cameras and cost to watch them die will be $49.95, and who would complain as america revels in the painful last moment of monsters? well, i would complain. i would say, wait a minute. maybe the state shouldn t put these people or any people to death. yes. they ve done horrible things and deserve to suffer. but when the state executes, what s in it for us? an exorbitant price tag, for one. death row inmates cost us a lot more largely because their trials and appeals are longer and larger. we can put someone in maximum security for 50 years for less than it costs to try a capital murder case and house them in a special wing and then kill them after 20 years. do we get a crime deterrent for extra money? doesn t seem so. in recent studies, over 85% of criminologists agreed the death penalty does not deter crime. in a survey of 500 police chiefs find they also don t think it deters crime. and a new york times breakdown found states without the death penalty tend to have lower homicide rat
my point is a general area would that be a crime deterrent? we have a lot of that. my point is, there is a different standard for government and private businesses. government has enormous power and can be abused. macy s or gimbles can have cam ras to protect their property and if you looked back at how much footage came from government and private cameras. i think you find the fast majority is private cameras and private image. somed said you are were inconsistent and i think you are . would you care to clarify. yeah, my policy on the drones and filibuster haven t changed. they will find they used the same exact analogy saying that
take it to gabby giffords former district? you know, i honestly didn t even think about that until about four days ago when a reporter from the huffington post called me and asked me about the insensitivity of what we were doing. the only thing related with that is geography. what we re doing is training and arming residents in high crime areas as a crime deterrent and we are looking to analyze the crime data that comes out of this and to see if there really is a correlation or a causal link between armed citizenry and crime. why not go ahead since you just learned about this, why not pull back on this gun giveaway? are you considering that? no, absolutely not. i m not going to stop doing what i m doing because others, you know, have a false impression of my organization. tucson, arizona, has a crime problem. they are currently short 150 officers, and we would like to
good morning, it s thursday, november 10th. this is your a.m. wake-up call. i m carol costello joining you live from new york this morning. the board of trustees have decided that effective immediately, dr. spannier is no longer president of the university. in addition, joe paterno is no longer the head football coach, effective immediately. these decisions were made after careful deliberations. and in the best interests of the university as a whole. this morning pen studen stat alumni and students are waking up for the first time in 46 years without paterno leading the nittany lions. the president is also out. our mike galanos reports from outside the school from state college, pennsylvania. reporter: emotions boiled over as the announcement was made. joe paterno is no longer the head coach at penn state university. the students did not see that coming. many supporting joe paterno, wished he had done more through the child sex abuse scandal but joe paterno out. also,
to install street surveillance cameras in predominantly african-american neighborhoods saying they work as a crime deterrent and help police catch criminals. but the aclu has a big problem with this. reporter: what s surprising with this story is not that a community group in a high-crime area is looking for surveillance cameras to help them out. you mentioned the urban league. it has been a harsh critic on the seattle police department in recent years and they are looking to give the police department more power. it s south seattle, one of the high-crime neighborhoods of the city. largely african-american community that has seen a rise in gang activity. young people getting shot is sadly common. there have been several, including a 12-year-old boy shot by a 10-year-old boy at a bus stop. there are several schools, a