make those things happen. barack obama made those promises and look where we are now. you feel like everyone who runs for president, like you re running for the student body of your elementary school you re going to say we re going to bring everybody together. it just doesn t happen. this is a polarized town. and there are real ideological divides, right? there s not a lot of space in the middle. how she does it it is different from the way she ran, right, in 2008. this idea that she was, she knew how the clinton war room worked and that s why she was so good because she could take the fight to the republicans as opposed to obama who was all about the mushy middle. so it s you know it s a nice campaign line. it won t happen? we ll see what happens or won t happen. okay. it was interesting if you haven t seen the video. go online to find it. can you see it on cnnpolitics.com. she s been working on being more conversational. one of the people we watch when senator clinton speaks is e
recalling the last time she saw her husband. just that we loved each other and gave a kiss and a hug like we always did. you know i was in the courtroom when taya kyle gave that testimony, extremely powerful. the jury was deeply moved she pointed out that taya kyle was not in the courtroom when the verdict was read. she had stormed out during closing arguments, she had been so angry as a result of the things said by the defense regarding the death of her husband. so hard for the family to have to hear anything in any way might justify such a tremendous and irreplaceable loss. let s try to make sense of how they got there so quickly. we have cnn senior legal analyst and former federal prosecutor jeffrey toobin. now that they ve released everything these are the big moments, you ll get to hear and see it for yourself the way the jury did. let s start with what the prosecution had on its side. one, they had the confession right? i would tell them i m so sorry
about him. if you can call it that. was not under some sort of delusions of what he was doing. the defense argued it s the other way, it s proof how out of touch he is after doing something so horrible to someone he knew cared about him, he did something routine. showing he didn t have that the upset of emotion that killers often have. then the chase. they watched this chase and the prosecution was very strong on this. because they said and as we heard in the sum up put in a very indelicate way by the prosecutor crazy don t run. when what were they saying? flight. flight is another very key point in this case. if you don t think you are doing anything wrong, you don t flee. if you do think you did something wrong, if you think you committed a crime, you run away from the police. he ran away from the police. and the defense wasn t able to continue his delusion into that the cops chasing him meant something different to him. so that hurt him.
weather advisory area. expecting atlanta to be 33 to the south of the city 32 and ice where i m standing and 31 and snow just 20 miles north of here and that snow could be could be six inches deep. and there s just no way to plow that when you have like ten plows for the entire city. i know there s a few more than that, because every little municipality has a certain number of plows. here s the storm. as it rolls across the south. you get memphis involved. you get nashville, jackson, mississippi. you get birmingham and huntsville and all the way through atlanta. and finally exiting the coast where raleigh and elizabeth city and hampton roads completely get smashed with snow. yes, the low country of north carolina will get a big snow event. could be eight to ten inches of snow there. where atlanta, we re expecting four to six, you get up to rome dalton maybe blairsville and the like ten inches of snow.
correctly. so i don t think can you criticize the jury for doing what the law probably required them to do. 100% agree, it was a horrible thing here and people want to not see someone rewarded for doing something horrible. chad littlefield and chris kyle were doing something good and their families will never have them back. when you re a prosecutor this is a social commentary. mental illness, we call you crazy and you re a weird little guy and we re going to liken it to heart disease and cancer. does it show that we know how to deal with it in this society. this jury had ample evidence to find either way, i would argue. there was information before this jury to say, this was a premeditated act. if you look at yesterday s testimony. with regard to the expert who analyzed the crime scene. he described it as a sneak attack. that would be indicative of someone who plotted and planned, waited until people could not pose any danger to themselves. and then acted and acted to take