and they're very good friends of mine, four men and sally's first flight. there are a number of answers to that question. one is on the one hand they were all thrilled to be flying. the goal when you become an astronaut is to fly. they could have said 14 monkeys and four spiders were going and they would be fine with that. also, all four of them were military guys and with military backgrounds and their hold training was it is not about me. it is about the admission. they were thrilled on one level but sally was the one getting all the attention. they didn't have to do the dreaded press interviews with people like me who say how do you feel about that flight and what will you be doing? they loved that it was sally. they liked the fact that because of sall
it was the way she was. >> great work on tv. knowing this is a time of great change i wonder if you have any insight into how the other astronauts on the shuttle flight accepted her. they were certainly openly accepting but how did they really -- >> i have spoken to all of them and they're very good friends of mine, four men and sally's first flight. there are a number of answers to that question. one is on the one hand they were all thrilled to be flying. the goal when you become...
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Feb 8, 2015
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gown she was wearing when her husband was shot.it was possible that susie could have placed pillows and a blanket between herself and bill and that these received most of the blowback blood spatter. but that blanket and the t-shirt bill mowbray was wearing when he was shot had been lost, a serious blow to the prosecution. meanwhile, susie mowbray's defense team had its own problems. they had to account for what many considered to be her unusual behavior just before and after the shooting. she found out just before bill's death that she was being cut out of his life insurance policies. then, after he was shot, she called a family friend before calling 911. and within ten hours of his death she was painting the room where the shooting took place. her defense also concentrated on bill mowbray's behavior. his business was in trouble. he was being investigated for alleged tax irregularities. ten years earlier, he had actually attempted suicide. and he told friends he would kill himself before spending one day in jail. he even told a cow
gown she was wearing when her husband was shot.it was possible that susie could have placed pillows and a blanket between herself and bill and that these received most of the blowback blood spatter. but that blanket and the t-shirt bill mowbray was wearing when he was shot had been lost, a serious blow to the prosecution. meanwhile, susie mowbray's defense team had its own problems. they had to account for what many considered to be her unusual behavior just before and after the shooting. she...
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Feb 8, 2015
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he was very upset. >> and it was soon discovered that this guard was among many at green haven who hadthing to hide. >> people had motives to kill donna inside the prison. i believe that because of all the illegal activities that were going on in green haven at the time of her death, and long before that, that there were people there that not only did they have the motive, they had the capability to carry out such a crime. >> those activities had been revealed in an official report released just two weeks before donna payant's murder. the green haven guards were suspected of having a "let's make a deal" attitude with the prisoners. guards were selling drugs and even providing prostitutes to inmates. a good old boy network had kept this secret for years. but some of the new female recruits like donna payant wanted no part of that network. and when donna payant had made the earlier charge of sexual harassment, she quickly became known as a whistle blower. during an autopsy on donna payant, the medical examiner discovered she was not only sexually assaulted with extreme savagery, he also
he was very upset. >> and it was soon discovered that this guard was among many at green haven who hadthing to hide. >> people had motives to kill donna inside the prison. i believe that because of all the illegal activities that were going on in green haven at the time of her death, and long before that, that there were people there that not only did they have the motive, they had the capability to carry out such a crime. >> those activities had been revealed in an official...
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Feb 1, 2015
02/15
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i was just describing how angry i was. i had just expected that he would give me a couple pills or something, just to relax my muscles, calm me dawn. >> instead, dr. schneeberger gave candy a shot. she says she went numb almost immediately. >> i had no control over my muscles. it is like all my muscles left, and i was just this piece of jelly falling over. i tried to scream. as i was falling over, nothing would come out except for a croaking noise that a frog would make. it was just -- it was so scary. >> candy isn't actually sure what happened next, but believes she was raped. >> when a dentist freezes your gums, you can't -- and he's pulling your tooth out, you can't feel the pain from the tooth. but what you can feel is pressure of the tooth moving back and forth and that's the only way i can describe it. >> when she regained consciousness alone in the exam room, candy had the presence of mind to place her underwear in an airtight bag. candy was too dizzy to leave the hospital. the nurses insisted she spend the night. s
i was just describing how angry i was. i had just expected that he would give me a couple pills or something, just to relax my muscles, calm me dawn. >> instead, dr. schneeberger gave candy a shot. she says she went numb almost immediately. >> i had no control over my muscles. it is like all my muscles left, and i was just this piece of jelly falling over. i tried to scream. as i was falling over, nothing would come out except for a croaking noise that a frog would make. it was just...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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richmond was the capital. austin was a capital -- boston was a capital. athens was another capital. what they had was a state government in one city or town and rotated around the state. the term "seek a federal government" or seat of government" is a term in the constitution. as our next speaker will point out, people of the united states did not refer to this place as the capital of the united states until the 1870's except for a very few people such as -- not george washington, who would not use the word because he was so careful about doing things constitutionally. but certainly, l'enfant, the american peter l'enfant who designed washington, d.c., and who i will talk about. i'm highly offended to hear the word "p a -- pierre." this man was an american. french born, but american. he was an american citizen. the pierere nonsense was created by the american institute of architecture in the late 19th century in order to claim our capital was not designed by some mere american slot but by a frenchman, and indeed a parisian. this was picked up by the french ambassador at the end of th
richmond was the capital. austin was a capital -- boston was a capital. athens was another capital. what they had was a state government in one city or town and rotated around the state. the term "seek a federal government" or seat of government" is a term in the constitution. as our next speaker will point out, people of the united states did not refer to this place as the capital of the united states until the 1870's except for a very few people such as -- not george...
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Feb 28, 2015
02/15
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>> when evidence of innocence emerges -- >> something was going on that was very unscrupulous and was very deliberate. >> the system will stop at nothing to get what it wants. >> we had struck out and he was going to die. >> there's a body in the water. >> he was butcher and murdered. >> many people proclaim their innocence. >> in this case, there are many things that stink. >> this man is remorseless. >> he needs to pay for it with his life. >> the electric chair flashed before my eyes. >> get a conviction at all costs, let the truth fall where it may. >> world famous bourbon street. you can buy a song and dance for a dime. >> on december 5th, 1984, ray liuzza, a fun loving 34-year-old bachelor from a prominent new orleans family was out on the town celebrating his promotion to vice president of one of the city's biggest hotels. >> ray liuzza was a true new orleanians, the fine cuisine and the epitome of the music as well. >> late that night as he returned to his garden district apartment, he was approached by someone in the dark. >> he was robbed at gunpoint. he complied with the pe
>> when evidence of innocence emerges -- >> something was going on that was very unscrupulous and was very deliberate. >> the system will stop at nothing to get what it wants. >> we had struck out and he was going to die. >> there's a body in the water. >> he was butcher and murdered. >> many people proclaim their innocence. >> in this case, there are many things that stink. >> this man is remorseless. >> he needs to pay for it with...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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second, that it was from a type o individual, who was a secreter. and that a pgm type, a phosoclugomutase of one plus, all matched frediani's blood type. >> dna testing in 1985 was still in its infancy. at the last minute when faced with the fingerprint and serological evidence, frediani pleaded no contest to the assault and was sentenced to five years in prison. but frediani said he was innocent of her murder. >> they knew who killed helena greenwood. and they knew it was david paul frediani, but they couldn't prove it. >> eventually helena greenwood's murder was relegated to san diego county's cold case files and forgotten. over the next several years helena's parents died, her husband, roger, developed cancer and he too passed away. >> and who is there to mourn for helena? very few and growing fewer. >> and gen-probe went about the work helena had been pursuing before her death, looking for ways to use new dna technology for quicker, faster medical diagnoses. david frediani served only three years of his five-year sentence and was released. he re
second, that it was from a type o individual, who was a secreter. and that a pgm type, a phosoclugomutase of one plus, all matched frediani's blood type. >> dna testing in 1985 was still in its infancy. at the last minute when faced with the fingerprint and serological evidence, frediani pleaded no contest to the assault and was sentenced to five years in prison. but frediani said he was innocent of her murder. >> they knew who killed helena greenwood. and they knew it was david...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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his dog was his life. she was his baby. >> she had a lot of hamburgers, a lot of pizza, hot dogs, things like that. i think she ate mostly people food. she was very spoiled. >> police soon learned that a dog matching keisha's description was found a month earlier, wandering aimlessly several miles away. >> she was just standing in the middle of the street, dazed, looking around like where am i, what am i doing here? >> john's parents identified keisha. the evidence suggested she had been driven there and dropped off. >> keisha was found during january when the roads are typically dirty and muddy. but keisha's condition was pretty clean. >> the crime scene showed that the dog's leash, which normally was kept inside the trailer next to the door, was actually in the victim's van. it suggested the victim's van had been used to transport the dog and dispose of the dog. >> this was just one unusual detail in an investigation that was to become even more bizarre. the real question that needs to be asked is "what
his dog was his life. she was his baby. >> she had a lot of hamburgers, a lot of pizza, hot dogs, things like that. i think she ate mostly people food. she was very spoiled. >> police soon learned that a dog matching keisha's description was found a month earlier, wandering aimlessly several miles away. >> she was just standing in the middle of the street, dazed, looking around like where am i, what am i doing here? >> john's parents identified keisha. the evidence...
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Feb 21, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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it was probably not so much controversial as it was, that's nice you're doing it, and that was t. because people just didn't think it was going to go anywhere. it was mission impossible. and, you know, you had a lot of people who -- i mean, core people who were very much in favor of pursuing this action, and so they were all hyped up, but i would say 90% could care less, and maybe 20% were really -- this happened in '42. why are you bringing this up now? let's let it die. forget it. but that was a small group. maybe not even 20%. >> so tell me what the hearings did for you when they started in the various cities? were you able to attend any of them, or what was it like? >> i did, and it was just very, very moving. and -- but, you know, as we're putting together this commission bill, i wanted to make sure that we had prominent members of the congress. if i dropped the bill in, people were like, oh, that's self-serving. so i didn't want us to be in the forefront on this thing. and so i wanted to make sure that we had judiciary committee members who were going to be considering this
it was probably not so much controversial as it was, that's nice you're doing it, and that was t. because people just didn't think it was going to go anywhere. it was mission impossible. and, you know, you had a lot of people who -- i mean, core people who were very much in favor of pursuing this action, and so they were all hyped up, but i would say 90% could care less, and maybe 20% were really -- this happened in '42. why are you bringing this up now? let's let it die. forget it. but that...
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Feb 19, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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he was a broken man. health wise, he was coming apart. the paper was barely making it out. own in a rooming house. he was known to be agitated and worrisome and would walk around the flat roof that they had triple deckers in boston. and he either slipped or fell to his death. was e it was on his birthday. there's a lot of the early reports in the paper that said he jumped. it was a suicide. the family always said he would never do that. i think this's a strong case that could be made that the timing of it on his birthday and what not, he was failing health that he may well have jumped to his death. >> how long did d.w. give filth? >> he lived a bit longer. i can't remember off the top of my head how old he was when he died. but he retired and lived in hollywood for a number of years. >> did he ever have another success? >> not like birth of a nation. he indisputedly and deservedly has a place in american history. >> got another book you're writing? >> i do, actually. i'm always working on something. >> can you tell us what it is? >> no not now: >> and you did how many books
he was a broken man. health wise, he was coming apart. the paper was barely making it out. own in a rooming house. he was known to be agitated and worrisome and would walk around the flat roof that they had triple deckers in boston. and he either slipped or fell to his death. was e it was on his birthday. there's a lot of the early reports in the paper that said he jumped. it was a suicide. the family always said he would never do that. i think this's a strong case that could be made that the...
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Feb 8, 2015
02/15
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BLOOMBERG
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he was impressed by that. >> i think he was. >> he told you he was going to beat hillary early on. >> think it was late summer. there was a moment in which he said to us, we are going to win this thing. there was an exchange with senator clinton on the tarmac. the conversation got heated. he was composed. he handled it and got back on the plane. was not frazzled. >> people have taken note of and asked why, there's a kind of aloofness and detachment. why? >> people have written that. there's a lot of stuff behind it. some is the comparison to bill clinton. bill clinton was so amazing at making people feel like they were the only person in the room. i tell people all the time that the president is very different than bill clinton. the president has two small children. i guess they are not small, they are actually pretty big. >> the tallest one -- the oldest one. >> she is like 5'10" or 5'11". he is about 6'1". what was really important to him, he wanted to have normalcy for the girls. i think it was important for him to be home for dinner as much as he could if he was not traveling. if
he was impressed by that. >> i think he was. >> he told you he was going to beat hillary early on. >> think it was late summer. there was a moment in which he said to us, we are going to win this thing. there was an exchange with senator clinton on the tarmac. the conversation got heated. he was composed. he handled it and got back on the plane. was not frazzled. >> people have taken note of and asked why, there's a kind of aloofness and detachment. why? >> people...
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Feb 25, 2015
02/15
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FOXNEWSW
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it was awful. it was bloody. it was a senseless crime. we can all agree eddie had something wrong with him, weird guy, but that's not mental illness. was this a stretch on the defense's part to go for mental illness? >> what else are they going to do, sean? what else are you going to do? they really didn't have anything else to go with. they had no choice. he confesses. the evidence is absolutely overwhelming. as the prosecutor said in the closing arguments, folks this is not a whodunit case. everybody knows whodunit. this isn't a self-defense case. they're shot in the back, they're executed. casey said there's stippling. they shot within like 12 inches. so there's nothing to do except for the defense attorney to make sure that the prosecuteors are playing by the rules, that the judge is giving a fair trial. and basically you're slowly leading this individual to a life behind bars, which obviously it's a tragedy all around. there's no winners here whatsoever. >> yeah. i was talking to casey outside the courthouse, we'll go back to him in
it was awful. it was bloody. it was a senseless crime. we can all agree eddie had something wrong with him, weird guy, but that's not mental illness. was this a stretch on the defense's part to go for mental illness? >> what else are they going to do, sean? what else are you going to do? they really didn't have anything else to go with. they had no choice. he confesses. the evidence is absolutely overwhelming. as the prosecutor said in the closing arguments, folks this is not a whodunit...
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Feb 8, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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it was something that was just a thing that was going to happen. >> if education was to be the way out would show them the way up. parochial school for the elementary grades offered both. >> we were told, don't get mad, pray. the catholic school, don't get mad, pray. so we'd say we have to pray for so-and-so, we start praying. >> later, at the public high school, where girls often aspired to be baton twirlers with the marching band, irene and josie were reluctant. it was the late 1940s. was it unusual for mexican-american teenagers to do twirling? >> it was. my mom says, you go ahead and try out. they have a new music director, and we'll see if he'll get you in. and he was impressed with the two of us, and he let us in. >> irene went on to become mcallen high's first mexican-american drum majorette, an inspiration to her younger cousins. >> in essence, it really did not matter what race she was. she was just irene. >> irene also made an impression in the local beauty pageants, eventually being crowned miss south texas in 1958. >> she was everything i think that all little girls, especi
it was something that was just a thing that was going to happen. >> if education was to be the way out would show them the way up. parochial school for the elementary grades offered both. >> we were told, don't get mad, pray. the catholic school, don't get mad, pray. so we'd say we have to pray for so-and-so, we start praying. >> later, at the public high school, where girls often aspired to be baton twirlers with the marching band, irene and josie were reluctant. it was the...
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Feb 28, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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and that was all right, except i was homesick. i really loved the ranch and loved being with my parents, and i didn't want to be away. so i remember those years with considerable pain, actually. c-span: what was it like when you found out that your mother had been married before? >> guest: well, i was very shocked. c-span: what year was that? >> guest: oh, i don't remember. i was a student in el paso, and i remember one of the children i knew saying, `i know something about you.' `no, you don't.' `yes, i do. i know something about you and your mother.' `no, you don't. what is it?' `well, your mother was married before. she had another husband.' and i said, `oh, that's not true. i know you're wrong.' and when i went home to my grandmother's that evening, i asked her about it. i said, `now somebody at school told me that mo had been married before. that's not true.' and my grandmother said, `well actually, it is. she--she had a brief marriage before she met and married your father.' and i guess that was something that, in those days
and that was all right, except i was homesick. i really loved the ranch and loved being with my parents, and i didn't want to be away. so i remember those years with considerable pain, actually. c-span: what was it like when you found out that your mother had been married before? >> guest: well, i was very shocked. c-span: what year was that? >> guest: oh, i don't remember. i was a student in el paso, and i remember one of the children i knew saying, `i know something about you.'...
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Feb 8, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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it was not french. it was named by a construction worker on the site. it was grand. it's a 17th century baroque bed from italy. everybody asked for an evening in it. he was filling it quite deliberately with all of the wrong people. built by a woman architect presided over by a movie star, the home of media mogul. there are many ways in which san simian says a lot about how culture has changed and social hierarchy has broken down in our 20th cent rip. -- century. he had a strongly didactic reason he did what he did. business people, sports figures, literary figures, and movie stars. but it was a departure from convention to socialize that in the 1920s. the beautiful library has greek faces. since mr. clark also donated greek vases, he started collecting them in 1901 when he was young and collected them until 1951, the year of his death. he didn't buy things en masse. he did not like to buy collections that other people form md. he went after object by object. his possessions and always had a large say in the selecting to the despair of the dealers he never followed t
it was not french. it was named by a construction worker on the site. it was grand. it's a 17th century baroque bed from italy. everybody asked for an evening in it. he was filling it quite deliberately with all of the wrong people. built by a woman architect presided over by a movie star, the home of media mogul. there are many ways in which san simian says a lot about how culture has changed and social hierarchy has broken down in our 20th cent rip. -- century. he had a strongly didactic...
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Feb 19, 2015
02/15
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ALJAZAM
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it was huge. it was wonderful. and the campaign is called i will what i want. >> uh-huh. >> and it talks about professional obstacles, rejection letters. how do you deal with -- with that? [ laughter ] >> professional obstacles? with -- maybe not always achieving what are -- or being rewarded what you think you have worked for? >> that is something that i definitely struggled with throughout my early years as a professional. not really understanding that it is not enough just to be talented. it took me a long time to understand that you -- we are in control of our destiny, and that it's up to us to first of all understand what we want be able to execute what it is that we want, and not be afraid to tell people what we want and i think that was kind of the start of me ending up on the path i wanted to be on for my career. was not just assuming these people were going to know what i wanted but to let them know. i work really hard and i see myself having more of a future as a classical dancer not just doing contempora
it was huge. it was wonderful. and the campaign is called i will what i want. >> uh-huh. >> and it talks about professional obstacles, rejection letters. how do you deal with -- with that? [ laughter ] >> professional obstacles? with -- maybe not always achieving what are -- or being rewarded what you think you have worked for? >> that is something that i definitely struggled with throughout my early years as a professional. not really understanding that it is not enough...
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Feb 17, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 40
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was. it could have been just eyesore it could have been carbon dioxide in some kind of frozen form but they're was a reluctance to say that they're was not only running water but standing water and water that would have run for a long time. they knew that there have been major breaks, dam breaks and water would flow but those were catastrophic to things. this is the kind of thing you would find on earth. one of the main reasons why they said it could not be just a delta, like a a river delta was because the understanding was that the mars atmosphere can handle it. it was much too thin and anything that was standing water would quickly either evaporate or sublimate and freeze. in any case, this is what the began to see. some of the more daring scientists would say what we're looking at is obviously a riverbed and then awakened of the things. what they also began to see after sending up some instruments that could read this kind of information they're are large classes of minerals that are f
was. it could have been just eyesore it could have been carbon dioxide in some kind of frozen form but they're was a reluctance to say that they're was not only running water but standing water and water that would have run for a long time. they knew that there have been major breaks, dam breaks and water would flow but those were catastrophic to things. this is the kind of thing you would find on earth. one of the main reasons why they said it could not be just a delta, like a a river delta...
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Feb 8, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 63
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when it was here, it was about washington. i think it will find, hopefully, its home in different places for people that it might have meaning for. susan: hopefully for people who experience the play, what do you want to leave them with? what is the ultimate message for them? james: i will risk sounding -- i coy here, but i have kind of given up on the idea that i can even wish that. what i do hope is that knowing that many people have big opinions about mary lincoln, i hope the play will at least engage those opinions, and if not change them, for a couple of hours, they might consider who mary lincoln was, might have been, and maybe look at her a little differently. susan: and are there universal messages in the play as well? james: absolutely. susan: what do you hope they would be? james: grief is a process. grief is both very private and very public. no one can do it for you. you have to go through that. as mary said, mary lincoln did it on her own terms. that did not please a lot of people, that she did it on her own terms
when it was here, it was about washington. i think it will find, hopefully, its home in different places for people that it might have meaning for. susan: hopefully for people who experience the play, what do you want to leave them with? what is the ultimate message for them? james: i will risk sounding -- i coy here, but i have kind of given up on the idea that i can even wish that. what i do hope is that knowing that many people have big opinions about mary lincoln, i hope the play will at...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 49
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it was a very -- it was a battle that changed many of our lives. i will just say that in many ways there are many lessons that can be learned from falluja on the current day and terms not necessarily of itself but afterwards that the awakening. in many ways that is the key to success. it's moving forward. thank you. [applause] >> the barbed wire and guard towers but the memories come flooding back for so many people who until today have lost such a big part of their child. for many released after the war some very good memories and with it the history of this camp now more than 60 years later. >> said the government comes to the department and says we have a deal for you. we will reunite you with your families and the crystal city internment camp come in the same internment camp if you'll agree to go voluntarily and then i discovered what the real secret of the camp was. they also had to agree to voluntarily repatriate to germany into japan if the government decided they needed to be repatriated. so the truth of the matter is the camp was humanely
it was a very -- it was a battle that changed many of our lives. i will just say that in many ways there are many lessons that can be learned from falluja on the current day and terms not necessarily of itself but afterwards that the awakening. in many ways that is the key to success. it's moving forward. thank you. [applause] >> the barbed wire and guard towers but the memories come flooding back for so many people who until today have lost such a big part of their child. for many...
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Feb 21, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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she was a nurse he was an accountant. and in that 40 years not a single person that they talked to had ever heard of the camps of the concentration camps. i want to add that when i talk about words concentration camps later took on a different meaning. because of the germany extermination camps for jews, for russians, for any political enemies that they had so that a lot of people since tried to avoid the use of that term because though many japanese and japanese americans died in the camps, the conditions were pretty grungy and unhealthy, they were not death camps. they were just to keep them away because though there had never been a single act of sabotage by a japanese or japanese american during world war ii or the run-up to world war ii they were put there because people were so afraid there would be acts of terrorism bombings people on hills with flashlights signaling to japanese submarines so they could bombard san francisco or whatever. those things didn't happen. but people were afraid of them. and the press was
she was a nurse he was an accountant. and in that 40 years not a single person that they talked to had ever heard of the camps of the concentration camps. i want to add that when i talk about words concentration camps later took on a different meaning. because of the germany extermination camps for jews, for russians, for any political enemies that they had so that a lot of people since tried to avoid the use of that term because though many japanese and japanese americans died in the camps,...
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947
Feb 1, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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the dress was wrong. the car seat was wrong.e within the pictures had a very masculine appearance and don't appear to with consistent with our victim. the list goes on and on. >> and prosecutors did not believe rathbun's accident scenario. they suspected when rrathbun wa taking photographs that day, for linda, it was a job. to rathbun, an opportunity. >> the forensic evidence suggested that rathbun struck her on the right side of the head, twisted linda's arm, tied her ankles and sexually assaulted her, possibly with his gun. he may have forced her to consume the alcohol. the deep bruises on her ankles indicated linda desperately tried to escape. after the assault, rathbun caused linda's death by asphyxiation. linda's blood and saliva were found on the car cover in the cargo area. and evidence suggests rathbun washed linda's face and redressed the body an effort to conceal what happened. he later disposed of linda's person items in a dumpster, but made the mistake of including the lexus rental agreement in his name. >> charles r
the dress was wrong. the car seat was wrong.e within the pictures had a very masculine appearance and don't appear to with consistent with our victim. the list goes on and on. >> and prosecutors did not believe rathbun's accident scenario. they suspected when rrathbun wa taking photographs that day, for linda, it was a job. to rathbun, an opportunity. >> the forensic evidence suggested that rathbun struck her on the right side of the head, twisted linda's arm, tied her ankles and...
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Feb 1, 2015
02/15
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it clearly was observed. it clearly was seen. no one knew what to do with it because it was in a medium, in blood on a pillowcase against a pattern on the pillowcase that made it unreadable. if there was some way to make that print readable, it could take on as vibrant a forensic persuader as dna evidence and maybe some more. >> then investigators got a break. >> every year we have a latent print conference which encompasses all the latent print examiners in virginia. it's a training seminar basically. the imaging people there, one of the vendors brought their imaging system there. >> i was highly skeptical of it. had never seen it used in a forensic case. but since we had nothing else other than this very faint print on fabric, we thought it was worth a try. >> the new system was called image enhancement technology. image enhancement uses a computer to identify patterns like those woven into a pillowcase. once the pattern was identified, it was subtracted from the image, leaving only the ridge patterns of the fingerprint behind.
it clearly was observed. it clearly was seen. no one knew what to do with it because it was in a medium, in blood on a pillowcase against a pattern on the pillowcase that made it unreadable. if there was some way to make that print readable, it could take on as vibrant a forensic persuader as dna evidence and maybe some more. >> then investigators got a break. >> every year we have a latent print conference which encompasses all the latent print examiners in virginia. it's a...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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can you imagine what was going through her mind knowing what she was going to face?he knew at that point that her body would be in a condition that the casket had to be closed. >> the medical examiner found residue of duct tape on her face, suggesting that the cause of death was suffocation. >> her hair was substantially shorter. he had to cut the duct tape out of her hair to keep from leaving it behind. and that told me that he had some experience, at least, or some level of criminal sophistication. the profile that we developed of him described a white male, unsuccessfully married, probably not currently married, mid to late 20s to maybe even as old as early 30s, who had a history of sex crimes. >> the signal analysis unit of the fbi engineering section told investigators that the voice distortion of the abductor's voice was accomplished by something called a variable speed control device. >> we believed either through employment or through his technical education had some sort of background or experience in electronics. >> investigators believed the killer had eve
can you imagine what was going through her mind knowing what she was going to face?he knew at that point that her body would be in a condition that the casket had to be closed. >> the medical examiner found residue of duct tape on her face, suggesting that the cause of death was suffocation. >> her hair was substantially shorter. he had to cut the duct tape out of her hair to keep from leaving it behind. and that told me that he had some experience, at least, or some level of...
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627
Feb 2, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 627
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that was the best, this photograph was taken at the house right after her father was arrested. they lost the house for 30 days later. this is the second person. on the morning of december 7 the 13-year-old girl rested her elbows on the windowsill of her family's apartment in little tokyo, the cultural enclave for the japanese and los angeles. on the streets below was a traffic jam the cars filled with angry men felt the street. a few carried posters with enraged messages. hunting license good for the duration of hunting season. opening season now. while the parents were easy the immigrants from japan. she considered herself to be 100% american. the knock on the door came march 13, 1942 friday the 13th on an unlucky day in america and perhaps an omen. she wasn't at home that she was at school. little did she know that it would be her last day at central junior high. she noticed the front door was open. her mother was at the table with a note in her hands and she had a frozen smile on her face. she could see that her mother was frozen in terror. they said was pop-up arrested. as
that was the best, this photograph was taken at the house right after her father was arrested. they lost the house for 30 days later. this is the second person. on the morning of december 7 the 13-year-old girl rested her elbows on the windowsill of her family's apartment in little tokyo, the cultural enclave for the japanese and los angeles. on the streets below was a traffic jam the cars filled with angry men felt the street. a few carried posters with enraged messages. hunting license good...
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Feb 21, 2015
02/15
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MSNBCW
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was in shock.l 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 performing fairly no
was in shock.l 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....
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69
Feb 8, 2015
02/15
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MSNBCW
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it was very, very scary. i literally thought i was going to die. i was like okay, here we go.his is it. >> i had no time to do anything but ride it out. >> the wing hits the ground first. then the nose crashes down at a 45-degree angle. >> are you okay? ian's phone continues recording audio in the frantic moments after the crash. >> holy [ bleep ]! grandpa, are you okay? grandpa, are you okay? >> my first thought was, wow, this really just happened. how am i not dead. i looked at myself and i was like, okay, everything is working. my body's intact. >> grandpa are you okay? grandpa, are you okay? holy [ bleep ]. >> i was like okay we have to get out this plane because it could blow up. >> ian dislodges himself from the wreckage but his grandfather is stuck. his legs trapped by equipment that collapsed around them on impact. >> he lifted my 230 pounds out of the doorway and helped me get out of the airplane. luckily for both of us we didn't have any fire. so we were able to get out of the plane without any further injury. >> help soon arrives on the scene. >> i was just excited
it was very, very scary. i literally thought i was going to die. i was like okay, here we go.his is it. >> i had no time to do anything but ride it out. >> the wing hits the ground first. then the nose crashes down at a 45-degree angle. >> are you okay? ian's phone continues recording audio in the frantic moments after the crash. >> holy [ bleep ]! grandpa, are you okay? grandpa, are you okay? >> my first thought was, wow, this really just happened. how am i not...
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Feb 15, 2015
02/15
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was no way to identify the man since this was before dna testing. police knew that in order to identify possible suspects, they first had to identify the victim. >> we said from the very beginning, if we find out who she is, we'll find out who killed her. >> missing persons reports were checked, but no one fit the description of the torso. seven months later, she was buried, still unidentified in an unmarked grave and soon forgotten. one year later, a telephone call changed that. ng for someone with alzheimer's means i am a lot of things. i am his guardian. i am his voice. so i asked about adding once-daily namenda xr® to his current treatment for moderate to severe alzheimer's. it works differently. when added to another alzheimer's treatment, like aricept®, it may improve overall function... and cognition. and may slow the worsening of symptoms for a while. (man) namenda xr doesn't change how the disease progresses. it shouldn't be taken by anyone allergic to memantine, or who's had a bad reaction to namenda xr or its ingredients. before starting
was no way to identify the man since this was before dna testing. police knew that in order to identify possible suspects, they first had to identify the victim. >> we said from the very beginning, if we find out who she is, we'll find out who killed her. >> missing persons reports were checked, but no one fit the description of the torso. seven months later, she was buried, still unidentified in an unmarked grave and soon forgotten. one year later, a telephone call changed that. ng...
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287
Feb 1, 2015
02/15
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WPVI
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it was a tragedy and it was horrible. the hallway was streaked with blood.the deceased, medical researcher stefan andersson barely recognizable from more than two dozen stab wounds to his head, face and neck. all from the heel of ana's blue velvet stilettos. his hair still on the heels. and on a glass table nearby, a macabre sign, trujillo's book of tarot, turned to the picture of death. instantly, the police officer was suspicious. >> he just yelled at me and took his gun out and he told me to -- to get down on the ground. i thought they were there to help us. the millions of officers showed up. where was the ambulance? >> reporter: ana tells police andersson had attacked her, that she killed him in self-defense. but though she was drenched in blood, police say she doesn't look injured. she gives a rambling, disjointed statement. >> it's a meandering sort of my life up till now three hour tape in which she talks about what actually happened the night of very briefly. >> reporter: the cops have heard enough. they put her under arrest. >> you said you were su
it was a tragedy and it was horrible. the hallway was streaked with blood.the deceased, medical researcher stefan andersson barely recognizable from more than two dozen stab wounds to his head, face and neck. all from the heel of ana's blue velvet stilettos. his hair still on the heels. and on a glass table nearby, a macabre sign, trujillo's book of tarot, turned to the picture of death. instantly, the police officer was suspicious. >> he just yelled at me and took his gun out and he told...
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Feb 4, 2015
02/15
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it was quite unusual.ut the big question that people are going to have is at what point do the jordanians know that he was in fact dead and if they know this why were they offering to engage in some kind of negotiation? did that prolong the agony and it's possible that they have suspicions and jordan has faced its own internal security charges and the campaign against isis was quite unpopular. jordanian officials are telling me that this is going to strengthen their resolve and we'll see whether that is true and whether they maintain their role in the coalition. it's important to note that they did not stop participating in air strikes with the u.s. even after the pilot was killed. pardon me. after he was captured. >> shane harris thank you very much for joining us tonight. we will be right back. whoa whoa whoa! who's responsible for this?!? if something goes wrong, you find a scapegoat. ...rick. it's what you do. ahhhhhhhh! what'd you say? uh-oh! kelly! if you want to save fifteen percent or more on car i
it was quite unusual.ut the big question that people are going to have is at what point do the jordanians know that he was in fact dead and if they know this why were they offering to engage in some kind of negotiation? did that prolong the agony and it's possible that they have suspicions and jordan has faced its own internal security charges and the campaign against isis was quite unpopular. jordanian officials are telling me that this is going to strengthen their resolve and we'll see...
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Feb 21, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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he was cruel the slaveholder was a slaveholder.y hour that he robbed a man of their rights, he was sharpening the knife of revenge. for his own throat. and speaking of the principles for which our country was founded, he spoke the very reasons that gave the slaves a right to rebel. i could not stop thinking of freedom and liberty. i heard freedom in every sound and saw it in every object. freedom shone from every star, it breathed in every wind. although i found a better life in baltimore, i did not find happiness because true happiness and slavery can never coincide. on a monday, the third day of september, 1838, i boarded a train to philadelphia. i arrived at afternoon in philadelphia and new york city the next morning, free, black, and 20 years old with my slave days behind me. are you with me? a leader settled in message -- i leaders settled in massachusetts. i have heard of the abolitionist movement as a child in baltimore but i did not know of the work that they did until i read my first copy of "the liberator." this paper fo
he was cruel the slaveholder was a slaveholder.y hour that he robbed a man of their rights, he was sharpening the knife of revenge. for his own throat. and speaking of the principles for which our country was founded, he spoke the very reasons that gave the slaves a right to rebel. i could not stop thinking of freedom and liberty. i heard freedom in every sound and saw it in every object. freedom shone from every star, it breathed in every wind. although i found a better life in baltimore, i...
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97
Feb 8, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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eye 97
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soon he was not a home but she too was at school. little did she know it would be her last day at central junior high. at the end of the day she struggled at the iron steps of the apartment building. on the second floor she noticed a front or with soap and. she posits. her mother was seated at the dining room table with her head in her hands. when she let out, she had a frozen smile on her face. her mother was almost always cheerful. she lost easily and never complained. even at 13 she could see that her mother was frozen in terror. she walked through the ponder department. tours have been dumped on the living room floor. shares were toppled. contents of the kitchen cupboards were spilled on the counters. mama, was papa arrested? yes, five fbi men came. they took papa away. as was the case of the cs and the other enemy aliens including his father there were never any charges filed against these people. the reason given for his arrest. no opportunity to defend himself. the camp. these are the two important leaders of the camp. on this
soon he was not a home but she too was at school. little did she know it would be her last day at central junior high. at the end of the day she struggled at the iron steps of the apartment building. on the second floor she noticed a front or with soap and. she posits. her mother was seated at the dining room table with her head in her hands. when she let out, she had a frozen smile on her face. her mother was almost always cheerful. she lost easily and never complained. even at 13 she could...
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2.2K
Feb 15, 2015
02/15
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i think it was blue. >> when police arrived, stephanie was hysterical and was unable to provide much detail about the crime. police were skeptical since the boys had numerous prior run-ins with police. >> they're always running their motorcycles through the yards up and down the street. they were always having a party. we were always down here for something. there's definitely got to be more to this than what we know. >> but there was evidence at the scene to corroborate stephanie's story. officers found megan's sweatshirt and sandals, along with the cover for the scope of a rifle. there were shoe prints leading in the direction the assailant was headed. at the bottom of the driveway, police found tire impressions, and near the road was a purple glove and an ice scraper. over the next few hours, megan's family and the police searched the streets and parking lots of jackson county, but she was nowhere to be found. $21. could something that small make an impact on something as big as your retirement? i don't think so. well if you start putting that towards your retirement every week an
i think it was blue. >> when police arrived, stephanie was hysterical and was unable to provide much detail about the crime. police were skeptical since the boys had numerous prior run-ins with police. >> they're always running their motorcycles through the yards up and down the street. they were always having a party. we were always down here for something. there's definitely got to be more to this than what we know. >> but there was evidence at the scene to corroborate...
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Feb 14, 2015
02/15
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BLOOMBERG
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eye 26
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it was rewarding intellectually, it was fun.t felt a little bit unreal, like i was in a lighter gear than i should be. i ultimately missed that, being in a higher gear. emily: let's talk about your innovation lab, where you are the mad scientist. you laughed when i said that. max: i am not that mad. [laughter] it is awesome. it is basically the intellectual outlet for everything that comes up in my overactive brain. it is the consolidation of all my intellectual activity, investing activity, startup activity, coding, hacking, prototyping -- anytime i have a wacky idea, i can gather the troops and say, we are going to build something crazy. it is a bit of a tyrannical democracy where lots of people are excited. we prototype it. we have lots of space covered in white board paint. when we have an idea, we start sketching something on the wall. as often as not we say, it is , amazing, no one is doing it. why don't we solve it? we start a company. it is like a generator, a factory for projecting companies. emily: give us an update on
it was rewarding intellectually, it was fun.t felt a little bit unreal, like i was in a lighter gear than i should be. i ultimately missed that, being in a higher gear. emily: let's talk about your innovation lab, where you are the mad scientist. you laughed when i said that. max: i am not that mad. [laughter] it is awesome. it is basically the intellectual outlet for everything that comes up in my overactive brain. it is the consolidation of all my intellectual activity, investing activity,...
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Feb 15, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN2
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so it was tough. it was tough. what i saw bob fraser's widow and she asked me that question, that was a tough one, really a tough one and it came to mind later on in my career in baghdad. at the same time bob was really one of the best foreign service officers i ever met. you know he was maybe 51 years old. so bob you know bob i think would have gone on to use things and then died. so i'm not going to just drop it. i will finish the job. >> was during parts of your book. the kosovo conflict spills over. an angry mob attacks the embassy with you and your staff inside. just read from that portion. >> you know know, we had one of these small embassies and i remember they say where your marines. someone from washington, tom pickering. i said we have no marines because we are one of these new embassies and were outfitted well enough. we didn't have the necessary marine contingent. offenses were not embedded enough. there are certain standards. you go down six feet, poor a lot of cement. we had nice-looking fences. we ju
so it was tough. it was tough. what i saw bob fraser's widow and she asked me that question, that was a tough one, really a tough one and it came to mind later on in my career in baghdad. at the same time bob was really one of the best foreign service officers i ever met. you know he was maybe 51 years old. so bob you know bob i think would have gone on to use things and then died. so i'm not going to just drop it. i will finish the job. >> was during parts of your book. the kosovo...
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Feb 9, 2015
02/15
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CSPAN3
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eye 54
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was hatched. i could be wrong, but i think it came from sncc, probably from jim bevel. everybody thought it was a great idea. dr. king endorsed it within a few days and said, we will have this march. you know what happened next, there was a march on the seventh of march. dr. king wasn't there, but john lewis, who was at the head of it. you have all seen the pictures. that is what galvanized the conscience of the entire country. >> we have all seen the pictures and we will take a look at them once more. take a look at the monitor. it is from our film that airs on the fourth floor on selma. i want you to take a look at what has become known as bloody sunday. that's take a look. >> march 7, 1965 and john lewis led a group onto the bridge, the first leg of the 55 mile walk to the state capital, montgomery. >> apparently the orders were once they get to the state highway, stop. >> you are ordered to disperse. the march will not persist. >> you saw the horses trampling over people. he saw john lewis. yo
was hatched. i could be wrong, but i think it came from sncc, probably from jim bevel. everybody thought it was a great idea. dr. king endorsed it within a few days and said, we will have this march. you know what happened next, there was a march on the seventh of march. dr. king wasn't there, but john lewis, who was at the head of it. you have all seen the pictures. that is what galvanized the conscience of the entire country. >> we have all seen the pictures and we will take a look at...
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123
Feb 23, 2015
02/15
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WRC
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eye 123
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there was no peace in the house. i was like you have to turn some stuff down.'t live like this. he's like i don't care. this is going save our life. just the fear that spread was absolutely amazing. >> reporter: by july 2009, four months after the dewitt murders and six months after the lofton murders, detectives were stumped. kirkland grew frustrated. >> they went to karen and carissa's house and started combing back fields for evidence there. i think that the investigation started off bad because they were so sure that the usual suspects was the suspects. >> we kept calling them and they wasn't giving us no answers. so that kind of pissed me off because i felt like we deserved to know something. >> it was wide open. we had nothing. >> reporter: you were out of your investigative playbook. >> that's when it gets scary. >> reporter: the detective promised patricia he will take down her sister's killer. would that turn out to be an empty promise? at this point what he needed was luck, and luck was about to come his way from the most unexpected source. >>> coming
there was no peace in the house. i was like you have to turn some stuff down.'t live like this. he's like i don't care. this is going save our life. just the fear that spread was absolutely amazing. >> reporter: by july 2009, four months after the dewitt murders and six months after the lofton murders, detectives were stumped. kirkland grew frustrated. >> they went to karen and carissa's house and started combing back fields for evidence there. i think that the investigation started...
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60
Feb 1, 2015
02/15
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MSNBCW
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go know where it was scary and i was just wondering if i was ever going to see the next day or not. figured this was the end. >> over the next three years, edwards undergoes a dozen surgeries. along the way he contracts an infection that ultimately claims his eyesight. despite his hardships, edwards remains positive. >> the good lord felt like it was not my time to go. i feel like i still have something to offer, to give to people. i'm blessed to be here still today. i talk to people about how important it is to not take anything for granted because you can lose everything in a flash. >> in recall, six people die in the fire. what went wrong to start this deadly blaze in the first place? turns out it's something that went unnoticed. accumulating for years. dust, polyethylene dust, a nonstick coating applied to the raw rubber produced at the factory. >> it's not like house dust. it's like a real fine, powdery kind of a texture of a talcum powder and when it's suspended and hanging in the air, it's very explosive and very flammable. if it accumulates over time and in a drop ceiling, i
go know where it was scary and i was just wondering if i was ever going to see the next day or not. figured this was the end. >> over the next three years, edwards undergoes a dozen surgeries. along the way he contracts an infection that ultimately claims his eyesight. despite his hardships, edwards remains positive. >> the good lord felt like it was not my time to go. i feel like i still have something to offer, to give to people. i'm blessed to be here still today. i talk to...
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416
Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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CNNW
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and if bramblett was involved, what was his motive? i am totally blind. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. >>> a team of forensic scientists at the western virginia crime lab analyzed the items recovered from their prime suspect's home. using a process known as the charcoal tube method, arson investigator tom simpson placed samples of earl bramblett's stained blue jeans in a can and then heated it. the vapors were trapped in a tube filled with charcoal, then fed into a gas chromatograph mass spectrometer, a device that can analyze the precise chemical composition of a stain. even though bramblett's jeans had been submerged in water, simpson discovered the stains were diesel fuel, the same accelerant used to start the hodges' fire. the blacked-out entry on bramblett's timecard presented another challenge. forensic documents examiner gordon menses used a video spectral comparator with various light sources in an attempt to see undernea
and if bramblett was involved, what was his motive? i am totally blind. and sometimes i struggle to sleep at night, and stay awake during the day. this is called non-24. learn more by calling 844-824-2424. or visit your24info.com. >>> a team of forensic scientists at the western virginia crime lab analyzed the items recovered from their prime suspect's home. using a process known as the charcoal tube method, arson investigator tom simpson placed samples of earl bramblett's stained blue...
SFGTV: San Francisco Government Television
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27
Feb 15, 2015
02/15
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SFGTV
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bell received was quite clear that it was landlord's family that was going to be moving in. mr. chu has a home, mr. chu's family, his mother and the disabled family relative have a home, mr. bell's informed that the whole family does not want to live together here. if the landlord is going to try to do a demolition by evading the restrictions under him under california code, under local law, that should not be encouraged. none of this thing about the landlord move-in came up until now and i question why when the first permit was applied for in september, then immediately cancelled after mr. bell appealed there's no indication or any real intent to do the lmi, there's no rent control records to do an lmi, so i think at minimum, the discretionary review is called for. >> okay, we can hear from mr. cohen. >> mr. chu put in the two rooms downstairs for the house *it. they were not intended to be rental unit, one was a play room and the other was to be a bedroom. there was a storage room which is where the stove top kitchenette is in now, and they're not in the bed rails the other oc
bell received was quite clear that it was landlord's family that was going to be moving in. mr. chu has a home, mr. chu's family, his mother and the disabled family relative have a home, mr. bell's informed that the whole family does not want to live together here. if the landlord is going to try to do a demolition by evading the restrictions under him under california code, under local law, that should not be encouraged. none of this thing about the landlord move-in came up until now and i...
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Feb 24, 2015
02/15
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i was not living there. it was a tense time. i think i remember my father feeling awful physically, maybe a case of gout. then the raid happens. it failed. he did not disclose and said i told the president, i do not disagree but if you do it, you are not listening to me. so clearly, i'm going to resign. he was, i think, probably relieved at once since, but it hurts. hurt that his word or counsel as secretary of state was not capturing the president's ear to the point where the president was following his advice. it was a tough period, but he moved on. charlie: an interesting case study. the president wanted his best advice. the best advice of others and sometimes he would listen to the cia director and sometimes secretary of defense and sometimes the white house counsel. to resign because he does not listen to you -- >> i think it was a factor. on an issue important to my father. in my office, you listen to a lot of people. >> and hope they do not go away. you were resistant to becoming a lawyer. >> i had a very well-known lawye
i was not living there. it was a tense time. i think i remember my father feeling awful physically, maybe a case of gout. then the raid happens. it failed. he did not disclose and said i told the president, i do not disagree but if you do it, you are not listening to me. so clearly, i'm going to resign. he was, i think, probably relieved at once since, but it hurts. hurt that his word or counsel as secretary of state was not capturing the president's ear to the point where the president was...
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Feb 28, 2015
02/15
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i was shocked. the suspect was an elderly female.out of the norm for an auto theft suspect or somebody taking a bait vehicle. i was double checking my facts to make sure that was the right car. >> seen in this video from the bait car, the suspect enters the car and after finding the keys left lying on the seat and placing her shopping cart in the back drives off. greenwell follows behind her and when she peers back in the window, it's a moment of mutual confusion. >> she turned and saw me. we made eye contact. >> no. oh, my god. >> i could see her making motions. she was talking to herself. obviously i didn't know what she was saying. maybe she was shocked that the police were so quick because i was that it was her in the vehicle. >> when he flashes his lights, the vehicle pulls over. >> vehicle pulled over on the shoulder. we pulled behind it in basically textbook fashion. i gave her verbal commands. for the most part she obeyed commands. >> let me see your hands. open up the door. keep your hands visible. stay right there. turn aro
i was shocked. the suspect was an elderly female.out of the norm for an auto theft suspect or somebody taking a bait vehicle. i was double checking my facts to make sure that was the right car. >> seen in this video from the bait car, the suspect enters the car and after finding the keys left lying on the seat and placing her shopping cart in the back drives off. greenwell follows behind her and when she peers back in the window, it's a moment of mutual confusion. >> she turned and...
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Feb 10, 2015
02/15
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in what was out one was efficiency. the basic threshold question for members of the finance committee, and the efficiency point is i believe, the mark of a more efficient allocator of resources than is a member of the ways and means committee or the finance committee. so that was one principle. the second principle is an equity question. horizontal equity. equal incomes should pay equal taxes. not somebody has the same income and next door somebody is using loopholes to reduce their tax rate. third is fairness. which is essentially vertical equity. and that is those who have more should pay more. in other words the progressive nature of the system. and fourth, do whatever you can to make the system less complex. we live in a time where few people fill out their returns, and where tax fraud is estimated to be nearly $80 billion to $100 billion. so those are the principles. efficiency, equity, fairness, simplicity. and you measure everything against those principles. now what do you need to pass tax reform? drawing on our
in what was out one was efficiency. the basic threshold question for members of the finance committee, and the efficiency point is i believe, the mark of a more efficient allocator of resources than is a member of the ways and means committee or the finance committee. so that was one principle. the second principle is an equity question. horizontal equity. equal incomes should pay equal taxes. not somebody has the same income and next door somebody is using loopholes to reduce their tax rate....
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Feb 16, 2015
02/15
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KQED
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and i could be a bad husband and was bad employee and was bad boyfriend and was. i really hated being a bad dad. couldn't stand it. wasn't raised that way. the the idea that i left my kids locked in a car while i went into a dope house, i came out and thought, you know what? my god is a forgiving god maybe not of this, though. when my daughters wrote their essays to go to college, that's kind of where the book started. i read their personal stories of what life had been like with me and it didn't comport with the story which i was telling which was kind of a joseph campbell -- >> charlie: yeah. -- somebody who, you know has an epiphany and hot foots it back towards the righteous path. and in their eyes and in their memory, it was a lot bumpier road than that. so my sort of me and my self-realization followed by epiphany, followed by accomplishment sort of deepened and got a lot darker when i went back and looked at it. >> charlie: carr joined the niesms in 2002 and quickly became one of the world's finalist media critics. in 2013, he talked to me about the paper a
and i could be a bad husband and was bad employee and was bad boyfriend and was. i really hated being a bad dad. couldn't stand it. wasn't raised that way. the the idea that i left my kids locked in a car while i went into a dope house, i came out and thought, you know what? my god is a forgiving god maybe not of this, though. when my daughters wrote their essays to go to college, that's kind of where the book started. i read their personal stories of what life had been like with me and it...
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Feb 22, 2015
02/15
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i was happy. it was just a great feeling. it seemed like at the time one of the happiest moments in my life. i had got this guy stopped. and i survived it. >> as davis' shooting spree comes to an end, one of his victims, michael carroll, is struggling to survive. >> my son had just turned 5 two days ago. like he could not have a dad all of a sudden. like that was a really powerful thing for me. >> to everyone's surprise, carroll pulls through, as do the five others who survived the shooting in ennis but there's a long road to recovery for carroll. >> getting shot was easy. the really hard part was recovery. >> before the shooting, carroll weighs 165 pounds. after his recovery, he's down to 112 and his rage is overwhelming. >> the more i sat there and hated him, even though he was in a small jail cell and i was out in the open, it was still giving him the power over me. >> on the day the 46-year-old davis is sentenced to life in prison without parole, carroll confronts him in the courtroom. >> i made sure to tell him that if h
i was happy. it was just a great feeling. it seemed like at the time one of the happiest moments in my life. i had got this guy stopped. and i survived it. >> as davis' shooting spree comes to an end, one of his victims, michael carroll, is struggling to survive. >> my son had just turned 5 two days ago. like he could not have a dad all of a sudden. like that was a really powerful thing for me. >> to everyone's surprise, carroll pulls through, as do the five others who...
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Feb 8, 2015
02/15
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but there was no way of knowing why this was so.ut, pieces of each branch were ground into sawdust and given to dr. donald dickerson, an organic chemist. dickerson dissolved the samples and injected the sample into a gas chromatograph. the results indicated the presence of hydrocarbons, compounds indicative of petroleum products. even more startling, only two of the five branches showed traces of petroleum, the ones on the side of the tree where vicki mccalister said the cremation took place. a unique forensic approach had uncovered evidence that matched vicki mccalister's bizarre and horrifying story exactly. >> heck of a coincidence. >> but the story doesn't end here. another mysterious fire and attempted prison breakout and the murder of one of the grabbe children were all to impact fred grabbe's trial. there comes a time in everyone's life when you want more. like a new meticulously engineered german sedan. finely crafted. exactingly precise. desire for such things often outpaces one's means. until now. hey matt, new jetta? yeah
but there was no way of knowing why this was so.ut, pieces of each branch were ground into sawdust and given to dr. donald dickerson, an organic chemist. dickerson dissolved the samples and injected the sample into a gas chromatograph. the results indicated the presence of hydrocarbons, compounds indicative of petroleum products. even more startling, only two of the five branches showed traces of petroleum, the ones on the side of the tree where vicki mccalister said the cremation took place. a...
45
45
Feb 16, 2015
02/15
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how hard was that? >> i've been really lucky to have some great investors and mentors from early on. i've had great partners with me to steer me to what i should have been doing with my time. for every moment in tumblr's history. the way the team works has changed hugely over the last 10 years. the people on the team have changed as well. >> tell me about selling to yahoo! did you want to sell or did you feel like you had to? ♪ >> tell me about selling to yahoo! how did you make that decision, how did the process start? how did you start talking to marissa? >> the conversation with marissa was a fun one. we were looking for partners for strategic investment. we were in the process of raising money. more than just having an investor come in and cut us a check. actually show up with some technology we can lean on. resources, distribution, content that could make our network better. there were a ton of things to do with yahoo! but also, with marissa -- her vision for what she was trying to do with the comp
how hard was that? >> i've been really lucky to have some great investors and mentors from early on. i've had great partners with me to steer me to what i should have been doing with my time. for every moment in tumblr's history. the way the team works has changed hugely over the last 10 years. the people on the team have changed as well. >> tell me about selling to yahoo! did you want to sell or did you feel like you had to? ♪ >> tell me about selling to yahoo! how did you...