On the birth centenary of Dev Anand, September 26, a deep dive into the journey of celebrity lookalike Kishor Bhanushali, or Jr Dev Anand, who has kept the Hindi film legend alive through him. He features in Geetika Narang Abbasi s latest documentary URF/a.k.a. on Bollywood duplicates.
that s a kind of discovery that i understand. i do not understand this computerized discovery with millions of pages and how the judge basically agreed with the prosecution, not a strongly, but a great with the prosecution that, really, you don t have to sit down and go through every piece of paper and turn every page that way. there is a way of searching. but i have to say, i was impressed with the size of the burden that the defense counsel described. lawrence, those of us in the 21st century, that ll of the 20th, we are used to this kind of discovery. there s all sorts of automated ways to do this. there are a lot of pages, that s because there s a lot of duplicates. and here, jack smith s team explains a lot of these pages are actually pages that are donald trump s pages. they ve been in his position for three years. her not being turned over for the first time. and trump s lawyers made a
get some kind of recovery monies for the families that lost everything. the facts will come out, we ll be totally transparent and hold everyone accountable. there has been so much confusion about the number of missing people tragically. do you have an updated number of how many people you re still trying to find? i do. the number dropped originally from 1200 to 800. that s because everyone, we cast a wide net, everyone who spoke up they re worried they lost someone or couldn t locate someone sent us a lot of reports. there were a lot of duplicates. that number under 300 now. the number of missing reports is more like a third of that, missing people to the county. so about monday we expect to have a new number from the fbi. it is tragic, andrea. 115 fatalities. we re beginning to rebuild. i m grateful to the president, grateful to the bipartisan committee that came yesterday to maui and we re grateful to all of america for caring about us. there is a tension between the effort to
don t have to sit down and go through every piece of paper and turn every page that way. there is a way of searching. but i have to say, i was impressed with the size of the burden that the defense counsel described. lawrence, those of us in the 21st century, that ll of the 20th, we are used to this kind of discovery. there s all sorts of automated ways to do this. there are a lot of pages, that s because there s a lot of duplicates. and here, jack smith s team explains a lot of these pages are actually pages that are donald trump s pages. they ve been in his position for three years. her not being turned over for the first time. and trump s lawyers made a whole bunch of outrageous claims. they said the average land of oregon prosecution, or conspiracy prosecution is really long, but they didn t tell the judge that their data was cooked, basically it included all the covid era
documents, they won t slow anything down, and to ken s point about the judge s comments about discovery and living in the electronic age, when you have 12.8 million documents, what you have is a situation that goes something like this: i email you and ken a transcript from the january 6th committee hearing. you email that, each of you, to five or six people, and they forward it on to people. all of that can come back in discovery, so there s this duplication. that s where computers come in. they rule out duplicates. then you can use word searches to narrow down to the documents that you need. and the government in this case has already vouched that they ve given the defense a roadmap to the documents that they ll be using at trial, giving them a real jump-start that defendants don t typically have. so this is six plus months to go to trial. that s very reasonable in one defendant case with only four