this is never a good thing. your dad was shot. i collapsed to the floor. none of it made sense to me. i had to hear the whole story. fences make good neighbors, they say. this was made for a fight. drug private property without permission. we are? big sky country, small by one man. the neighbors felt he was a bully. this man, who refused to be fenced in. praise for this country. a showdown, for shooting, and one man died. on his elbow, he said, he should ve done that. the shooter says it was kill or be killed. what was the truth? it was murder. kieran simple? yes. the man who shot first told his story. him or me, and i shot him. he said he came at me with a gun and i didn t have a choice. did the dead man s body tell a different story? wasn t even looking at him. he was looking the other direction. he got shot in the back. only two men were there and one of them is debt. now, his daughter wants the truth. who is this guy that could just
republican senators signaling it could be strong enough to overcome any threat of a filibuster. the new legislation coming in the wake of several mass shootings across the country, including an attack on a texas elementary school that claimed the lives of 19 children and two teachers. now, this framework of the agreement includes modest gun restrictions, and broader investments into mental health and school security. we have team coverage of these developments. joe johns is with the president in delaware. let s begin with daniella diaz on capitol hill. what can you tell us about this compromise? well, it just broke a little over two hours ago. and it is just a framework as you said, no legislative text yet. but i m going to talk a little bit about what this proposal includes. it would have support for state crisis intervention orders, investment in children and family mental health services. protections for victims of domestic violence. funding for school-based mental healt
this is dateline. she s, like christy, i need you to sit down. i m like, oh, no. this is never a good thing. your dad was shot. i collapsed to the floor. none of it made sense to me. i had to hear the whole story. fences make good neighbors, they say. this was made for a fight. drug private property without permission. we are? big sky country, small by one man. the neighbors felt he was a bully. this man, who refused to be fenced in. praise for this country. a showdown, for shooting, and one man died. on his elbow, he said, he should ve done that. the shooter says it was kill or be killed. what was the truth? it was murder. kieran simple? yes. the man who shot first told his story. him or me, and i shot him. he said he came at me with a gun and i didn t have a choice. did the dead man s body tell a different story? wasn t even looking at him. he was looking the other direction. he got shot in the back. only two men were there and one of
a trial of refs wearing body cams in adult grassroots footy will be doubled after they were used in around 500 matches and no instance of abuse were recorded. and one for the swifties taylor swift has been named time magazine s person of the year to cap off a stellar 2023. the star said she is the proudest and happiest that she s ever felt. time now to leave you with 10 seconds of teddy. the teacher s pet, this assistant labradoodle, helps a teacher in london who had a stroke. you re all caught up. bye for now. voiceover: this is bbc news. we ll have the headlines and all the main news stories for you at the top of the hour, straight after this programme. the framers of the american constitution harboured few illusions about human nature, and that s why they invested so much significance in this place the us supreme court, the ultimate check on executive and legislative power. my guest today was the first woman to be appointed as a justice in this court. for 25 years, she
you were raised on a ranch in remote arizona. i was. you described yourself as a cowgirl. well, i was. i grew up on this remote cattle ranch that was half in arizona and half in new mexico. we weren t near any town. and so our little community consisted of my parents and me and about six cowboys. and we all lived, basically, in the same place and tried to run the ranch. we had cattle and we also raised enough horses to do the work on the ranch. and that was my life. so you were a very practical girl? i think so, because we had to solve all the problems ourselves. if something broke down or you had a problem, you couldn t turn to the yellow pages and call a repair person for help. you had to fix it yourself. and would you say that you brought that sort of common sense, that practicality, to your long career in the law and in public service? perhaps a bit. and my parents were very independent in the sense that they thought the best government was the government closest to them