of he said she said. the he said the he is david sweat. how credible witness is he? if you asked me how credible the day before he broke out, i would have said to credible ever. when he was caught he was already shot. he was tired, hungry. he had been on the run for weeks. at that point they are probably treating him as a rock star asking him how did you manage to do this and break out. then he starts spilling the beans and starts telling on everyone. what s in it for him to spill the beans? the guy s in for life. at that point i think pretty much pride. he knows he s not getting out. everyone is fascinated to understand how they were able to pull this off. at that point he knows he s never getting out. he will probably be in solitary confinement iffor the rest of his prison life. i would find him to be more
mr. cressey on this. we went into pakistan to capture the guy who kill a bunch of cia guys in 93. so we have to be able to do that. the lethalality, it is an assassination program. we just don t do it if we can avoid it. let me jump in real fast. the operation was a not if a as the particular example of how law enforcement intelligence works together. it is not, you cannot duplicate on it repeated occasions. it was a unother eek set of circumstances that allowed the capital you are and it was a great success. that is one tool in the tool box we should use. that s not to say drones are the first choice. they are the weapon of last resort. real fast, what do you think is the impact of moving the drone program from the cia over to the defense department to the
in that same court. in fact, they were some of them were going to be tried there around the time of the september 11th attack took place. so i don t get this. i understand the complexities of making a distinction between, is it a war crime, a crime carried out by a militant carrying on a war or a civilian attempted murder or whatever. and sometimes it s a close case. but this isn t. this is leak like saying in the middle of the war we caught a nazi. not only prosecuting these guys in knew, ynew york, all of people you mentioned are serving life. this guy could potentially face life in prison. in a civilian prison which is a major issue of security for
did a laudable job, but i kept thinking, where were these guys in 98 when nobody believed the kids? where were they in 2002 when nobody believed the kids and just like the defense attorney gets up there and says, when these charges came out and the news broke, you all thought he was guilty. where were we in 1998 and 2002 and this is going on in this country right now, and there are children who are speaking out. they are not being believed, and they are in the same situation, and the reaction will often be the same, so be real careful by acting like we are fixing this problem. no, this is and ongoing traged in the country, so let s keep the perspective there. if you are just joining us, it is five minutes past 11:00 eastern time in new york, and the jerry sandusky trial has concluded. sandusky has been convicted on 45 of 48 counts of child sexual
hands today. guys in. what a mess. and the threat for more severe storms will continue today, so we will check in with maria, she is like for us in the fox news weather center. those images rick brought from dallas area are the reason why we need to have a plan ready for once the tornado warnings are issued. that illustrates the reason we need a plan to be ready and today we will see another risk for severe storms in the south account reason tore that is because it is so warm out there. we are seeing current temperatures in the 60 s and 66 in montgomery, alabama, and 66 in nashville. that will fuel the thunderstorms right now and, also, later this afternoons into the evening. though severe weather risk in kentucky and tennessee and alabama and mississippi and louisiana and right now we have storms across parts of louisiana bringing in heavy rain, so aside from severe weather like large hail and damaging wind gusts you have a concern of flash flooding