A woman peers into a neighbors yard and sees something for a few mysterious seconds a man, a woman and a moment thats unsettling. What she saw and what she. What had she seen . Was this drowning really an accident . Shes got a huge gash on her head. Something like that is not consistent with just falling down. A husband and father is suddenly under suspicion. Hes crying and were crying. He said, they think i hurt mom. Three daughters stand by their dad. And one prosecutor stands firm. Hes holding his wife of almost three decades under the water. My job is to get justice for cristi hall. Was it murder . Hello and welcome to dateline extra. Im craig melvin. In this hour, a story that calls to mind the master of suspense. A plot straight out of an Alfred Hitchcock film. A young woman peers into her neighbors yard and sees something for a few seconds. A man, a woman, and a moment that was unsettling. Was it some kind of accident . A crime . Maybe even a murder . What she saw and what she d
about what they hope for, what their plans, they want the business vote and as you say, when times are so tight economically, whoever gets into power, they cannot spend an awful lot of public money, they haven t got the money to spend. so there is very much i hope that small and medium sized enterprises will help the uk economy grow going forward? i don t think we can just rely and hope for us to grow out of the current challenge we have when it comes to her, as you say, public finances being incredibly tight and what we have called for is plans for the first 100 days of a new parliament to set out a new long term business tax road map so businesses and investors in particular are aware of what the government seeks to look at when it comes to such taxes and to set out a plan for the parliament ahead and we have also asked alongside that for
India Business News: The Bombay High Court granted bail to Avinash Bhosale in the Yes Bank-DHFL case. The CBI alleged he misused funds from Yes Bank for personal gain. The
A measure to repeal a now-defunct law passed last year that would use public money to fund private school tuition has been pulled from Nebraska’s November ballot, the secretary of state announced Thursday. Nebraska Secretary of State Bob Evnen said he's pulling from the ballot a measure to repeal the law that would have allowed corporations and individuals to divert millions of dollars in state income taxes they owed to nonprofit organizations that would award private school tuition scholarships. The Nebraska Legislature repealed and replaced that this year with a new law that cuts out the income tax diversion plan.