continuing to push this, on stories continuing to push this forward, this story obviously is not over, you ve done more than anybody to get to the bottom of it. i imagine that the effort to intimidate you, you have to materially feel it, but it seems like the story is very much alive and your sources are still talking to you. yes, i plan to keep digging into it. and following it where it goes. and it seems like most people are willing to talk with me, which is, you know, very helpful. it s a core benefit and a necessity to what you do, and all what we all do. alene tchekmedyian, writer for the los angeles times, out front about an important story about the use of force in the l.a. county jail and the effort to cover it up and paid for it and defended while she is doing it, ms. tchekmedyian, good luck, keep doing it, come back any time. thank you so much. we ll be right back. stay with us. thank you so much
he was controversial. a bit on the edge. especially when i asked him about his murder of his wife, bonny lee bakley. i mean, i was worth $25 million. i could have hired somebody to kill her when she was in tibet or some place. she drove all over the country. she was out selling, doing her i could have hired somebody to follow her for ten months and make her disappear so nobody would ever find he for christ s sake. i would go out to dinner to kill her? what the [ bleep ] s the matter with you! i didn t say you killed her. you didn t say i didn t. you said it s all very interesting. well, it was all indeed very interesting. joining me now, more on our big stories. tom mesereau. robert blake s attorney till he quit citing irreconcilable differences. you watched the interview. i did. you know robert blake. you represented him. you get him out on bail. what was your reaction to the interview? i had many reactions. robert s been through a lot of ups and downs. the p
this is piers morgan tonight. my extraordinary interview with robert blake. he was controversial. a bit on the edge. especially when i asked him about his murder of his wife, bonny lee bakley. i mean, i was worth $25 million. i could have hired somebody to kill her when she was in tibet or some place. she drove all over the country. she was out selling, doing her i could have hired somebody to follow her for ten months and make her disappear so nobody would ever find he for christ s sake. i would go out to dinner to kill her? what the [ bleep ] s the matter with you! i didn t say you killed her. you didn t say i didn t. you said it s all very interesting. well, it was all indeed very interesting. joining me now, more on our big stories. tom mesereau. robert blake s attorney till he quit citing irreconcilable differences. you watched the interview. i did. you know robert blake. you represented him. you get him out on bail. what was your reaction to the interv
we ll mix it up over president obama s naacp absence. and on this [ booing ] plus, from newsman to newsroom, why dan rather says the hbo drama gets it absolutely right. and funny man john littquisimo. it saddens me they would treat them this way. this is piers morgan tonight. my extraordinary interview with robert blake. he was controversial. a bit on the edge. especially when i asked him about his murder of his wife, bonny lee bakley. i mean, i was worth $25 million. i could have hired somebody to kill her when she was in tibet or some place. she drove all over the country. she was out selling, doing her i could have hired somebody to follow her for ten months and make her disappear so nobody would ever find he for christ s sake. i would go out to dinner to kill her? what the [ bleep ] s the matter with you! i didn t say you killed her. you didn t say i didn t. you said it s all very interesting. well, it was all indeed very interesting. joining me now, mor
he told espn the abuse started in 1994 when he was 12 and continued for more than a decade. he waited until 2002 to phone syracuse city police who told him they couldn t pursue charges because the statute of limitations had expired. the city s police chief admits they could have done a better job. he said that in 2002 that the procedures which are in effect today were not in effect back then, the procedures that would mean an allegation would be logged into a computer database. back then they did next to nothing. not only did they not pursue charges. they never started an investigation or filed a report. no paperwork at all. the question is that unusual? the nypd tells suzanne candiotti that its own investigators are required to document any and all interview with alleged victims. one reason sex abuser rarely stop at one victim. if the allegations against bernie fine are true and right now that is a very big if he hasn t been charged with anything gettettyet, but i accu