0 mr. blitzer. thanks very. happening now a kidnapped teen didn t even know that her mother and brother had been murdered until she was rescued. now the father of hannah anderson is about to speak out on that rescue and on the tragedy that struck his family. we ll bring it to you live this hour. a quarter of the world s prisoners are incarcerated right here in the united states and the attorney general of the united states unveils a bold new plan to reform what he calls a broken criminal justice system. and it s bad enough when the boss says you re fired, but what if it happens on a conference call with a thousand colleagues listening in? i m wolf blitzer. you re in the situation room. we begin with an extraordinary rescue. 16-year-old hannah anderson safe after a harrowing week-long ordeal that ended with the death of the man authorities say kidnapped her and killed her mother and her brother. just minutes from now anderson s father will speak to the news media for the first t
of 15 minutes public relations howard bragman and psychotherapy dr. robbie ludwig. doctor, stand by your man and we have talked about this before but how is it different time around? she is in front of the cameras and giving a message here. it s so cliche. i don t think we necessarily believe any more when the political wife stands by her man who betrayed her. it seems more like a political job and i think the public has gotten very jaded when we see this going on, we think does she really accept her husband in everything he has done? i just don t think people are buying it. it s very different if you re in a nonpolitical arena. i was watching as you watched some of the video do they ever have eye contact? how are they communicating with each other during this press conference? i think it s a great point. we were speaking about this in the green room. it didn t look like she was feeling very loving. she looked like, okay, now i m here. almost like she made a last-minute decision
ina drew resigned today. mere window dressing if you ask me. and jamie dimon weakened critical aspects of the frank dodd bill. don t be fooled by what he said on meet the press . sec should look at this. that s their jobs. they ll come to their own conclusion. we have supported 70% of dodd. we support too baggy to fail. we want the government to be age to take down a bank like jp morgan. i think a lot of dodd frank will accomplish that purpose. don t be fooled. he fought against the important stuff. his overall success while admitting it s trading failure would cost more than money. the company is going to earn a lot of money this quarter. we made a terrible egregious mistake. there is no excuse for it. we hurt ourselves and our credibility, we ll pay the price for that. to senator carl levin the cries will be closing the loophole the banking industry created to allow jp morgan to make it s risky trade. the question is whether we ll tick to the law as written whic
gas. right. i want to look at this. gallop polls can find the price at which consumers significantly change their behavior is $5.35. richard, no economic statistic more immediate than gas prices and consumers are feeling it. is this justified? yeah. i i think that gallop poll says 50% to 60% of us start to change their behavior when that goose price goes above $5 or $6 a gallon. really, it means americans may have to change the way they live. that s the fifth factor that you and lizzie were talking about. it may seem painful in the short run. we have to change the way we live. we have to move closer to where we were, increasing numbers are walking and biking to work or downsizing that house. if we want to make the american economy thrive, we have to make the american economy less oil dependent. that means the most important thing we can do is change the way we live. there s how gas prices change your behavior and change the way you live and how gas prices change the w
surprise. you certainly hear republicans call for that, but it wouldn t do anything in the short-term. this is way too big an oil market. as you know, the bulk of what makes up the price of gas is the price of oil. and it s all a lot of tradeoffs, too. certainly you don t want a depression so you can have $2.50 gas. right. i want to look at this. gallop polls can find the price at which consumers significantly change their behavior is $5.35. richard, no economic statistic more immediate than gas prices and consumers are feeling it. is this justified? yeah. i i think that gallop poll says 50% to 60% of us start to change their behavior when that goose price goes above $5 or $6 a gallon. really, it means americans may have to change the way they live. that s the fifth factor that you and lizzie were talking about. it may seem painful in the short run. we have to change the way we live. we have to move closer to where we were, increasing numbers are walking and biking to