you learn by in direction. so i am able to, having done this, compare it to what has happened in the past. i have seen different presidents show up over the years, the fiery president, and the teacher president, and this was different. shepard: this was the most anding thing about the booking sheet, as we call it. that was that he was all chill. the kinder and more gentle ahmadinejad and there is a reason and what i would have predicted. for most politicians showing up they are not speaking to the people in the room but the audience is back home. that is who they are trying to influence and that is true of president obama today. for president ahmadinejad there are deep political divisions in iran and it is not the folks in the streets after the election, it is pro ahmadinejad hard-liners versus antiahmadinejad hard-liners and the clergy versus ahmadinejad.
death penalty. it will cost several million to prosecute you, this is the first of two trials. shepard: all right, judge. all gross. thank you. go ol miss. i have never been to oxford. shepard: you have to come you will meet the coach and you will know they will win. they are young, inexperienced, but they will win. everyone knows this. they have to. i know how to make shep happy open the air. if you sat down to dinner with ahmadinejad, which our next best did, what would you ask?
in prison, right? we are talking about virginia or connecticut. shepard: i am stuck on the other. we had a famous case like this in new jersey that there was a best seller, a husband fired someone to kill the wife and the thugs are free and the husband is serving a life sentence. in virginia, the people that were hired by this woman to kill her husband and his son are serving a life sentence. she will be executed because the state cut a deal with them. this is like arguing how many angels are on the head of the pin. which is worst? paying someone to kill your husband? or to take the money and kill them. they are equally horrible. but virginia has chosen to execute the person who orchestrated the crime and incars rail for life those who perpetrated it. the connecticut case is the station i started to explain. shepard: those two guys just from the text messages.
relations between countries and leaders. that, of course, includes iran and its president mahmoud ahmadinejad who is expected at a nuclear test ban treaty meeting this hour and our president tried to convince president and their president to get serious about talks to scale back the nuclear program. the united states and the international community seek a resolution to our differences with iran and the door remains open to diplomacy if iran chooses to walk through. but the iranian government must demonstrate a clear commitment and to show the peaceful intent. shepard: the leaders of the united states says iran s intent for the nuclear program is anything but peaceful aimed at creating atomic bombs. president obama also talked about the middle east conflict pushing for a two-state solution for the israelis and the palestinians. and now, our reporter has
to all legal experts present very difficult challenges not the least of which is proving that if indeed there were verbal tauntses they led directly to her taking her own life. defense lawyers in all of this, excuse me, the prosecution lawyers are going, rather, against lawyers are going to bring up the fact that she had a troubled background and she had a history of depression, and she had, according to her own mother, tried to harm herself in the past. so, a very difficult case, indeed, for prosecutors. shepard: thank you from the newsroom. joining in the conversation on our website on on the hunt, on the lower right of the home page at fox news.com. a federal judge if new york city sentenced a pakistani scientist to 86 years in prison after her conviction on terror charges. the police arrested this woman