i didn t see much in the way of reaction. his facial expression was pretty neutral. he seemed rather resigned to the situation. in court he s generally been resigned. he seemed a little bit more dour than on previous appearances, and he gave his wife sort of a half wave, a somewhat feeble wave as he was led away by two marsh marshals. he wasn t handcuffed. eventually, i guess, hours later moved to this jail south of washington. barbara mcquade, let me bring you in the on the decision this judge make. we requecan show a couple quote. she said, this isn t middle school. i can t take his cell phone. if i say, well, don t call the 56 witnesses that mr. west ling tells me i need clearly list in the order, will he call the 57th? mr. westling the attorney for paul manafort in court today.
yeah, do what you can. if you can find anything tonight. investigators reach out to their informants, and over the next hour, they confirm that booth s fled to university park. now it s a matter of pinpointing exactly where he s hiding. with help from the u.s. marsh marshals, o malley s teams uses electronic surveillance to locate the fugitive. they narrow their search to a single location, an apartment complex. and get ready to make an arrest the following morning. ten-four, we have two cars moving in right now. he s in front of us. one of two things. he gives up or he s fighting. w? that s why right here, in australia, chevron is building one of the biggest natural gas projects in the world. enough power for a city the size of singapore for 50 years.