[inaudible conversations] good evening, everyone. I work with the events if you could take a moment of silence your cell phones and make sure they are not audible during the presentation, that would be great. We will have about an hourlong event have to bee given to the r and the other half to questions. Please use the microphone when you have a question once we get to that portion of the event. We are recording so that helps. Before you get in line for the signing, if you could fold up your chairs and set them against a shelf, that would be helpful. Im pleased to welcome brian to discuss his book facing justice on death row. This is a deep and intimate look on an innocent man on death row. And intimate and close witness of this man on death row to get him exonerated. Weve heard this kind of tragic scenario time and again in this modern era. A review of the book msnbc news anchor says grace and justice on death row isnt just about how a broken system almost broke another decent man. Mo
Im know moderator of the session on criminal justice. This is airing on cspan and we have two very distinguished folks with us today the authors of two books, both involve the criminal Justice System. One case has been resolved. One case is very much active and youre very familiar with it due to its publicity through a podcast. So, lets get started by introducing Brian Stolarz and emelia right and rabia chainsawed chaudry, and ill give each authors ten minutes to tell you what they want you to here about the books theyve written and their miss on the criminal Justice System their perspectives on the criminal Justice System. Both are attorneys. Brian is an attorney who represented a man on death row, rabia is a family friend of man currently incarcerated in state of maryland for a case that dates back to 1999. Brian, first . Im the warmup act for these two. Everyone is here to see. Doesnt offend me you came to see her but ill be the warmup act. Im forked to be here the Annapolis Book fe
Problem in the world today. The World Health Organization estimated that would be 50 Million Deaths from resistant bacteria in 15, 20 years begin raising thing is this is the coolest story ever. Three days after that announcement those the discovery in maine, probably guilty scientific discovery ever to come from the state of maine. Nothing begets maine. My family is from maine. Antibiotics all come from back to evict bacteria made it to attack of the bacteria to get resources. We thought we had them all. This clever group from maine took back the soil and they put into the cultures. They create new bacteria that would never grow without soil being in the media. An identified a new bacteria that at its own antibiotic and it killed every drugresistant strain we saw. So all of a sudden three days after this proclamation we had a potential answer on it. The hard part though is how to make sure that happens . How do we make sure that this drug, nobody wanted the drug. You have to save it u
LEWISBURG Accompanied by a Bucknell University alumnus who helped him to find freedom, a wrongly incarcerated man who spent years on death row shared his riveting story during a special presentation Thursday evening at the Campus Theatre. According to the Death Penalty Information Center, since 1973, at least 195 wrongly convicted people have spent […]
LEWISBURG — Accompanied by a Bucknell University alumnus who helped him to find freedom, a wrongly incarcerated man who spent years on death row shared his riveting story during a