various diseases. it has been a common defence of nazis who are called after the war that they didn t know, so she had trouble arguing the case. it seems that the court hasn t accepted her argument and have held her responsible. it shows the scale of the holocaust that this was a relatively small camp, with only 65,000 people who died there. she camp, with only 65,000 people who died there. ,, , ., , ., camp, with only 65,000 people who died there. ,, , ., ., , died there. she is a very old lady, 97 ears died there. she is a very old lady, 97 years old- died there. she is a very old lady, 97 years old. she died there. she is a very old lady, 97 years old. she is died there. she is a very old lady, 97 years old. she is facing - died there. she is a very old lady, 97 years old. she is facing a - 97 years old. she is facing a two year suspended sentence, so it is presumably not likely to be enforced, but presumably it does demonstrate symbolically the age is no barrier tojusti
first black woman to run for president in 1972. she said, being black and being a woman was a double whammy. and she also right. ketanji brown jackson spoke to that. and she also said, if you don t have a seat at the table, bring a folding chair. right. she is in her gown in the high court with her seat. it s not a folding chair. and she s giving opinion, something that the other justice, clarence thompson, the other black person on the court hasn t been doing for years. we heard about prince recently from him. but in the first day, we were so mesmerized by her decision and her conversation on matters that impact all america. and she has a seat at the table. and she s already made her presence known. but i want to talk about you a little bit, april, because you re being modest in not talking about yourself and talking about kamala harris and ketanji brown jackson. but you have been a trailblazer
the supreme court returns this week for a new nine-month term with several hot button issues on the docket. a new justice, ketanji brown jackson. we will break it all down. good evening. judge brown jackson is going to bring an important perspective to the high court. the issue is the political makeup of the court hasn t and. you are still dominated by conservative justices, 6-3. that includes those three trump appointees who have shown they are more than willing to go against precedent and rethink decades old rulings. we should expect similar rulings this next year. there are a lot of other controversial issues that will come up during this term. what more can you tell us about that? they ae almost all on the docket. all the political forms. lgbt rights, voting rights, affirmative action, the court is going to hear a case where plaintiffs are accusing alabama
bill: this man who spent more than 20 years behind bars is now out of prison. a judge vacated his murder conviction after a popular podcast brought his case to light. alexandria hoff is on the story live in d.c. with more. alex, good morning. syed was 18 when he was sentenced to life for the murder of his ex girlfriend. he is now 42 years old and released to home detention. the court hasn t deemed him innocent of the crime his conviction has been granted a new trial. the judge determined back in 2000 the state failed to disclose evidence that could have helped his defense. known as the brady violation. it was the groundbreaking 2014 podcast that brought the case to the spotlight and downloaded hundreds of millions of times and examined police tactics that led to his conviction. unreliable cell power data and a witness that showed him lee s body in the trunk of the car.
senator manchin left them hanging i won t say walked away but left them hanging on his own proposal. couldn t he have to tell him six or seven months ago he wasn t going to be there? he said he wanted to get it right, he s been concerned how inflation is rising and he s looked at factor that have changed. that s what he s doing so what may have been true in the world six months isn t true today. things have changed. he looks to see what s best and right now. joe manchin never promised anybody a turkey dinner. these are promises that progressives made in a campaign in a primary that they lost. and they continue to lose. and there s a reason they continue to lose seats. because they promise things that don t actually come to fruition. it s very easy to campaign, it s very easy to tweet, it s a lot harder to deliver. and what people thought was best for the country, that s what he s continuing to do.