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Transcripts for BBCNEWS BBC News 20240604 08:07:00

the guilty don t pay. why should the innocent? that s ridiculous. but from today, that will change. wrongly convicted prisoners like andy will no longer have to pay towards the cost of their own imprisonment. yeah, that s very welcome. very welcome, yeah. good. it s a step in the right direction but much more needs to be changing, too. you know, you don t want to putjust a sticking plaster on something that s, you know, mortally wounded. it needs much more. there s been a real problem. sentiments echoed by sir bob neill. he chairs thejustice select committee and had called for this change. when the state makes an error, it s right and proper that the state accepts that as swiftly as possible and, secondly, that the state then doesn t try and put needless obstacles in the way of somebody seeking recompense. key among those obstacles is a new test, introduced in 201a, that means that victims

Transcripts for BBCNEWS BBC News 20240604 10:13:00

on something that s, you know, mortally wounded. it needs much more. there s been a real problem. sentiments echoed by sir bob neill. he chairs thejustice select committee and had called for this change. when the state makes an error, it s right and proper that the state accepts that as swiftly as possible and, secondly, that the state then doesn t try and put needless obstacles in the way of somebody seeking recompense. key among the obstacles is a new test, introduced in 2014, that means that victims of miscarriages ofjustice need to prove their innocence beyond reasonable doubt. that is an extremely difficult l hurdle to meet and that is why hardly anyone is now getting compensation any more. - even very serious cases - where people have been in prison for murder or rape for years, i for cases which were accepted

Transcripts for BBCNEWS Breakfast 20240604 05:47:00

is? jane. people. come out this way. your name is? jane- very people. come out this way. your name is? jane. very lovely people. come out this way. your name is? jane. very lovely outfit. people. come out this way. your name is? jane. very lovely outfit. you - is? jane. very lovely outfit. you are eurovision is? jane. very lovely outfit. you are eurovision super is? jane. very lovely outfit. you are eurovision super fan? - is? jane. very lovely outfit. you are eurovision super fan? telli is? jane. very lovely outfit. you i are eurovision super fan? tell me are eurovision superfan? tell me about what that means in practice? it means to me, ifirst about what that means in practice? it means to me, i first started watching eurovision when i was nine years old in 1974, when abba won it with mortally. each year it is great to celebrate all of the music of eurovision particularly abba, so you will see me walking around with my 1974 hat on. i will see me walking around with my 1974

Transcripts for MSNBC MSNBC Prime 20240604 08:40:00

the ground. these weapons are of a power that some people say a handgun is also a semiautomatic. keep pulling the trigger and each time you pull the trigger a gun will fire. why do people distinguish between those and these. i ve seen unfortunately a number of handguns, these clearly weren t handguns. the level of devastation and destruction to the body was well beyond a handgun. these individuals were mortally, mortally wounded. there were ems people here and a surgeon like you. this is beyond in many cases what people on the scene can do. i m not even sure that some of these people if they were magically in an operating room within moments can be saved given the damage that you and others have described to me that those people who died faced. they were clearly deceased at the scene. getting them to an operating room would not have made

Transcripts for CNN Erin Burnett OutFront 20220105 00:04:00

say why didn t he just hand it back to the legislatures, why didn t he do that? mortally wounded. well, pence, for his part, has made it clear he is not on the same page with trump when it comes to that dark day. january 6th was a dark day in the history of the united states capitol. you know, president atrump and have spoken many times since we left office and i don t know if we will ever see eye to eye on that day. paula reid begins our coverage in washington. and paula, a lot of big developments tonight here. what more are you learning about the messages to hannity to and from, right, that what s in them? and how significant this is for the committee at this time? another busy day for the january 6th committee, erin. and it s so interesting that they are seeking sean hannity s voluntary cooperation with their investigation. and it appears that their interest in him as a potential witness has arisen out of the materials they collected from former white house chief of of sta

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