a new studio in portugal. do you think you could ever stop making work? uh, it can be easy. if i stop to breathe, then everything is just gone with the wind. if you stop to breathe? yes. so you don t plan to stop working? no. but breathe also is working. your son is here. you presumably have a different relationship with your son than you had with your father. but what does he make of life here? what does he make of life in the uk? well, he loves culture here. he feels he s been very well educated and protected. and let s see, i ve a little bit thought about it and he already become aware of rebounding off me. that s a good sign. have you always been a collector of.? only in 30 years. but do you have other things that you ve still never revealed? 0h, many. i have a0 tons of buttons. a0 tons of buttons! they are from britain. from britain? yeah. one day they put on the internet said, we have buttons, we have to just bury it, useless. i said, maybe i can do something. so th
other potential criminal. these are felony crimes in new york state, no matter who you are. we cannot and will not normalise serious criminal conduct. live from our studio in singapore. this is bbc news. it s newsday. it s seven in the morning in singapore and seven in the evening in florida, where donald trump hasjust flown back from manhattan. he made us legal history there becoming the first person ever to have served as president to be charged in a criminal court. i could take you to the seen live. there is a flurry of vehicles that are awaiting the scene there, but he did make us legal history becoming the first person ever to have served as president to be charged in a criminal court. he entered not guilty pleas to sa indictments. the car execution plans he repeatedly falsified business rafter to conceal crimes during the 2216 election claims. of the prosecution claims. payments to two women with whom mr trump is said to have had a relationship. to effectively buy
removed from office, still less arrested. well, my guest is the world renowned human rights lawyer geoffrey robertson. is the campaign for global cooperation to uphold international law and human rights going backwards? geoffrey robertson, welcome to hardtalk. how big a deal is the icc s decision to charge vladimir putin with war crimes and issue an arrest warrant? it s very important because it has removed a credibility that he would otherwise have had. he is banned now from 123 countries. so, in addition, he may well end up in the hague, not soon, of course, but in years to come, there may be a coup and he may, like milosevic, be handed overfor. to ease sanctions. he may, in time, he s only 69, be stumbling into the dock like some old nazi, as there are at the moment in germany, so it is not without significance. i m imagining people listening to you in moscow and giving a look of complete disdain to what they have just heard. the fact is vladimir putin is still president o
responsibility for your actions, be responsible. she would praise you and just keep pushing you to do better and she would always want us to be better people. then came that easter sunday, 2006. church services, a big family dinner, that easter egg hunt for the grandkids. their last day on this earth. we forget that one day my kids remember it. they talk about it all the time. last days go wouldn t be no. it wasn t. and he had missed the easter party, spent the day with his future in laws. but left his young puppy with his parents. called mom and dad on the way home and i m going to come in and get the dog and said no he can stay here. he will be fine. he just leaves in the porch. and we are watching the monday morning, he said, oh, i will come get him. would history have been different had he listen to his parents? it s hard to know, of course.
reporter: the prairie takes on a sweet, rolling pitch as it tucks into a nebraska corner. and outside of omaha they are the rich black topsoil has grown generations of solid and faithful americans. a tiny remnant of whom appointed themselves in and around a place called murdaugh. it s the sort of place where heads turn and a stranger drives by. the family s name is carved in the local stone. it was easter sunday afternoon, 2006. a big farmyard and, like every year, an easter egg hunt. it was grandma and papa s yard. or mom and dad, to tammy, who brought her own some like always. they found their easter eggs. they found their easter baskets. and mom always made it every individual easter basket special to that child they were like that where wayne and