man, joseph ozment and served him with papers ordering him to be in court as well. they found him in laramie, wyoming and tried to flee. he tried to get away in his girlfriend and they served them with a sympathy. the pair were planning to get married and invitations gone out. there were hints of thinking of living on the land and not settling down. and there were hints they might have a small private ceremony to take place at an undisclosed time, date and location. attorney general jim lahood is joining us and no love lost and calls it political ly motivated and blamed the department of correcti corrections for blocking the pardon dons. making several claims that keeping them honest does not stand up to the facts. first, about the murders. they live in the mansion or on the mansion grounds. for decades, our governor s mansion has been served primarily by inmates by the state penal system. almost all murderers, because experts say people who have committed one crime of p
pardon more than two dozen criminals. dr 300 criminals. and four convicted killers, all worked at the governor s mansion as part of a long standing program now suspended along with the pardons. before the court put the pardons on hold, those four killers walked away. three since checked in as required by the judge and expected to show up at a hearing this friday. last night, mississippi authorities tracked down this man, joseph osment and served him with papers ordering him to be in court as well. they found him in laramie, wyoming and tried to flee. he tried to get away in his girlfriend and they served them with a sympathy. the pair were planning to get married and invitations gone out. there were hints of thinking of living on the land and not settling down. and there were hints they might have a small private ceremony to take place at an undisclosed time, date and location. in. a moment, mississippi attorney general jim lahood is joining us and no love lost between him
him with papers ordering him to be in court as well. they found him in laramie, wyoming and tried to flee. he tried to get away in his girlfriend and they served them with a sympathy. the pair were planning to get married and invitations gone out. there were hints of thinking of living on the land and not settling down. and there were hints they might have a small private ceremony to take place at an undisclosed time, date and location. in a moment, mississippi attorney general jim lahood is joining us and no love lost between him and haley barbour. and calls it politically motivated and blamed the department of corrections for not blocking the pardons. making several claims that keeping them honest does not stand up to the facts. first, about the murders. they live in the mansion or on the mansion grounds. for decades, our governor s mansion has been served primarily by inmates by the state penal system. almost all murderers, because experts say people who have committed o
into the water in california. she continues to fight against malfee yans, and if you are thinking to yourself, haven t i heard the name, erin brockovich before? yes, you have. it was from a hit movie. i am curious what the experience is of having your name become so massive in having a movie named after it and jewulia roberts playing the role, and people recognize you and is it a bewillering that experience? it s a double-edged sword, because not everybody embraces it. it s a gamut of things, so i never know what to expect.
to address the concerns of both the tea party and the occupy wall street. we ll take a break here. when we come back, i also want to follow up on weather religion is a new issue in the gop primary. we ll do that. we ll take a break here. but i want to talk to you about press pass and our two meet the press conversations that you can find on our blog presspass.msnbc.com. first, author michael lewis, whose book moneyball is now a hit movie starring brad pitt. we talk to him about the film, but also about his new book boomerang on the global financial crisis. plus, i sit down with documentary filcmaker ken burns. we discussed his new pbs film on prohibition. fascinating thoughts on history. his thoughts on civil discourse and politics, and, of course, baseball. we ll be right back here with trends and takeways. we re back with our roundtable after this. we re back in chicago with we re back with ou