walk out of this apartment and pay for what you did than it is to go out of this apartment with guns and lose your life over it, so the choice is yours. imagine for a moment that someone is holding you hostage. you know they have killed four people. they really have nothing to live for. and after spending seven hours wondering if that person was going to end your life, they suddenly set you free. ashley smith talks about what that feels like in the final part of her story. why didn t you run in those moments? what was it? did you did you just were uf motivated by fear or was there some knowledge that i m going to get out of this? i think looking back on it even times when i read the book or watch the movie, even myself, i m, like, go, girl, you need to get out of there. you got a chance. but i think several things went through my mind at that point in time. number one, my car was not, um, it wasn t a very good car. it had been breaking down on a
competitors in the democratic race that year. basically, the fcc rules kick in after an appearance like that because al sharpton did not have to pay for all that air time on nbc that saturday night in the 2004 campaign. and it wasn t just nbc or some other network covering him as a news story, it wasn t a interview with him as a candidate, it was this other thing that nbc did on its comedy show that he did not have to pay to be there for. and so, under the rules, that gave all the other candidates running against him for the democratic nomination, it gave them the opportunity to say, formally and legally, hey, we want just as much time as you just gave to al sharpton. give us equal time. or in the case of the 2004 race, the way it went down, it was give me equal time. because the only candidate who put in an equal-time claim after al sharp top hosted saturday night live that year was mr. charisma himself, joe lieberman.
or in the same place, that he has a relationship with putin? so i wasn t that was my read last night in real time. i was corrected rather vociferously as one is on twitter by a lot of people. no, no, he was saying he s met him several times. this happened to be one of the times when they were together. stable mates. stable mates were his line. they re not stable mates unless the stable is the whole world. putin was in russia when this interview was taped. fiorina, however, her best line of the night was this thing about we didn t just meet in a green room. but in fact when she met with putin it was in a green room getting ready for a speech. it wasn t a tv green room but it was a green room. neither one of them won that exchange. not in a good way. who did it hurt more? probably hurt fiorina more. trump s brand is able to sustain saying things that are blatantly not true as he has said throughout this primary. it doesn t seem to drag his
recruited by west point. this is semantics. this is exactly what i expect from the trump campaign to come after him and try to blow this into a bigger story. i would say to them, stay classy just for once. a little classy. katrina? these are questions, ben. they re not being blown up. simple questions. and yes, the base might stay behind him as long as this is where it ends. all right, thank you both very much. outfront next, net troh jet 9268, as it fell out of the sky, one company actually downloaded all the data from the plane. it wasn t a government, an intelligence service. it was a company. and we have a special report on this untold part of the story next. mall and big-ability. towing-ability and stowing-ability. rack-ability and hvac-ability. it s fully customizable and sized just right to give you cupcake-ability,
and her husband, gary, longtime residents of madison county, a quaint midwestern community about 30 miles from st. louis, became victims of a crime. it wasn t a particularly vicious or heinous crime, more like petty theft. but it is frequent, and they re frustrated. the first time they hit the truck, they took extension cords. the second time they took about the same amount of extension cords for the copper. the third time they took extension cord the replacement extension cord, and they took the welding blade. the theft may have only been extension cords, but they re worth a few thousand dollars. the hamiltons don t own the truck. it belongs to mr. hamilton s employer. so the theft really affects them. they don t want this to jeopardize his job. his company that he works for, they re really good to him, and it was just a courtesy that he could bring his truck home at night, and we felt we were obligated to try to find out who was doing it and to put a stop to it. so the hami