1967. he went on to spend 19 years behind bars before that conviction was overturned after years of appeals. reuben hurricane carter, dead at the age of 76. bill: back here live in boston. there are runners on the course this is the day that boston has awaited for, to get their own, what they call, revenge, from a year ago. there were so many heroes that emerged in aftermath of last year s bombing, many of them runners who stopped to help the wounded. that is what dr. natalie stavas did. she had to run down an alley to get past police barricades. taking that risk ultimately saved lives. she retraced her story and her steps with me just about a week ago. dr. natalie stavas is a pediatrician who was several hundred yards from finishing her 10th boston marathon. that is when the race stopped in front of her. i was with my father and we were running and we heard the
by a number of agencies. and then you ve got the energy independence issue which may turn out to be something that will be leveraged by republicans in this debate. so we ll see. we have got to go. karl, thank you so much. great to have you here as always. thank you. bill: back live in boston. two minutes ago the elite women are now on the course here in boston and security as you know, is the big concern for the next seven, eight, nine hours, as the city gears up for marathon monday which is today. former new york police commissioner ray kelly, who knows a lot about security when it comes to keeping millions and millions safe. he has got one big concern about this year s race. listen. obviously some sort of copycat event, something that looks similar to what we saw last year. again you can not totally rule out an event happening away from the marathon. and i believe that the
went to jail. i think that may come back to haunt him. when you are giving advice it depends on the advice you were giving. joe and ed, a pleasure to talk to you both. good to be with you. about 11 minutes away from the next wave of runners who head out on their 26.2 miles and 11 minutes from happening now and jenna lee as a preview. we will continue your terrific coverage from boston and follow the marathon with live reports. and echoes of the cold war as we get a better idea of the policy. questions surface whether it is the race policy. and they are taking down plane seat sizes and two interesting
in years? back again to boston and two brothers, two terrible injuries from the terrorist attack at the marathon. how they recovered together, and refused to give in. when i was on fire, so i started putting myself out. i backed myself away from the barricade and started checking myself to see if anything was missing. then i immediately tried finding him. c mon, you want heartburn?
happen again? i do think it could happen again but i think that the importance realization that most of boston and most of the world is trying to come to, we can t live in fear, because living in fear just paralyzes us. if we lived in fear we would never run again. bill: do you think that day changed you? if you do, how did it change you? that day completely changed my view for me what it means to be a physician. it changed my perception and even my outlook what i want to do with my life. i am along a completely different path now than before the marathon. bill: today she is running her 11th boston marathon, with her father next to her just like last year. to me closure with what happened last year is still