US Enron - Enron founder Kenneth Lay cross-examined in court
NAME: US ENRON 20060427Ix TAPE: EF06/0364 IN_TIME: 10:09:48:09 DURATION: 00:01:43:05 SOURCES: see script DATELINE: Houston - 26 April 2006 RESTRICTIONS: See Script SHOTLIST: AP Television News Houston, Texas - 26 April 2006 1. Ken Lay and wife arriving at court UPSOUND: (English) Ken Lay, founder of Enron Corporation "(Q: Do you think they will cross-examine today?) It well could, probably sometime this afternoon if it does." 2. Wide shot of co-defendant, former Chief Executive Jeffrey Skilling, arriving 3. SOUNDBITE: (English) Mac Secrest, Lay''s attorney "Ken has been anxiously awaiting an opportunity to tell his side of the story and answer questions and make sure that both sides of this, if you will, investigation is told." MANDATORY COURTESY: Sketches by Pat Lopez 4. Sketch of Ken Lay on witness stand 5. Sketch of Ken Lay being questioned 6. Sketch of Ken Lay on witness stand 7. Sketch of Ken Lay with lawyers AP Television News Houston, Texas - 26 April 2006 8. SOUNDBITE: (English) Ken Lay, founder of Enron Corporation "(Q: It wasn''t witness tampering?) It was not and again, the better question is when is the taskforce going to talk about, what in fact they have charged me with, instead of all this other stuff." 9. Cutaway of Mac Secrest, pan to journalists 10. SOUNDBITE: (English) Mac Secrest, Lay''s attorney "This phoney spectre that they are trying to raise, that Mr. Lay has done something wrong is bull you know what, and when they take their best shot at Mr. Lay, they aren''t going to get anywhere." 11. SOUNDBITE: (English) Ken Lay, founder of Enron Corporation "I think they are ashamed to talk about their charges so they don''t spend all their time trying to run diversions around the side." 12. STILL photo of John Hueston, prosecutor brought in from US Attorney''s office in Orange County, California to help with court case STORYLINE: Enron founder Kenneth Lay on Wednesday showed signs of anger during the first day of cross-examination at his court trial in Texas. He snarled at a prosecutor, who accused him of witness tampering when the ex-chairman and chief executive called several potential witnesses during his own fraud and conspiracy trial. Jurors who had been listening impassively snapped to attention. "Did you have any conversations to get your story straight for trial?" asked prosecutor John Hueston. Lay replied: "Can you elaborate on that Mister Hueston? I''m not sure what story you''re talking about." The prosecutor noted that Lay called two Goldman Sachs and Company executives during the trial regarding a September 2001 meeting about Enron. Former Enron Chief Financial Officer Andrew Fastow, whom Lay has dubbed a traitor, liar and crook, testified that he and Lay met with the executives to discuss re-structuring Enron at the same time Lay was telling employees and reporters that the company was sound. Lay says the executives called the meeting to discuss Enron''s vulnerability to a takeover. Lay says he called the executives in March, the same month Fastow testified, but he says he didn''t try to align their memories of the meeting with his. Lay, known in Houston for his avuncular, polite persona and who frequently headlined charity events, shed any pretenses to his usual diplomacy when faced with the prosecutor who secured his indictment in July 2004. Lay''s visible anger and Hueston''s rapid-fire questioning produced an electricity that has been absent from the trial, even during almost eight days of testimony from his co-defendant, former Chief Executive Jeffrey Skilling. After court, Lay''s Attorney Mac Secrest said, "This phoney spectre they are trying to raise that Mr. Lay has done something wrong is bull-you-know-what, and when they take their best shot at Mr. Lay, they aren''t going to get anywhere."
Angry Mature Caucasian Male Expresses Intense Emotions at Home
Close-up of an angry mature Caucasian male expressing intense emotions at home wearing a black hat and sweater.
Fight Breaks Out After Mayoral Race
In Newark, New Jersey, a fight breaks out at a press conference after Mayor Hugh Addonizio concedes to Mayor-Elect Kenneth A. Gibson in a 1970 run off election. A man rushes the stage and assaults a cameraman and his equipment with a chair. Police climb the stage to control the crowd and pull aside a man with a bleeding head.
Paramount
US Sen. Alben Barkley in Washington, DC, after resigning as Senate Majority Leader
Allied Forces in Battle of Casablanca and North Africa in World War II
Operation Torch in World War 2. Allied invasion convoy off Casablanca, Morocco. American troops on ship's deck, cleaning and checking their rifles. Closeup of a wire from the Invasion Task Force Commanders, listing signals that will tell of the French forces' decisions. Closeup of U.S. troops boarding Higgins Boat from a transport ship. Rear Admiral H. Kent Hewitt on the USS Augusta (CA-31). U.S. President Roosevelt, Free French Commander, Charles de Gaulle, and French General Giraud, all issue calls for French forces not to resist Allied invasion. View of triple turret 8-inch guns on the USS Augusta. Sailors in their bunks. Suddenly guns from the shore begin firing on the invasion convoy. Shells explode in water near convoy ships, as sailors man battle stations and begin returning fire on Casablanca. French defenders signaled friendly attitude by directing searchlights vertically. British spitfire aircraft launch toward Algiers, from Gibralter. British troops in an amphibious landing at Algiers on November 8, 1942. View of French Admiral Jean Darlan. Allied troops enter Algiers. American airborne troops parachute from C-47 transport aircraft over Oran, Algeria. Next section covers Battle of Casablanca: Allied warships fire at Vichy French ships and aircraft and more troops head to shore in landing craft. Sailors firing anti-aircraft guns from landing craft, at enemy aircraft overhead. A U.S. carrier-based SBD Douglas Dauntless aircraft as it descends in the sky. French sailors load 380mm guns on battleship Jean Bart and fire her guns. Glimpse of French Shore defense guns firing with shells exploding in waters offshore. Gunners aboard U.S. warship loading a heavy gun. Angered over British attack on the French Fleet in 1940, Admiral Daran refused to negotiate with the British. Inserted footage of French battleship Dunkerque exploding during British attack on French fleet at Mers-el-Kebir, July3, 1940. A tank driving ashore from a landing craft. Closeup of a French soldier (from the rear) firing his rifle at invading Allied troops. Allied medical corpsmen on the sandy shore, running with a litter. A jeep pulling a towed artillery field piece ashore from the surf. Medical corpsmen carrying a wounded on a stretcher. Allied troops fighting defenders in Casablanca. Animated map shows German invasion of Vichy France. View of Philippe Petain, Head of Vichy France. View of Admiral Darlan saying goodbye to U.S. Lieutenant General Mark Clark after secret meeting of the two. Officers of German Armistice committees departing a North African city. Cheering crowds are happy to see them depart in a truck. French crowds cheering American troops. British Lieutenant-General Kenneth Anderson arriving at Algiers. French General Henri Giraud salutes. General Dwight D. Eisenhower salutes. Parading color guard with flags of France, Britain, and the U.S. Animated map shows German forces pouring into Tunisia. View of German troops on deck of a ship and at ship's anti-aircraft positions. General Eisenhower conferring with British and French allies. Camels used on rough terrain. American writes "Tunis Toonerville." in chalk. Allied troops sitting on floor of freight rail car with door open as old steam engine moves the train. Animated map shows German and Allied supply lines. A U.S. Douglas A-20 Havoc bomber landing on an airstrip. Numerous German warplanes parked in Tunisia. U.S. M2 tanks and other military vehicles moving along narrow mountainous roads. Locomotive transporting mules in stock cars. C-47 transport airplanes drop British and American airborne troops. Commandos disembark from ships at Bone, Algeria. Allied aircraft parked on a captured enemy airfield, under attack by German Dornier Do 17 and Heinkel He 111 bombers. A Parked American B-25. Allied soldiers firing small arms and anti-aircraft guns at German planes. Location: Casablanca Morocco. Date: November 1942.
Dick Morris Presser (08/18/1998)
Former presidential adviser Dick Morris, who resigned during his own sex scandal in 1996, appeared before the same grand jury Tuesday to tell about his conversations with Clinton after the Lewinsky allegations became public in January. "The president repeated to me that the charges against him were not true, that he did not do what they said he did," Morris said. He lauded the president's decision to admit indiscretions, but said Clinton's attacks on Independent Counsel Kenneth Starr were "too much on the side of anger and perhaps even arrogance." END
USA: AMADOU DIALLO SHOOTING ACQUITTAL
TAPE_NUMBER: EF00/0227 IN_TIME: 04:08:11 - 04:17:11 - 07:21:49 - 10:23:13 LENGTH: 02:49 SOURCES: All ABC except shots 1-6 = POOL RESTRICTIONS: ABC = No Access North America/CBC/Internet FEED: VARIOUS (THE ABOVE TIME-CODE IS TIME-OF-DAY) SCRIPT: English/Nat In the U-S four New York City police officers have been acquitted of all charges in the death of unarmed African immigrant Amadou Diallo last year. The controversial result angered many New Yorkers who marched in their hundreds from Diallo's former apartment building to the neighborhood police station. But the protest was largely peaceful, with only nine people arrested for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. Unarmed African immigrant Amadou Diallo died in a hail of 41 bullets on the doorstep of his Bronx, New York City home last February. The officers say they thought he was reaching for a gun which turned out to be a wallet. Prosecutors said the victim was minding his own business when the defendants cornered him without legal cause. They allege the plainclothes officers opened fire without identifying themselves or telling him to stop. The four police officers - Kenneth Boss, Sean Carroll, Edward McMellon and Richard Murphy - were charged with second-degree murder. But the judge said the jury could consider less serious charges, opening the door for a compromise verdict. The trial was moved to the New York state capital, Albany, because of the publicity of the racially charged case. All the officers were white. When the verdicts arrived, the officers were acquitted of all charges. SOUNDBITE: (English) "There are no victories in this case, there was a loss of a life, and four police officers lives are changed forever. We're proud of this jury who had the strength and courage to listen to the facts in this case and come back with a proper verdict." SUPERCAPTION: Steven Brounstein, Defence Lawyer The defendants had testified that Diallo, a street vendor from Guinea described by his family as a devout Muslim, forced them to shoot in self-defence. The police version, echoed by each of the defendants, held that Diallo was acting strangely as they combed the neighborhood for a suspected rapist. They said he ignored repeated warnings to "Stop!" and "Show your hands!" The case has become a lightning rod for civil rights demonstrations, but outside the courthouse, Amadou Diallo's mother called out for calm. SOUNDBITE: (English) "The killing of Amadou was wrong, I want to be able to pursue that and with the family, with the people together. We want to achieve justice in peace. " SUPERCAPTION: Kadiatou Diallo, Diallo's mother However Amdadou's father struck a more inflammatory note. SOUNDBITE: (English) "Finding this, four police officers who murder Amadou, are not guilty of any charges, it's a murder for all the community." SUPERCAPTION: Saikou Diallo, Diallo's father New York City Mayor, Rudolph Guiliani, speaking at City Hall after the verdict, called the shooting "a great tragedy". The mayor said the verdict followed "an eminently fair trial under very, very difficult circumstances." And predicting anger and protests over the acquittals, Guiliani called on New Yorkers to be careful in how they react. SOUNDBITE: (English) "They have every right to express their view point about it. They have no right to break the law. I expect that New Yorkers will conduct themselves in a decent way." SUPERCAPTION: Rudolph Guiliani, New York Mayor In Washington, the Justice Department spokesman said it will review the case with a view to bringing federal civil rights charges against the officers. Justice prosecutors did just that when Los Angeles police officers were initially acquitted in the videotaped beating of black motorist Rodney King in 1992. SHOTLIST: XFA Albany/ New York/ Bronx, New York City, USA - February 25 2000 POOL Albany - 25 February 2000 1. Close-up of judge, pan to wide of defendants 2. Kenneth Boss stands up 3. UPSOUND: (English) Court proceedings 4. Defendant stands up 5. UPSOUND: (English) Court proceedings 6. Defendants embrace ABC Albany 7. Wide exterior view of court house 8. Pan views as police officers walk out of court, crowd shouts 'murderers' 9. SOUNDBITE: (English) Steven Brounstein, Defence Lawyer 10. Pan view of Diallo's parents walking with Rev. Al Sharpton 11. SOUNDBITE: (English) Kadiatou Diallo, Diallo's mother 12. SOUNDBITE: (English) Saikou Diallo, Diallo's father Bronx 13. Aerial view of police on standby, wearing riot gear New York 14. SOUNDBITE: (English) Rudolph Guiliani, New York Mayor Bronx 15. Aerial views of crowds around Diallo's home?
Elderly carpenter rejoicing after receiving work order, small business ideas, crafts, hobbies
Elderly carpenter rejoicing after receiving work order, small business ideas, crafts, hobbies
OPP Commissioner Speaking on Ipperwash Crisis
At a press conference in London, OPP Commissioner Thomas OGrady states he does not take tactical or operational direction from the government and that OPP officers did not enter the park grounds or make an attempt to remove people, followed by scenes of the Ipperwash crisis and the charge against officer Kenneth Deane of criminal negligence causing death. PLEASE NOTE News anchor and reporter image and audio, along with any commercial production excerpts, are for reference purposes only and are not clearable and cannot be used within your project.
Haiti President
AP-APTN-0930: Haiti President Friday, 9 March 2012 STORY:Haiti President- Martelly shows passport and denies accusations he gave up citizenship LENGTH: 00:57 FIRST RUN: 0230 RESTRICTIONS: AP Clients Only TYPE: Creole/Nat SOURCE: AP TELEVISION STORY NUMBER: 731576 DATELINE: Port-au-Prince - 8 Mar 2012 LENGTH: 00:57 AP TELEVISION - AP CLIENTS ONLY SHOTLIST 1. Various of Haitian President Michel Joseph Martelly showing passports 2. Mid of crowd at news conference 3. Martelly showing passports 4. Pan right of passports on display on table 5. Martelly with passports in front of him 6. Wide of media conference 7. SOUNDBITE (Creole) Michel Joseph Martelly, Haitian President: "I am not a liar, I am a Haitian citizen from head to toe." 8. Pull out as Martelly finishes media conference 9. Various exteriors of Martelly leaving building after media conference STORYLINE Haiti's President Michel Martelly displayed his passport at a news conference on Thursday in Port-au-Prince, as the leader attempted to quell rumours that he had given up his Haitian citizenship and was not eligible to hold office. "I am not a liar, I am a Haitian citizen from head to toe," he said to the media. Critics of Martelly, a former globe-trotting musician, charged that he had renounced his Haitian citizenship prior to taking office last May. Several opposition senators went so far as to open an inquiry into the question of his passport. Martelly had already denied that he held US citizenship but angered opponents by refusing to show his Haitian passport. But on Thursday, Martelly showed reporters eight stamped passports that he's held over the years as U.S. ambassador to Haiti, Kenneth Merten, and other diplomats looked on. Merten said Martelly used to have a green card and now has a visa, but there are no records of him being an American citizen. Clients are reminded: (i) to check the terms of their licence agreements for use of content outside news programming and that further advice and assistance can be obtained from the AP Archive on: Tel +44 (0) 20 7482 7482 Email: infoaparchive.com (ii) they should check with the applicable collecting society in their Territory regarding the clearance of any sound recording or performance included within the AP Television News service (iii) they have editorial responsibility for the use of all and any content included within the AP Television News service and for libel, privacy, compliance and third party rights applicable to their Territory. APTN APEX 03-09-12 0435EST
Come on I want to be young again.
4K Resolutions, Sport, Exercise Machine ,Chest ,Concentrate ,wellbeing ,technology ,determination ,confidence ,courage ,resilience ,toughness
VA: CONTENTIOUS SCHOOL MEETING/PARENTS OUTRAGED
<p><b>--SUPERS</b>--</p>\n<p>:00-:04</p>\n<p>Colleen Renthrope</p>\n<p>Mother</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>:06-11</p>\n<p>Tuesday</p>\n<p>Newport News, VA</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>:17-:21</p>\n<p>Kimberly Slaydon</p>\n<p>Mother</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>:25-:28</p>\n<p>GoFundMe</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>:28-:36</p>\n<p>Desiree Yvette</p>\n<p>Mother</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>1:06 - 1:13</p>\n<p>John Krikorian</p>\n<p>Father</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>1:35-1:46</p>\n<p>Cindy Connell</p>\n<p>Teacher</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>2:09-2:13</p>\n<p>Kenneth Trump</p>\n<p>School Security Consultant</p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--LEAD IN</b>--</p>\n<p>THE SCHOOL DISTRICT WHERE A TEACHER WAS ALLEGEDLY SHOT BY A SIX-YEAR-OLD STUDENT EARLIER THIS MONTH HELD ITS FIRST BOARD MEETING TUESDAY.</p>\n<p>PARENTS TURNED OUT TO MAKE THEIR VOICES HEARD -- AND THEY WEREN'T HAPPY. </p>\n<p>C-N-N'S BRIAN TODD HAS DETAILS. </p>\n<p><b>--REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS</b>--</p>\n<p>Colleen Renthrope/Mother</p>\n<p>"I send my kids to school and find myself praying to God that they will return home safely."</p>\n<p>EMOTIONAL, FURIOUS PARENTS VENT AT SCHOOL OFFICIALS IN NEWPORT NEWS, VIRGINIA.</p>\n<p>AT THE FIRST SCHOOL BOARD MEETING SINCE A 6-YEAR-OLD BOY SHOT AND WOUNDED HIS FIRST-GRADE TEACHER IN THE CLASSROOM.</p>\n<p>Kimberly Slaydon/Mother</p>\n<p>"Don't want to have a family dinner, where I talk about where my kids will hide in their school."</p>\n<p>ONE WOMAN SAID HER DAUGHTER WAS IN THE CLASSROOM AT RICHNECK ELEMENTARY SCHOOL WHEN TEACHER ABBY ZWERNER WAS SHOT.</p>\n<p>Desiree Yvette/Mother</p>\n<p>"She's six. She's terrified because the person that was advocating for her got hurt. She got hurt."</p>\n<p>SHE BLAMED SCHOOL OFFICIALS FOR FAILING TO PREVENT THE SHOOTING. </p>\n<p>BEFORE THE SHOOTING, A SCHOOL EMPLOYEE HAD SEARCHED THE BOY'S BACKPACK, BASED ON A TIP, BUT FOUND NO GUN.</p>\n<p>Desiree Yvette/Mother</p>\n<p>“You guys should have been defending and protect her when she came, or whoever came and said that there was a possible weapon in that child's backpack or otherwise.”</p>\n<p>PARENTS, EXPRESSING ANGER - THAT THIS WAS THE THIRD SCHOOL SHOOTING IN THE NEWPORT NEWS SCHOOL DISTRICT SINCE SEPTEMBER OF 2021, WITH ONE FATALITY.</p>\n<p>ONE PARENT, ISSUING A WARNING.</p>\n<p>John Krikorian/Father</p>\n<p>"Enough is enough. What will it take? I pray it is not a fourth shooting, because that blood will be on your hands."</p>\n<p>ONE PARENT SAID TRUST IN NEWPORT NEWS SCHOOL OFFICIALS HAS BEEN LOST-- AT ALL LEVELS.</p>\n<p>PARENTS AND TEACHERS SAID IN THE NEWPORT NEWS DISTRICT, MANY STUDENTS WHO DISRESPECT TEACHERS AND ENGAGE IN VIOLENCE FACE NO CONSEQUENCES.</p>\n<p>AND SCHOOL OFFICIALS ARE ACCUSED OF DOWNPLAYING OR IGNORING DISCIPLINARY INCIDENTS, FOR FAVORABLE STATISTICS.</p>\n<p>Cindy Connell/Teacher</p>\n<p>"Ask any teacher in this school division why discipline incidents decline and I have a feeling the response will be the same: Infraction numbers are down because incidents are not always officially reported."</p>\n<p>SOME AT THE MEETING CALLED FOR NEWPORT NEWS SCHOOL SUPERINTENDENT GEORGE PARKER -- AND THE ENTIRE SCHOOL BOARD -- TO RESIGN.</p>\n<p>SCHOOL OFFICIALS SAY THEY'RE RESPONDING TO THE SHOOTING BY INSTALLING METAL DETECTORS AT ALL ELEMENTARY SCHOOLS IN NEWPORT NEWS.</p>\n<p>AND THEY'RE CONSIDERING A RULE TO REQUIRE STUDENTS TO BRING ONLY TRANSPARENT BACKPACKS TO SCHOOL.</p>\n<p>ONE SCHOOL SECURITY EXPERT CALLS THAT 'SECURITY THEATER'.</p>\n<p>Kenneth Trump/School Security Consultant</p>\n<p>"The number-one way we find out about weapons in schools is not from a metal detector, but from a kid who comes forward and tells an adult that they trust. It's about relationships."</p>\n<p><b>--TAG</b>--</p>\n<p>THE NEWPORT NEWS SCHOOL DISTRICT HAS NOT RESPONDED TO THE QUESTION OF WHETHER DISCIPLINARY INCIDENTS ARE UNDER REPORTED. </p>\n<p>IT ALSO REFUSED TO ANSWER QUESTIONS ABOUT IF THE SUPERINTENDENT -- OR ANY BOARD MEMBERS -- PLAN TO RESIGN. </p>\n<p><b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----</b></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--KEYWORD TAGS--</b></p>\n<p>VIRGINIA NEWPORT NEWS SCHOOL EDUCATION FIREARM WEAPON</p>\n<p></p>
OPP Officer and Ipperwash Crisis
Scenes from the Ipperwash Crisis, a confrontation between Native American activists and OPP officers over a land dispute in Ipperwash Provincial Park, followed by a report on an officer charged with criminal negligence for the shooting of an activist that occurred during the conflict. PLEASE NOTE News anchor and reporter image and audio, along with any commercial production excerpts, are for reference purposes only and are not clearable and cannot be used within your project.
Burger - Basher
A LORAIN COUNTY OFFICIAL IS ACCUSED OF ASSAULT WITH A CHEESEBURGER
NOTES: PRINT 37 LOCATION: NAIROBI, KENYA TITLE: KENYATTA CROWDS SERVICED DATE: 08/26/78 NO: LNC 96010 DATE SHOT: 08/24/78 LENGTH: 37 FT SECONDS: 0.59 SOUND: NATURAL SOUND DATE OF ARRIVAL:
NOTES: PRINT 37 LOCATION: NAIROBI, KENYA TITLE: KENYATTA CROWDS SERVICED DATE: 08/26/78 NO: LNC 96010 DATE SHOT: 08/24/78 LENGTH: 37 FT SECONDS: 0.59 SOUND: NATURAL SOUND DATE OF ARRIVAL: FILM SHOWS: MOURNERS QUEUE TO FILE PAST BODY OF KENYAN PRESIDENT JOMO KENYATTA: BODY LYING IN STATE: AND POLICE ATTACK CROWDS AS THEY BECOME RESTIVE DURING LONG WAIT TO VIEW BODY. LEAD IN: ARRANGEMENTS WERE GOING AHEAD IN NAIROBI ON SATURDAY (26/8/78) FOR THE MOST IMPRESSIVE FUNERAL IN BLACK AFRICA'S RECENT HISTORY - THAT OF THE LATE PRESIDENT, JOMO KENYATTA. AMONG THESE HEADS OF STATE AND ROYALTY WHO HAVE ALREADY STATED THEIR INTENTION TO BE PRESENT AT THE FUNERAL ARE TANZANIA'S JULIUS NYERERE AND ZAMBIA'S KENNETH KAUNDA. UGANDA'S IDI AMIN HAS ALSO SIGNALLED HIS INTENTIONS OF ATTENDING THE LAST RITES, RAISING APPREHENSION IN SOME CIRCLES THAT HE COULD CAUSE EMBARRASSMENT TO KENYA AND TO MANY GUESTS. BUCKINGHAM PALACE HAS ALREADY SAID THAT PRINCE CHARLES WILL REPRESENT THE UNITED KINGDOM THRONE. BRITAIN HAS CLOSE TIES WITH KENYA, AND THE QUEEN LEARNT SHE WAS TO BE BRITAIN'S NEXT MONARCH WHILE ON SAFARI IN KENYA, FOLLOWING THE DEATH OF KING GEORGE VI. FEET R/SECS 4 0.06 GV CROWD WAIT 8 0.13 MS INTERIOR STATE HOUSE MOURNERS PAST BODY 11 0.18 MS SOBBING WOMAN 15 0.24 GV QUEUES 19 0.30 MS POLICE MOVE INTO CROWD 23 0.37 MS MS MAN ARRESTED 37 0.59 MS FIGHTING; POLICE MOVE INTO CROWD (2) COMMENTARY: ALTHOUGH KENYATTA IS MOURNED WORLD-WIDE AS AFRICA'S ELDER STATEMENT, THE GRIEF IS NOT NEARLY AS INHENSE AS THAT FELT IN KENYA ITSELF. THE CROWDS QUEUING UP OUTSIDE THE LYING IN STATE PROVIDED AN ACCURATE INSIGHT INTO THE LOVE AND RESPECT THAT KENYATTA COMMANDED AMONG HIS OWN PEOPLE. THOUSANDS QUEUED IN THE HOT SUN TO FILE PAST KENYATTA'S BODY, LYING AT THE STATE HOUSE. BUT THE NUMBERS WERE TOO GREAT, AND THE CROWD OUTSIDE BECAME IMPATIENT AS THEY REALISED HOW LONG THEY WOULD HAVE TO WAIT BEFORE BEING ADMITTED TO THE STATE HOUSE. POLICE MOVED IN TO RESTORE ORDER, AND ALTHOUGH SEVERAL PEOPLE WERE ARRESTED, IT WAS NOT ENOUGH TO QUELL MOUNTING ANGER. POLICE THEN MOVED INTO THE CROWD IN FORCE, USING FORCE TO DISPERSE THE CROWD (UP NATURAL SOUND TO END)
Close-up of black man wildly laughing and celebrating at home
Close-up of a black man wildly laughing and celebrating at his home
ACTIVIST FLOATS PROPAGANDA BALLOONS TO NORTH KOREA
--SUPERS--
:40-:51
Park Sang-hak
Defector & Activist

:57-1:05
NIS

1:15-1:28
Park Sang-hak
Defector & Activist

1:28-1:51
Paula Hancocks
Seoul, South Korea 

 --LEAD IN--
ACTIVIST PARK SANG-HAK HAS A UNIQUE WAY TO MAKE HIS VOICE HEARD IN THE REPRESSED POLITICAL ATMOSPHERE OF NORTH KOREA,
BY SENDING PROPAGANDA BALLOONS BLAMING KIM JUNG UN FOR THE DEATH OF AMERICAN OTTO WARMBIER INTO NORTH KOREA, 
PARK HOPES HE CAN HELP CITIZENS UNDERSTAND THEIR REGIME AND INSPIRE THEM TO TAKE A STAND. 
C-N-N"S PAULA HANCOCKS HAS MORE IN THIS C-N-N EXCLUSIVE REPORT. 

 --REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS--
UNDER COVER OF DARKNESS, PARK SANG-HAK PREPARES HIS MESSAGE TO NORTH KOREA.
300,000 FLIERS, 2,000 ONE DOLLAR BILLS... AND THIS: A CLEAR MESSAGE FROM THIS DEFECTOR THAT NORTH KOREA IS TO BLAME FOR THE DEATH OF OTTO WARMBIER, THE US STUDENT DETAINED FOR 17 MONTHS IN NORTH KOREA, SENT BACK IN A COMA, WHO PASSED AWAY THIS WEEK.
IT READS "KIM JONG UN BRUTALLY KILLED THE YOUNG AMERICAN MAN OTTO WARMBIER, HUMANITY CONDEMNS HIM"
USING MASSIVE BALLOONS TO FLOAT THE MESSAGE ACROSS THE BORDER IN TO NORTH KOREA - THIS IS A DRILL PARK KNOWS WELL. 
THE ACTIVIST SAYS THESE MESSAGES CHANGE MINDS - HE WANTS HIS PEOPLE TO KNOW THE TRUTH ABOUT THEIR REGIME.
Park Sang-hak, Defector & Activist: "We"re telling 20 million North Korean residents, HE SAYS, about Kim Jung Un"s cruel, murderous actions and we"re sending this to express our condolences over Warmbier."
PARK KNOWS THESE PROPAGANDA BALLOONS ANGER NORTH KOREA. 
HE SURVIVED ASSASSINATION ATTEMPTS IN THE PAST.
THIS NORTH KOREAN AGENT ARRESTED IN 2011 ON THE STREETS OF SEOUL BY SOUTH KOREAN INTELLIGENCE OFFICIALS. 
HE WAS TRYING TO MEET UP WITH PARK. 
OFFICIALS SHOWED US THE POISON PENS HE WAS ARMED WITH AT THE TIME.
BUT PARK REFUSES TO STOP AND HAS A MESSAGE FOR US PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP.
Park Sang-hak, Defector & Activist: "I want to urge the U.S. government," HE SAYS, "in light of Warmbier"s sacrifice to charge Kim Jong Un in the International Criminal Court for crimes against humanity. And designate North Korea as a barbaric and terrorist country." 
Paula Hancocks, Seoul: PARK HAS BEEN SENDING THESE PROPAGANADA BALLOONS FOR WELL OVER A DECADE NOW, HE KNOWS NOT ALL OF THEM MAKE IT TO NORTH KOREA DEPENDING ON THE WIND, HE SAYS HE MAY NEVER KNOW HOW MANY ACTUALLY READ HIS LEAFLETS, BUT HE"S CONVINCED IT"S IMPORTANT TO GIVE SOME INFORMATION TO HIS OWN PEOPLE WHO HE SAYS IS STARVED OF CONTACT WITH THE OUTSIDE WORLD. PAULA HANCOCKS, CNN, SEOUL." 

 --CNN INFORMATION--
 What happened to Otto Warmbier? Ex-detainee believes torture possible 
 By Paula Hancocks, Joe Sterling and Emanuella Grinberg
 CNN
 (CNN) -- Kenneth Bae, the US citizen detained by North Korea for two years, says he believes it is possible the late Otto Warmbier could have been tortured during his captivity in the communist country.
 In an interview Wednesday with CNN in Seoul, Bae said he was threatened a few times during his 735 days in a North Korean prison but never tortured.
 Warmbier"s parents said they believe their son was subjected to "awful, torturous mistreatment" by the North Korean regime. 
 Warmbier, 22, a University of Virginia student, died Monday in Cincinnati, less than a week after his release from North Korea. He could not speak or move voluntarily when he returned, and his doctors said he suffered extensive brain damage.
 Asked whether Bae thinks Warmbier was physically mistreated given the threats he received in captivity, Bae said it is possible the college student was "threatened" or that he was "physically tortured or attacked."
 "It didn"t happen to me," Bae said. "There"s no way for me to know that for sure." 
 Authorities used a particularly ominous threat with prisoners, Bae said: "If you don"t follow there will be something worse that will happen to you."
 "So I do believe that something like that could have happened to other detainees at this point because of what has happened to Otto. I am worried about other detainees, what they go through," he said.
 Warmbier visited North Korea in January 2016 on a sightseeing tour. He was arrested for allegedly stealing a political sign from a restricted area and sentenced to 15 years of hard labor. 
 The cause of Warmbier"s death is not known, and his family objected to an autopsy, a request the Hamilton County Coroner"s Office in Ohio honored.
 Last week, his treating physicians in Cincinnati said he suffered from unresponsive wakefulness, a condition also known as persistent vegetative state. 
 In a news conference before Warmbier"s death, they said they could not speculate on the cause of his condition. 
 But they cast doubt on North Korea"s assertion he fell into a coma after contracting botulism and taking a sleeping pill. 
 Bae was the longest-held U.S. citizen in North Korea since the Korean War -- first detained in 2012 and released two years later. In 2013, he was sentenced to 15 years of hard labor for committing unspecified "hostile acts" in the country.
 Warmbier was "probably terrified" during his ordeal, Bae said.
 The Trump administration worked to secure Warmbier"s return to the United States. Three Americans remain detained in North Korea.
 Bae said he hopes President Donald Trump will "take a stand with the North Korean government," demand the release of all detainees and deal with "human rights violations." 
 "Every life is very important, Otto Warmbier"s life is very important, (so are) all the detainees and 24 million people living under such a terrible state right now," he said.

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 --KEYWORD TAGS--
NORTH KOREA OTTO WARMBIER PROPAGANDA BALLOONS PARK SANG-HAK 


Diallo Vigil
TWO YEARS AGO, DIALLO WAS SHOT AT 41 TIMES, AND HIT 19 BY FOUR NEW YORK CITY POLICE OFFICERS WHO THOUGHT HE HAD A GUN...IT TURNED OUT TO BE A WALLET, ON SUNDAY, DIALLO WAS REMEMBERED IN ALBANY.