reporter: that someone, michiel oakes, as identified by his license plate. and that wad of plastic? the suggestion was, of course, that it shrouded mark stover s body. and remember, there was a chain behind the grange that appeared to have been cut that morning. and here were receipts, found in oakes car, showing he bought and later returned a bolt cutter from a lowe s hardware store the day mark stover disappeared. of defendant oakes suv. are you aware that mr. oakes purchased a 22-caliber pistol at your store? i am. keith morrison: this former hardware store manager testified he sold michiel oakes that 22-caliber browning. he d been interested in it for a very specific reason. he told me, well, i have a barrel that i can interchange
the referendum comes as puerto rico s economy is crumbling. trllions of dollars in debt, the bankrupt island is struggling with failing schools and crushing poverty. nearly half a million puerto ricans have moved to the u.s. e inland in the past decade. many seeking better jobs. at new york s annual puerto tcan day parade, many people said they hoped for statehood. it is the best thing that puerto rico can do right now, with all the debt that they have. why would it help puerto rico. s overall, they are citizens of the united states. i think it would be a great thing. those who oppose statehood warn puerto rico could struggle even more financially because it could be forced to pay millions in federal taxes, or lose its cultural identity. a concerned puerto rican sative raul russi says he doesn t have. all you have to do is look at. this you think these people have a problem? even in puerto rican residents here in their homeland vote for the island to become a state, congres
safety doesn t come in a box. it s not a banner that goes on a wall. it s not something you do now and then. or when it s convenient. at bp, it s training and retraining in state-of-the-art simulators so we re better prepared for any situation.
but directv has been number one in customer satisfaction (son) pa, i know we settle for cable. over cable for 15 years. (father) how bout over 15 satisfying years with that woman over there boiling your clothes. her layers and layers of.layers. hair that i ve rarely seen because it s always under that bonnet. and how she fought off that grizzly and made him into these slippers. that s satisfaction son. (vo) don t be a settler, get a $100 reward card when you switch to directv. we have russia, which is a real threat, too, it s not as big as the soviet union but a real threat run by a very smart cookie, much smarter, much more cunning than our president, i will tell you that right now, whether we like it or not. and i like him because he called me a genius, he said trump is
he said that to your mother? uh-huh. they ll never hold me accountable for this? uh-huh. why did he say that? because i don t think he feels the need to be held accountable for the things that he does. power? yeah, power, and doesn t have to play by the same rules that other people have to. the rules. to investigators, it did seem like joel courtney thought he was playing a game. the inmate whose sister said he had above-average intelligence knew that without physical evidence or brooke s body, it would be nearly impossible for investigators to charge him with murder. by the spring of 2005, fbi scientists were working feverishly, examining every inch of that green minivan joel once drove, hunting for dna evidence. on the day marking the first anniversary of brooke s abduction, her family and police dutifully held a news conference. privately, the family had held the secret for months that police had a strong suspect and that brooke was likely no longer alive.