hearing disturbing stories from his college classmates, one of them writing an e-mail during the time they sat in class together, reading as follows, we do have one student in this class who was disruptive today. i m not certain yet if he was on drugs as one person surmised or disturbed, he scares me a bit. the teacher tried to close him out and he refused to go so i talked to the teacher after ward. hopefully he will be out of class very soon and not come back with an automatic weapon. we will be joined live with that student, as well as another classmate, who will tell us what they saw and heard from jared loughner as we learn more about why he really opened fire on that crowd in tucson. one lawmaker in washington today is getting attention for his new plan to cut down on potential violence. he is introducing a bill that would make it a federal crime to use language or symbols that could be perceived as threatening or inciting violence against a federal official or member
is proven true they did kill somebody or contributed to his death, directly. but, using skype, using twitteder and using things that remove them from their violence, similarly, the poor kid, mrmr. mr. clemente says on facebook i will kill myself. i don t know how real they imagined any of this was. martha: kimberly, let s talk about the legal side of this. it is becoming increasingly frustrating that there are not ways to hold people like this culpable for their actions, as i understand it, they are up on invasion of privacy charges, which seems a little light to me, frankly. when you think about the consequences of their actions. and what it looks like, it appears, that resulted in the death of another young human being with a promising life ahead of him who apparently felt this shame and humiliation, directly from the hands of these two college classmates, that are a cold-blooded, intentional killers? no, did they act in a reckless disregard of h young man s
i hope she still after this book has a relationship with them. that could be worrisome. her aunt katherine in mississippi talked and they gave me oprah growing up, what she was like then. others i talked to, i went to, talked to her college classmates, her high school classmates, colleagues that worked with her in nashville and in baltimore and in chicago. so someone might say to you, karen, well, i have known oprah for 30 years. the fact of the matter is, they probably knew her for the two years they worked with her, like that. right. it is also interesting, because people were sort of picking up on some of the parts of the book, some of the headlines, that she exaggerated how difficult her childhood was in terms of poverty. what did your sources tell you about that? i think the biggest revelation in that is with oprah s sexual abuse, she, herself, talked a lot about her
friendship with gail. it just seems like are we really getting the full picture? we are getting the full picture because i interviewed over 800 people to do this. most of the sources in the book are on the record from phil donohue. if you go from her childhood and talk to members of her family, relatives, her aunt catherine. high school interview, college classmates. the biggest source of information in this book is oprah herself because she has given so many interviews over the years. and i collect every single one. megyn: you make it point that she changed a lot from when she first started. how? like you just said. the lavish spending. the immense wealth has sort of removed her from her audience. the chicago reporters who cover call it the dawn of the diva.