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Oct 27, 2014
10/14
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WPVI
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use monroeville road or free bridge road instead. let's stay in new jersey, burlington county, we have emergency construction that's blocking the ramble from the turnpike northbound to exit 4 for 73. that's kind of a bad situation with 73 being so busy, a lot of people want to go there, you have to use exit 3 or 5. they don't know how long the ramp will be closed. they are doing emergency work. 36 in millville. 47 in trenton. 42 in allentown. 45 in reading. after this chilly start it will be a nice day. 17 degrees cooler in millville. 11 degrees cooler in philadelphia. 13 degrees cooler in allentown. grab that jacket as you head out, tam. >> in hawaii dozens of residents are on alert as lava is moving toward their town. it is moving ten to 15 yards every hour, people are being told to evacuate by tomorrow. the volcano has remained continually active since 1983 with lava streams moving toward the town for the past two years. >>> some pharmacies have stopped using apple pay. >> reporter: trouble for the just launched apple pay. right a
use monroeville road or free bridge road instead. let's stay in new jersey, burlington county, we have emergency construction that's blocking the ramble from the turnpike northbound to exit 4 for 73. that's kind of a bad situation with 73 being so busy, a lot of people want to go there, you have to use exit 3 or 5. they don't know how long the ramp will be closed. they are doing emergency work. 36 in millville. 47 in trenton. 42 in allentown. 45 in reading. after this chilly start it will be a...
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Oct 21, 2014
10/14
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MSNBCW
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eye 68
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when i got there, i went to get my nieces from monroeville to another city, and because of the ebola crisis in monrovia at the time. but when i got back to the states, like the liberians are first to take the ebola seriously, it was not a joke. they didn't believe that we had ebola in liberia. so we're trying to talk to people in the community, this is real, you know. not till mr. patrick sawyer went to nigeria and died from ebola. thank you. >>> we have nothing to fear but ebola itself. this is "hardball." >> good evening. i'm chris matthews in washington. is fear contagious? a teacher in maine gets sent home for three weeks because she dared fly to an educational convention in dallas. in mississippi, scared parents yank their children from school after hearing that the principal
when i got there, i went to get my nieces from monroeville to another city, and because of the ebola crisis in monrovia at the time. but when i got back to the states, like the liberians are first to take the ebola seriously, it was not a joke. they didn't believe that we had ebola in liberia. so we're trying to talk to people in the community, this is real, you know. not till mr. patrick sawyer went to nigeria and died from ebola. thank you. >>> we have nothing to fear but ebola...
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Oct 28, 2014
10/14
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MSNBCW
tv
eye 101
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this case took place in monroeville, alabama if you go to that community you see all the memorabilia, there's a leading citizen put on a play each year, all the streets are named after characters, there is this romanticized fascination with that story. >> and here it was playing out again. >> where an innocent black man was being convict ed. >> this is 1993 that he is exonerated? >> that's right. >> this is not 50, 70 years ago? >> no. >> one of the things that's so important about the book and the work you're doing, it calls attention to individual stories and your grandmother. you say she once said, you can't understand most important things from a distance, you have to get close. do you think that is why opinions on the death penalty are where they are? i mean, they basically haven't moved in the last couple months when we talked about botched executions and a host of other injustices around the death penalty. people don't know these criminals, and so there's not a lot of sympathy for bias? >> we generally aren't close enough to what we're doing in the jails -- on death row in part
this case took place in monroeville, alabama if you go to that community you see all the memorabilia, there's a leading citizen put on a play each year, all the streets are named after characters, there is this romanticized fascination with that story. >> and here it was playing out again. >> where an innocent black man was being convict ed. >> this is 1993 that he is exonerated? >> that's right. >> this is not 50, 70 years ago? >> no. >> one of the...
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Oct 21, 2014
10/14
by
MSNBCW
tv
eye 59
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when i got there, i went to get my nieces from monroeville to another city, and because of the ebola crisis in monrovia at the time. but when i got back to the states, like the liberians are first to take the ebola seriously, it was not a joke. they didn't believe that we had ebola in liberia. so we're trying to talk to people in the community, this is real, you know. healthcarejflp workers before liberians belief we had ebola. >> even from what they were hearing from relatives in liberia. >> theynchu weren't worried. >> thank you very much for joining us. i really appreciate it.w3 >> chris hayes is up next.e1 çó >> tonight on "allt( in." n people whoj;w have been marked f the list havefá ebola.fáfá >> finally( some good news.c 43 people are cleared from theok ebola watch list, includingi] fianceecyñof the first patieqt)p >> i'm free, ebola free. >> then,xd despite calls to remn
when i got there, i went to get my nieces from monroeville to another city, and because of the ebola crisis in monrovia at the time. but when i got back to the states, like the liberians are first to take the ebola seriously, it was not a joke. they didn't believe that we had ebola in liberia. so we're trying to talk to people in the community, this is real, you know. healthcarejflp workers before liberians belief we had ebola. >> even from what they were hearing from relatives in...
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Oct 15, 2014
10/14
by
CSPAN2
tv
eye 38
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i did go to monroeville for two weeks in september and saw virtually all of what the doctor spoke about and my assessment is that it's probably even worse than he described and i would be happy to get into that when you all want to ask questions. >> great. this is a tremendously talented panel with an unbelievably interesting bunch of individuals so far. had a couple of questions and i'm hoping that maybe we could give a little bit more detail about the experiences. >> sure. >> cut me off whenever you want here. i got there on september 12 and on september 13 in the morning we started by going to the treatment centers. i've been to two of the three centers in a place called redemption hospital which is a hospital that has been turned into a transfer point. at any point in the next two weeks that i wanted to i could go to those places, i would always find the same thing. the treatment centers were full and there were people sitting, standing, lying on the ground outside the gates of all of those facilities trying to get in, generally they could not get in. they could not give an end if t
i did go to monroeville for two weeks in september and saw virtually all of what the doctor spoke about and my assessment is that it's probably even worse than he described and i would be happy to get into that when you all want to ask questions. >> great. this is a tremendously talented panel with an unbelievably interesting bunch of individuals so far. had a couple of questions and i'm hoping that maybe we could give a little bit more detail about the experiences. >> sure....
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Oct 22, 2014
10/14
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MSNBCW
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>> an african-american who grew up in monroeville, alabama the community which harper lee wrote "to kill a mocking bird." i got involved because his family insisted he was innocent. it was a surreal case. he told me highway had actually been put on death row for 15 months before the trial began. he was actually convicted despite being with 20 people who are 11 miles away at the time of the crime and one of these really outrageous cases, the judge whose name is robert e. lee key told me i shouldn't represent him. we found out one outrageous thing after another. it was all juxt opposed. and yet there is this disconnect. they were comfortablewalk watching this incident african-american man be convicted and sentenced to death for a while i crime he didn't commit. >> the evidence was contrived, many knew about this? >> there was a horrific murder. they couldn't solve the crime. i think there was so much pressure on police and prosecutors. what seemed to get him in trouble, he was having an affair with desmon women. there were all kind of witnesses who could confirm he didn't commit this crime
>> an african-american who grew up in monroeville, alabama the community which harper lee wrote "to kill a mocking bird." i got involved because his family insisted he was innocent. it was a surreal case. he told me highway had actually been put on death row for 15 months before the trial began. he was actually convicted despite being with 20 people who are 11 miles away at the time of the crime and one of these really outrageous cases, the judge whose name is robert e. lee key...