times on the stand. people inside the courtroom said rudy giuliani would just sit there looking on with little reaction. what do you make of that as somebody who knows a court room, that does not seem to be a good way to win a case to look on stoically as these two compelling witnesses cried. unless you are contemptuous of the system which rudy apparently is, he said he hopes to get an appeal so he can get a fair trial before a fair tribunal record and i don t know what that looks like, even if he got an appeal. certainly this was a fair proceeding. he is just tap dancing and the music is stopping. giuliani, and we discussed this he was supposed to testify he said he was going to testify and he had evidence to back up his lies and he did not takes the stand in his own defense that would have been unwise but he was still doubling down about the falsehoods of these women. the judge rebuked him saying it could lead to another defamation case he keeps lying about these women
space, and case by bricks, and concrete slabs. but a rescue worker, named daniel, knew where he was. can you tell us what you saw? [end of translation] they use shovels, and buckets. they use their bare hands. it was well below freezing, and the rescuers knew under the rubble, they would not make it through the night. they have had a little rest over the past three weeks, and the tension was clear.
reasonable change. some proposals can go too far, obviousl obviously. to jim cavanaugh s point, when roads are broken, we fix them. when programs are defective, we change them. kate snow if it didn t take a member of congress taking a round in the head at a safeway market in tucson or a classroom full of kids in connecticut, i guess that s why the president is so angry. that s what he s hoping, that this one will trigger a change. i m sitting here thinking of mark and jackie barden. they had a son named daniel, who was killed at newtown sandy hook. it really touched me, brian. they lost a child and they went to capitol hill. and they fought hard for what they thought was sensible and sort of easy. they thought they could get this measure through, that kelly
perfect streets of birmingham, michigan are an ideal place to raise children. it s hometown usa. i was an irish catholic, middle class girl that lived in the suburbs. i had a nice family and went to church. i was a good kid. i did not party and i wasn t loose. i was just a normal, every day kid. back in 1981, teresa flores was a 15-year-old high school student. that s when her family relocated from a small world town to this upscale suburb outside detroit. i think it was the hardest move that we made. teresa s family moved every year as her father, an executive, climbed the corporate ladder. in 1981 that meant a new house, new friends, and starting a new life in a new high school. unlike the small, rural high school she had attended, her new high school had thousands of kids who teresa considered exotic, including a junior named daniel. he was very flashy and wore
carried with it was huge. there was no way i wanted my mom to know that that had happened. in a state of shame and shock, teresa was approached by daniel a few days later at school. he said, i need to talk to you after school. and i was like, no way. i remember last time what happened. and he said, no. i need to talk to you. against her better judgment, teresa met daniel. to her shock, teresa says daniel showed her pictures of the rape that his cousin took while hiding in the bedroom. it looked like very compromising pictures. it didn t look like there was a struggle. you can traffic your next door neighbor and that is happening to many of our youth. assistant u.s. attorney erica mcdonald says as shocking as it may seem to most americans it s not unusual for girls to be trafficked out of their homes. people hear trafficking and think it involves transportation. it doesn t. over the last two decades she