They reckless about knowing or learning whether they were false . Look, every authority from 60some courts to the Department Of Justice to the fbi has confirmed that they were false and whats really interesting here, brianna, this case will, like most cases, go to discovery. Where the parties exchange information, get documents, take depositions. The plaintiffs here will get deep inside of fox news. If this gets the discovery before it settles or goes to discovery, then theyre going to get their eyes on the emails, the texts, the internal notes, memos, what was happening in fox news, and if they knew this was false or definitely should have known it was false, thats going to be real trouble for them legally. What, elly, would a settlement look like to avoid that . In a way seems between a rock and hard spot . Asking for almost 3 billion . I mean a settlement could be extremely damaging financially to a news, a i dont want to say news. To a media outlet like fox. Yeah. This is where the
deserted and escaped sarajevo through a tunnel under the airport, risking everything in a desperate move. behind them, they left a city in which it s estimated 10,000 people had been killed or gone missing. when you shut your eyes and look back, does this part of your life almost feel like a nightmare? it does. and it feels like even though it has happened to me and what i m saying here of my memories, it feels like i m recounting a movie or something or something i ve read. it feels it s very difficult for me to it s still emotionally has an impact when i think about it. don riddell reporting. to a story now that we are following out of france. no one s saying that money can buy good government, but maybe it can help shore up democracy, at least. well, the leaders of the g-8 nations meeting right now in deauville are close to a deal to send aid to egypt and tunisia,
hillary clinton visits pakistan, but is she building bridges? and picking up. survivors of the u.s. tornadoes return home alive, but they re mourning the loss of friends. he evaded justice for more than 15 years, but time is up for ratko mladic. the former chief of the bosnian-serb army is due to be back in court in belgrade today for a hearing that could see him handed over to the international war crimes tribunal in the hague. he s facing charges of genocide and crimes against humanity committed during the war in bosnia between 1992 and 1995. from that time to this, the international community s demanded that serbia find mladic and hand him over to stand trial. he s now 69 years old. mladic, seen here on the right in a cap, was led into a courtroom yesterday, but proceedings were cut short because his lawyers said he wasn t well enough to speak. serbia s president is confident he ll be extradited to the hague within seven days. once there, he ll be allowed to enter a pl