nations despite heavy opposition from the united states and israel. as you can see there are many in the general assembly giving the palestinian president a stand ovation approach the podium. listen. >> activities embody the core of a policy of colonial military occupation of the land of the palestinian people and the brutality of aggression and racial discrimination against our people this policy entails. >> israeli prime minister binyamin netanyahu countered that israel has given up land but it has not brought the two sides closer to peace. more on the prime minister's speech in a moment. >> an israeli soldier killing a palestinian protester during clashes on the west bank. the israel army reports they used live ammunition after settlers and palestinians started throwing stones. but we should note thousands of palestinians celebrated president abbas' request for statehood at the u.n. peacefully. and now the news live from the new york newsroom. what else did president abbas have to say? >> he was given a standing ovation before he spoke. the palestinian sport president abbas handed the united nations secretary-general secretary the paperwork needed to start the process to try and get the bid for palestinian statehood started. abbas is defying the obama administration which has vowed to use the veto in the security council against it. during the speech he accused israel of sabotaging the peace process and continuing to build housing settlements in the west bank and said he is willing to start negotiation but that israel, he said, must end the occupation. he was frequently applaud during the speech and said that the time has long past for the palestinian people to have their own state. (inaudible) the secretary-general of the united nations applying for application of palestine on the basis of the border of june 4, 1967, as a fall member of the united nations. >> but it is noted during the applause the american delegation led by susan rice on the left, sat on their hands and the administration saying only that negotiations can achieve a palestinian state not this type of vote. trace? >>trace: what was israel's response? >> 38 minutes after he set the podium, binyamin netanyahu gave a forceful response calling the u.n. "the theater of the absurd," and said israel supports the content of the palestinian state and ready for negotiations but not with an entity that launches attacks against israeli civilians saying both should economize but the palestinians should take israel's security seriously. >> we cannot achieve peace through u.n. resolutions. but, only through direct negotiations between the parties. the truth is, so far, the palestinians have refused to negotiate. the truth is, israel wants peace with the palestinian state but the palestinians want a state without peace. the truth is, you shouldn't let that happen. >> the request now goes to a security council committee where a vote, if there is one, could be weeks or months away, so despite the historic call today the future of the palestinian quest is uncertain. trace? >>trace: thank you, live from new york, thank you. the massive out-of-control satellite plummeting toward earth now expected to hit some time late today or early saturday and we're new told there's a chance it could crash down in the united states. chicken little was right. officials point out a low probability but they initially said north america was in the clear. here is a look at this in 1991 when nasa first launched it to study the ozone lay. and this is amateur video from last week showing the bus-sized spacecraft on course to hit earth. nasa says it is highly unlikely that the dead satellite will hit anybody and it will break interest pieces and burn up as it moved to the united states, but, roughly 1,200 pounds of space thing will withstand re-entry. officials predicting the debris will spread out over 400 to 500 mile area. and now, nasa officials say there is a possible it could hit the united states. what changed? >>reporter: well, the satellite has changed the orientation so it is really slowing down and we can use this model to explain it. during the shuttle program when the senates came down for landing they would change the attitude or the orientation of the orbiter to slow down in re-entry. that is what is going on. there is more serious area creating friction which creates more drag so it will slowly slow down. that is happening in space with the sat lit. but, remember, this is moving up there, and it will break apart and come down somewhere. >> what will happen the re-entry process will melt the aluminum structure, the pieces on the inside will spread out and you have debris that will be a footprint of 500 miles long. very small, so small that anyone would see it. if anyone does, they should let us know. >>chris: as you mention this will come down, re-enter tonight, or possibly early tomorrow morning, trace. >>trace: we have talked about this for the better part of a woke and no one understands why can't nasa control this thing better? >>chris: well, a bunch of rocket scientists, right, they should have a plan? they do, now, but defendant years ago when it launches the government does not have a controlled re-entry land and now when they launch these satellites they have an extra engine so nasa can steer them into a certain direction. for example, they make it come crashing down not pacific ocean. but this thing has been free falling since 2005 and, again, where it will land, no one knows. back to you, trace. >>trace: thank you, chris, from johnson space center in houston. at the corner of wall and broad the dow is bouncing up and down after the worst two day beating since the 2008 financial crisis, and investors fear the economy could be headed for another recession as lawmakers bicker over spending that could force the government shut down and as officials in europe appear no closer to solving a debt crisis that threatens some of the biggest banks. and now the big board, the dow is down 21 points, and the nasdaq is off six points, the fox business network's gerri willis has the news like in new york. another wild week in the market. what is going on here? >>gerri: it is global uncertainty of the economy right here. given the news today, we should be very, very happy with what is going on in the stock market. and now, the news is mostly about europe and the problems with greece. today, a greece foreign minister saying orderly default is one thing they are considering in the country. chancellor of germany saying default is not an option because it is too dangerous to other countries and moody's downgrading greek banks and they said that what you get with a default, even an orderly default, that can lead to bigger defaults by bigger countries. lots of worries. people concerned not just about the economy but about government's response to problems inside the countries and, as you know, the continuing resolution not passing here, we don't know if the government will be open in a couple of weeks. lots of issues and worries. >>trace: worries about 401(k)'s which have taken a beating. people usually flock to gold but that seven down $100. >>gerri: that was a shocker. what is going on people are so nervous and worried they are selling what they can. gold has been popular, and they are unloading their gold to become liquid with cash on hand. it is not a good sign. >>trace: but the dow is rallying, down six. gerri willis with the fox business network, and you can catch gerri on weeknights on fox business news at 5:00 eastern. if you don't get fox business news you need to demand it. the g.o.p. candidate hoping to take president obama's job squared off last night for a debate in florida and the republicans have another chance to take the stage in orlando. a look at highlights on that next. the american student convicted of murder in a drug-fueled sex game back in court today. her appeals case is wrapping up in italy and her family says she may go free. a live report on that. my doctor told me calcium is best absorbed in small continuous amounts. only one calcium supplement does that in one daily dose. citracal slow release... continuously releases calcium plus d for the efficient absorption my body needs. citracal. gives you a 50% annual bonus! so you earn 50% more cash. according to research, everybody likes more cash. well, almost everybody... ♪ would you like 50% more cash? 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[ male announcer ] innovative medical solutions. fedex. solutions that matter. >> fox news is america's election headquarters and the top republican candidate's running for the white house taking turns on stage at the conservative political action conference. this, on the heels of last night's fox news/google presidential debate where the candidates faced off. here's front runner rick perry defending his decision to grant college tuition to illegal immigrants but getting a lot of push back from his rivals. listen. >> if you say that we should not educate children who is come into our state for no other reason than they have been brought there by no fault of their own, why think you have a heart. we need to be educating these children because they will become a drag on our society. >> that kind of magnet draws people interest this country to get that education, to get the $100,000 break. >> i would not allows taxpayer funded for illegal aliens or their children. all no free education, no free subsidies, in citizenship. in free ride. >> issue coming up again, today, karl cam republican with the news like from orlando. karl, has the battle spilled interest today? >>carl: it has, trace. the folks here have been talking all among about perry's discussion, this afternoon, about his suggestion that those who do not agree with him on combating illegal immigration "don't have a heart." and today romney was a speaker and insofar as he and perry battle at the top of the polls forefront runner status he was the one this pulled the trigger on mr. perry and quoted the texas governor before criticizing him. >> my friend, governor perry said if you don't agree with his position on giving the in-state tuition you don't have a heart. if you are opposed to illegal immigration it doesn't mean you don't have a heart it means you have a heart and a brain. >>carl: and then michele bachmann took the stage. she, too, said she is in favor of a complete border fence on 1,900 miles of the border, and perry opposes that and she would stop the provision of instate tuition credit or other services for illegal immigrants and mr. perry made in mention of last knit's remarks and he didn't even bring up the subject of illegal immigration but talked about health care and criticized president obama and romney, suggesting that romney's plan in massachusetts was the model for obama, a lengthy criticism of romney and obama but a hunger to hear him talk about immigration and what happened and he did not deliver. >>trace: apart from the immigration issue, i watched the analysis and perry was hammered and conservatives worried he is not ready for rhyme time. >>carl: i spoke with a very prominent iowa special conservative and evangelical christian who ran huckabee's campaign and he is deeply concerned that the illegal immigration position has scattered republican support for him in iowa and suggested it was a situation if which any other candidate could not win the iowa caucus where he was considered a likely frontrunner. this month, perry took a different tact and did not pension immigration but he talked about the need for a president and a candidate would doesn't rely on rhetoric and has more substance than slickness. here you go. >> i'm not talking about the rhetoric of change but i'm talking about the record of change. as conservatives, we know that values and vision matter. it's not who the slickest candidate or the smoothest debateer. >> some aides suggested the performance was off it could have been because he was tired. a conservative columnist said that she didn't like his response but at least he was courteous enough to give it in spanish. there is work for mr. perry to make up. >>trace: thank you, carl cameron, live from orlando. lawyers for the american woman convicted of murder in italy say crime scene investigators messed it up and after nearly four years it is time to set her free. but, today, the prosecution is laying out their case. as to why she should spend the next two decades behind bars. details are ahead. and the stepfather of a utah missing mom is now under arrest. he claims susan powell flirted with him, they had a strong sexual relationship and he called her a sexual person, wait until you hear what cops phone inside his home. [ beeping ] ♪ hush, little baby ♪ don't you cry ♪ soon the sun ♪ is going to shine ♪ [ male announcer ] toyota presents the prius family. ♪ walk if i want, talk if i want ♪ [ male announcer ] there's the original one... the bigger one... the smaller one... and the one that plugs in. they're all a little different, just like us. the two trains and a bus rider. the "i'll sleep when it's done" academic. for 80 years, we've been inspired by you. and we've been honored to walk with you to help you get where you want to be ♪ because your moment is now. let nothing stand in your way. learn more at keller.edu. two of the most important are energy security and economic growth. north america actually has one of the largest oil reserves in the world. a large part of that is oil sands. this resource has the ability to create hundreds of thousands ojobs. at our kearl project in canada, we'll be able to produce these oil sands with the same emissions as many other oils and that's a huge breakthrough. that's good for oucountry's energy security and our economy. >>trace: closing arguments not appeals trial of the american student now serving a 26 year sentence for sexually assaulting and murdering her roommate during a drug-fueled sex game. defense lawyers say the d.n.a. evidence what helped convict amanda knox was possibly contaminated but the press says the clues point toward "the only possible result," that knox and her co-defendant, and one-time boyfriend, are guilty. and now, the news live from the new york newsroom. the question here, rick, could she really go free, soon? >>reporter: this appeal was allowed after an independent review cast doubt on the d.n.a. evidence the prosecution used to convict her in the original trial. the review found that the police made major mistakes while collecting the evidence. the d.n.a. found on the kitchen knife that the prosecution says was hers, the d.n.a. found on the collapse of the victim's bra that the prosecution say belonged to the ex-boyfriend and co-defendant. and the independent review challenging both of those things, and uncovering that the d.n.a. samples weren't even collected until several weeks after the murder. if the jury believes that review, trace, and doubts what the prosecution has been saying, then, yes, amanda knox and her former boyfriend could be freed in the next couple of weeks. >>trace: her family is in italy? >>reporter: they have friend in from seattle. she was only a few months into her semester abroad program when this went down, four years ago, and her family has been a great deal of time in italy over the last four years. her mom says her daughter who has been sentenced to 26 years in prison is hanging in there. >> each day is a struggle, each day she is locked up is horrible, the appeal has gone great, and that is good, but, today, you get to hear the lies and the misinformation all over again and it is hard. but, i think ... no one is assuming this is over. we just have to wait and hope that the right thing is done. >> she will address the jury herself the beginning of not weeks and a final decision could come a few days after that. >>trace: thank you, rick, from new york. and now to the legal panel, the lawyers joining me from new york, former prosecutor jackson and from chicago, defense attorney. you heard the report, there, rick said d.n.a. for, five, times, really in this case it comes down to the d.n.a. >> right, rick is absolutely right, and what is interesting about this, the new d.n.a. ruling was that it was a 145-page report that was ordered by the appeals court, prior to this, prior to this hearing, and there is no other witness; there are, d.n.a., it hinges on the d.n.a. that is the one thing in this case that i think the jury had to go on because there really is nothing else. there is kind of a statement by amman dan knox but not previous trial she said there was coercion, so, we don't have anything, really, to go on. >>trace: she made a bunch of statements that were incoherent but for the sake of argument assume the d.n.a. here is questionable, okay. without the d.n.a., which is, really, called interest question, is had enough evidence to keep amanda knox in prison for two decades? >>guest: it depends. the trials are questions of interpretation and d.n.a. is significant, as suggested and rick talked about but this is more. she talked about the statements, those are relevant, what happened, she made statements to the police that there was question whether it was italian and she understood. and then, there was indication she was at her boyfriend's house but computer check was done at the house and the boyfriend said he was on the computer. guess what? there was in computer activity at that time. so, there are other things that pull her in, including the staged burglary which they suggest is the police, that it was staged as a result, you youw of a sexual game to make it look like, hey, it was a borrowing -- burglar. there is more to go on than just the d.n.a. >>trace: is this a happy medium here? maybe they lower the sentence because the evidence, really, isn't all that strong? >> i don't think there is a happy medium when you are talking about a girl who possibly has been wrongfully convicted here. if the prosecution's case was so strong and you look at what they argued in their closing, yesterday or today, they focused on the media hype and they also focused on crime scene photographs which were very gruesome and we know a crime occurred, and it was terrible, and in an american court that would you prejudicial so there are things it looks to me like the prosecution is focusing on because they really don't have a strong case. >> we both have seen compromise verdicts and that is what trace is alluding to, the jury could say we don't know exactly what happened, things are questionable and the d.n.a. evidence is called interest account if you believe it is contaminated, shorten the sentence. that is possible. >>trace: goes, we have to go. a jury is deciding the fate of a millionaire. the jury just asked the judge for something very critical to this case: a live report from orlando coming up. the postal service is critical to our economy-- delivering mail, medicine and packages. yet they're closing thousands of offices, slashing service, and want to lay off over 100,000 workers. the postal service is recording financial losses, but not for reasons you might think. the problem ? a burden no other agency or company bears. a 2006 law that drains 5 billion a year from post-office revenue while the postal service is forced to overpay billions more into federal accounts. congress created this problem, and congress can fix it. >>trace: this is "studio b" at the bottom of the hour and time for the top of the news. a jury deliberating against the florida millionaire who told a 9-1-1 operator five times he shot his wife and later said it was an "accident," and the prosecution says bob ward shot his wife in the face two years ago. at their mansion near orlando. during closing arguments yesterday the prosecution again played part of that 9-1-1 call in which ward repeatedly said and i quote, "i shot my wife." >> there is no evidence and you should disregard any notion in is a ... (inaudible) bob ward in his very own words. >> i just shot my wife. >> the against argues he was trying to stop his wife from killing herself and the gun went off as she and her husband struggled over it. >> i submit to you, ladies and gentleman, the state can't have it both ways. either she touched the gun. or she didn't. >> bob ward, today, waived his right to testify. and now the news like for us in orlando. the jury just asked for a yardstick and earlier they asked to see gun evidence, again, right? >>reporter: that's right. the jury now of six people has been deliberating not second-degree murder case for five hours and they have asked for two items: first, the gun, the revolver that fired the shot that killed her with one bullet. and a short time ago we thought it was a verdict but they wanted something else, a yardstick. evidently the jury is trying to re-create the possibility that she committed suicide. keep in mind the prosecution tried to prove the gun was fired 18" away great her head and they said suicide was impossible. both sides used demonstrations with the yardstick. and now it looks like the jury will try and re-create this in a back room to see whether a struggle may have been responsible for firing that deadly bullet. >>trace: and his behavior has been getting a lost attention in the trial. we have seen the tapes of him dancing in the jailhouse. has that been a factor in the case? >>reporter: the dancing video in the jailhouse visit was not a factor in the trial but his behavior certainly has been a factor, especially his behavior in his discussion with the 9-1-1 operator a short time after his wife was shot pointblank in the head, bled to death in the master bedroom. here is what the prosecution said about what bob ward did and did not say. >> this is horrible accident that has taken place. >> what would you fear of a horrible accident, wouldn't you say "i love you, honey," get there right now, but you will spill the blood all over? >> he showed no emotion on the 9-1-1 tape he has shown emotion in court, he has pounded on the table while his daughter testified and he has hat an outburst and part of the reason the defense has not allowed him to testify. >>trace: thank you. and now the legal panel, former prosecutor and against attorney. joey, steve is saying they asked for a yardstick and gun evidence. clearly, the jury is re-creating, 18" away and they said the bullet came define her eyes and if they buy it, that is tough for someone to do on her own. >> it is. and that is what the jury is doing, right on point, because in a recreation, they are attempting to find out whether it is plausible, whether the arguments being made are reason ability, and likely, and from a prosecution perspective, if you can establish, it is 18" away, this is no reason she would want to take her life and she established a facebook account, happy with friends and family, and everything else and now it defeats the defense contention she what suicidal and other things that were brought up during the course of the trial is they will go after it, and it is a close question, but, if they concluded that the prosecution here, right, is right on, with the points, there is trouble for the defense. >>trace: and joey has a go point because we have covered a lot of trials and you are taking the defense trial but when the jury asks for this they are buying into the prosecution case a little bit, am i right? >> well, i don't necessarily agree. the case is supposed to be argued and presented before the jury in the courtroom. when the jury starts asking for questions, and trying to re-create the scene behind closed door, the prosecution if this case may not start to feel, or may not be feeling confident because they are supposed to convince the jury in the courtroom. now you have the people in the back room, talking about things, looking at the ruler, and looking at the gun, and, that's, really, not where the case is supposed to be argued. also, we don't have any eyewitnesses, just like in amanda knox and we have, kind of a half, you know, kind of confession but not really. the guy goes from an accident to a suicide but he never admits to killing his wife. >>trace: the tapes are damning. >> and i argue the eyewitness is him, when he called 9-1-1 "i killed her," and this would be a different reaction if it were an accident and therefore there would seem to be evidence that is compelling that he did this. >> i am saying there is not a third party. of course he was there and he is the eye witness, and i am saying there isn't someone else who can say, yes, there was a fight or yes, he tried to kill her or or said he wanted to before. i am not defending him, this is a terrible case for him but it is questionable. >> he can plausibly defeat this in the event that the jury concludes they were struggling over the gun and she was suicidal and taking antidepressants. the jury is still out. >> that is aless for -- a loss for the prosecution. >>trace: the verdict could come down at any time. thank you both, a good conversation. police in utah charged the father-in-law of a missing mom with voyeur emand possession of child pornography. she vanished in december of 2009 and copped call her husband "person of interest" because he has a pretty strange alibi, and josh claims on the night he went missing he went camping with his two young sons not wilderness in subzero temperatures but no one else can corroborate the story and he has stopped cooperating with police. but, his dad recently came forward and claimed he once had a police flirting relationship with her, and police found thousands of images of females being videotaped without their knowledge including her, on tapes and disks they seized from the father if law's home during a search last month and we are told the images including photos of little girls on lay grounds and in bath doubles and in showers. >> creepy with a capital "c." lawmakers facing a budget battle in washington are fighting over a bill that would help disaster victims and keep the u.s. government open. under disaster relief fund could run dry on monday if an agreement is not reached and to that happens, it could hold up the passage of a stop game measure to avoid a federal shut down at the beginning of next in. and mike has the news on capitol hill. house republicans passed a bill last night which, really, hit a brick wall in the senate, so, what happens now? >> that's the question. finding a compromise is the trick. we know that all the lawmakers have left for the weekend without a deal so the first concern is the disaster relief money you mention. the second concern is if they cannot find a corn mice in the coming week, the government runs out of money. we can hear the frustration from house republican leader cantor. take a listen. >> harry reid is holding a bill up if no reason but for politics. this is why the people just don't have the respect for this institution and this town. >> you could hear cantor, the house majority leader saying essentially that people that believe that congress and washington are broken and he clearly had a hard time countering that argument. >>trace: the democrats, mike? what are they planning to do to resolve this? >>reporter: when senator reid shut down the bill when it was sent over from the house of representatives, he stripped out a controversial provision that was what they call offset in terms of paying for some of the disaster relief money with green energy money that was designated for other programs. that essentially, reid said, take time and chill. listen to him. >> the two democratic leaders, reid and pelosi, two republican leaders, mcconnell and boehner, should just cool off, work through this. there's a compromise here and a compromise is now before the senate. >> presumably there will be discussions over the course of the weekend and they will be back here late on monday for a vote in the senate and then we will see if they can find some common ground or whether we are in gridlock next week. trace? >>trace: you have to love it when the senate majority leader says "to chill." more highlights from the big debate. this is the third face off since texas governor rick perry upended the race. how did he do? did you watch this? the fireworks and the fallout. next. no collars. we are business in america. and every day we awake to the same challenges. but at prudential we're helping companies everywhere find new solutions to manage risk, capital and employee benefits, so american business can get on with business. ♪ [ coughing continues ] [ gasping ] [ elevator bell dings, coughing continues ] [ female announcer ] washington can't ignore the facts: more air pollution means more childhood asthma attacks. [ coughing continues ] log on to lungusa.org and tell washington: don't weaken clean air protections. >>trace: the g.o.p. is taking aim with the contenders trying to take his job and the other target was texas governor rick perry showing he is the front runter and last night the rivals does not go easy on him if you saw this. and now to the assistant managing editor of the "wall street journal", which is owned by the parent company of this network. john, i will play the sound bite of rick perry trying to go after romney's record and it got lost. play this and we will talk about it. >> i think americans don't know sometimes which mitt romney they're dealing with. the romney on the side against the second amendment before he was for the second amendment? was it with of before he was before the social programs from the stand point of he was for standing up for roe vs. wade before he was against first roe vs. wade? he was for race to the top. he's for obamacare and now against it. >>trace: the critics were scathing on this, and some said this was just gobbledegook. >> there were no "aha" moments and that segment was a good indication of how rick perry, that was a particularly bad moment, but how rick perry carried through the debate. he was not on his best game and romney was much more together, and he has been through this before, right, a presidential candidate, now, for a number of years, and it looked like rick perry had practiced that before the debate but it didn't come across well. and romney is looking at him and he says a couple times during the debate, nice try. dispatch. and at the end of the evening, most people felt that romney had carried off the evening boater than perry. >>trace: is it that practice makes perfect? romney has been debating since the early 1990's, and charles krauthammer said this is a rookie mistake on rick perry in is that what it is, a rookie mistake or not ready for the big time? >> it is a mistake and whether rookie, or not ready for the big time neither plays with the republican mainstream looking to get behind a candidate that will up end obama, so, no matter how, or what the reason if you go online and read the live blog of the debate, at the end of the day, this is a debate and we will not have another one for a few weeks, the public is exhausted by all of the figures on the stage. they are looking for someone to pick as a frontrunner and at the end of the evenings because romney had it together more, and was crisper in the response. >>trace: let me play a sound bite from romney if i can to get your response. >> i love this country. i spent my life in the private sector. not in government. i spent four years as a governor. i didn't inhale. >>trace: what they are saying is he didn't wow anyone but steady and presidential. >>reporter: that is right. he said about obama it pays to have a job, and i have had one. the spinoff jokes but making a point, jabbing at rick perry on social security issue where perry said, maybe the government, maybe the federal government should not be involved in this and romney said, what would you do, have 50 states with their own program. >>trace: before i go i have 30 seconds, yes-or-no, is santorum still not race because he did well? >>reporter: there were similar moments. probably not. you are looking at the two frontrunners. >>trace: john, assistant managing editor of the "wall street journal", thank you very much. dead federal workers are still collecting government checks. that is according to a new report. wait until you hear how much taxpayers are losing on this. some constipation medications can take control of you. break free. with miralax. it's clinically proven to relieve constipation and soften stool with no harsh side effects. just gentle predictable relief. miralax. >>trace: the u.s. government has dead people on its payroll from a report claiming the feds pay $100 million each year to former retired federal workers who are now dead. the office of personnel management is urged to more closely track the problem saying it is a bit waste of taxpayer money. and now, live to washington, dc, how, exactly, is this happening? >> well, a combination of bad record keeping and dishonesty on the part of the families of those who have died. the inspector jennifer the office of personnel management says the government has sent 601 million in benefit checks to dead federal workers over the past five years. he writes in the report that it is time to stop this waste of taxpayer money, with the paramount concern over improper payments when a death is not reported or detected and payments continue, sometimes for many years. and he cites one dead federal worker's son who collected benefit checks for his father for 37 years after his father died. trace? >>trace: any reaction from the obama administration on this? >>reporter: the office of personnel management said it is going after that money paid to dead people. the director of o.p.m. says action has been taken on all $600 million in improper payments including $113 million currently in collection. taking payment, he warns, or providing false information regarding a deceased is a felony and will be prosecuted where appropriate. while the inspector general warns opm is doing a better job of committing the lists there is a high probability the payments will continue to the dead people. >>trace: thank you, from washington, dc. it is a long running tradition for inmates condemned to die, the last meal, whatever you want to eat before you are put to death. now, in one state, that's over. what one prisoner did that prompted a state to step that practice. you need to hear this. 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