good evening, everyone. i'm eric burnett. how much will it cost to bail out europe? >> $1 million. >> just like dr. evil in "austin powers," that's not enough. >> $100 billion. >> nope. even a super villain would not ask for a number this big. the final number to bail out europe could be closer to $6 trillion. so take a deep breath. i'll get to the grand total in just a moment. days ahead of the crucial greek elections, spain asked for $125 billion to bail out its banks. and that's just the beginning because spain is only one of several european countries lining up for more money. spain, portugal, ireland, greece, already have asked for $615.5 billion. but does it add up to enough to save them and us from more economic calamity? sources tell "outfront," not even close. one of our most reliable sources says that all estimates to date on how much this is going to cost have been wrong. he warns about a domino effect, most notably on france and says we're not even close to stabilization. desmond lockman says europe needs about $1.2 trillion just to bail out spain and italy. john malden, heavily followed by traders on wall street, says the amount needed could be $5 trillion or $6.2 trillion. i thought $6 trillion was enough. but a hundred billion at that point is just rounding, right? that's about eight t.a.r.p.s. it may not even be enough to save europe because it all requires the help of the united states and the u.s. fed. and, yes, the imf, u.s. taxpayers. this is all central to us and how much money we will pay. what happens if europe breaks apart? this means the break-up of the world's biggest economy and our biggest trading partner, it means tens of thousands of american jobs gone. "outfront" tonight is pimco founder bill gross, one of the largest investors of retirement money in this country. bill, let's start with this issue of it's been sort of band-aid after band-aid. when are we going to know how much this is really going to cost? >> erin, i don't think we'll ever know. it's been an ad hoc approach, as you suggest. up until this point, euroland through its central bank, which is the ecb, basically has written about $2 trillion worth of checks, about the same amount, by the way, as our fed has written. how much more do we need? is it the $6 trillion that one of your viewers suggests? i'm not so sure it's that much. but it's a lot of money. it probably amounts to trillions of dollars when you include not only spain, italy and as you mentioned france as well. >> and france is a big issue. i think a lot of people watching the show say, i've heard about greece and spain. i think i've heard about italy. but france? >> well, france is not teetering but it's certainly not growing. it's in a small recession. as it turns out, greece was really sort of a trojan horse, not that the election on saturday doesn't matter. it does. but spain is the real deal. spain is the tenth largest economy in the world. it's got a gdp of about $1.5 trillion. that's about a tept of our ours is, but very big. to the extent that spain goes downhill, they have 25% unemployment. imagine. that's like the 1930s in the united states. to the extent that they continue in a depression, then, yes, the spanish plight becomes the plight of italy as well as spain and france. >> what are the risks in your view? you've put money in this and has to make a decision whether you're going to put pension money from americans into these economies. would you do it right now? or is it in your view sort of whether it's down the road or soon, europe's going to break up? >> i wouldn't do it. and we haven't done it. pimco's been out of euroland basically with the exception of germany and france for about a year and a half or two years. i think what euroland needs, what they want, what these measures are trying to do is to entice private investors such as pimco, china and associated agencies back into the market, so to speak. will they do it at 6% to 7% yield? i don't think that's enough relative to the risk. and so it will be up to the ecb, again, their federal reverse, to continue to write checks. and that might amount to hundreds of billions and perhaps, as you suggest, trillions of dollars. >> bill, today "the wall street journal" had a survey saying the top issue for americans who are getting ready to retire was europe. there were three issues up there and europe was one of them. what could the u.s. be on hold for? the fed is intimately involved in all sorts of ways of providing easy money to europe. but how much money could the u.s. be on the hook for? i know it's a hard question because you don't know how much europe is going to need. but this is the crucial question for taxpayers. >> well, three ways of involvement, really. the u.s. banks and there it's a small proportion. secondly, the imf, we participate significantly in the imf, although i don't expect the u.s. to allow the imf to make loans to spain and to associated countries from this point forward. and third, there are swap lines from the federal reverse that have been used and continue to be used. so there is some liability from the same point of the united states. but i don't think it's significant. what's really significant is the effect on u.s. economic growth. we're slowing. we're at 2%. we might move down to 1%. if spain basically continues on its path, then we might approach the 0% level, which ultimately is the worst effect of this particular crisis. >> bill gross, thank you very much. we appreciate your taking the time. as bill said, imf may not help from this point forward. up till now, they've provided incredible loans to countries including portugal and greece and ireland. up next, breaking news, the department of justice suing the state of florida accusing florida of not allowing a certain group of people to vote. and a nasty family feud in the kennedy dynasty. dooilt details leaking out in a tale of lies and tragedy. and a drug linked to zombie of like attacks. a reporter out front to tell us the horror he saw. you inspired a ron howard production. with your photographs. 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[ female announcer ] live the regular life. phillips'. ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 let's talk about the cookie-cutter retirement advice ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 you get at some places. ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 they say you have to do this, have that, invest here ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 you know what? ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 you can't create a retirement plan based on ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 a predetermined script. ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 to understand you and your goals... ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 ...so together we can find real-life answers for your ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 real-life retirement. ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 talk to chuck ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 and let's write a script based on your life story. ttd#: 1-800-345-2550 our second story out front, the u.s. government and the state of florida suing each other over florida's controversial voter purge plan. the storm has been brewing for a while. republican governor rick scott pushed for the purge saying he wanted to reduce voter fraud. opponents say it will unfairly racially target, targeting minorities and the poor. john avlon, roland martin are with us. i know you don't like this idea. i don't understand when someone goes to the polls and you're a citizen, could you prove you're a citizen right there and this could eliminate the problem? >> no. the reality is when i go to the polls, i bring my voter registration card and have a driver's license if i need that. the real issue here is that you have clerks, supervisors, election supervisors who told the state, hey, this list has problems. let's not move forward with it. they also waited far too late to push it forward. the d.o.j.'s job is to protect the voting rights of people. florida screwed up and the government needs to admit it. >> is there another way to accomplish this, to have people who are citizens be the ones voting without racially targeting certain groups of minorities and people who are lower income? >> there's been a big controversy across many states, not just in the american south but particularly in the american south regarding voter ids. that is, do we provide a more secure system of voter identification to make sure the people who are showing up at the polls are in fact the people they claim to be? look, the vast majority of the time, there is nothing untoward happening, no fraud happening, et cetera. but there is anxiety about a small handful of cases. that's one reason why you have this reaction. i think that it's entirely possible that you have to have a give and take here. the justice department is totally right and appropriate to be seeing to it that, hey, florida's not overstepping its bounds. on the other hand, there are also natural mechanisms in the states themselves which will check excessive behavior. so i think it remains to be seen whether or not this is the right decision. but you want to be sure this is done in a careful and deliberate matter. >> but the only take is dueling lutes between the government and the state of florida. there's a legacy of people being denied their franchise. there's clearly a problem in some of our rolls. but when you get a world war ii veteran, such as happened in this particular purge, being told he's not a citizen, you have a problem. right now, this is all coming to a head. >> i want to give you an actual fact. you heard a small number of voters -- a report said that here we have the evidence of voter fraud. they brought forth about 300 cases in the entire country in ten years. so this is what we call a solution in search of a problem. so when you hear there's a small number, it is a small number. but it goes beyond just the issue of voter id. the outlawing of voting on sunday, the issue of in ohio, they passed a law to say if you're a poll worker, you don't have to tell somebody what their correct voting location is if you don't want to. it's simply voluntary. >> are you trying to say that people who aren't citizens aren't really trying to vote? if you can only come up with 300 around the country, it's not really a problem. >> massive voter fraud, people can't even prove it. the republican lawyers found 300 in ten years. >> clearly dead people should never vote. >> oh, duh! i get protecting the voter rolls. but give me a break. it's not like all of a sudden they found 30, 40, 50 -- >> make it difficult to register folks raises legitimate concerns. you have another face-off -- >> do you have a problem when you go to get a voter registration card -- >> you don't have to. according to the law, if you choose to vote absentee, you don't need a voter id. when they say it's to protect the vote, that's only if you show up at the poll. you can vote absentee and not get a voter id. >> but would you agree in all cases that you would need to prove citizenship at some point and some way? >> i certainly believe approving citizenship, the problem is when you are targeting 180,000 is overwhelmingly a certain group of people -- >> it is overwhelming. >> we understand the impact when you're able to suppress the vote. >> within 90 days of the primary, too. >> what about this? it's not as if roland is saying, you shouldn't have to prove it. he's saying the way they're going about it isn't the right way. >> let's think about moving the voting day from tuesday to sunday and let's agree that we need some rock solid, ironclad voter id laws. and let's shift the efforts to say, let's be sure that members of marginalized communities are able to get them. that would be a great compromise proposal. and it's silly to have voting on tuesdays, a day when most people have to go to work. >> it's very hard to work on tuesday. >> it's ridiculous. and then in florida, their rationale for not allowing early voting on sunday is because people need time to count the ballots. it's nonsense. in maine, the republican legislature outlawed same-day registration. people didn't ask for it. they simply outlawed it. this has been a clear effort in 36 states by gop legislatures to change what's going on here. i'm saying, give me one example of them expanding access to the ballot. not one person can give me that. that tells me you're not trying to expand access, you're trying to limit access. >> you want it to be broader access and more people who don't have the education or the ability to easily read, it's people intimidated by the process already. >> when you talk about expanding access, one of the largest groups denied access includes ex-offenders. this is a controversial group for democrats and republicans to talk openly about the fact that you have hundreds of thousands of americans who by virtue of having served a prison sentence are no longer able to access the franchise. it's a controversial issue. but i think that -- i'm sorry? >> it's one of many. i love it when you come up with a centrist solution. we should be lowering the barriers. let's move towards letting more le vote and making sure it's all -- >> when jeb bush was governor allowed them to vote. rick scott overturned what jeb bush did. >> thanks to all. let us know what you think. still out front, it costs more and has fewer features? is apple's new computer worth it? and day one of the jerry sandusky trial. talk of the former penn state coach taking the stand. our paul callan is next. 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what would be the strategy for that? >> prosecutors traditionally start strong and finish strong. so of the eight victims who are going -- alleged victims who are going to testify, they must have thought that victim number 4 had some of the most compelling testimony. and he certainly did. there was a lot of detail and there was a lot to move the jury in that first day. >> it was moving and very sad. the defense has filed this motion that he has a psychological problem called histrion histrionic personality disorder. what is it? >> histrionic personality disorder is something that women suffer from by a 4-to-1 ratio as compared to men. it's basically a disorder that involves you in intengs attention-seeking behavior. there's nothing in it that has to do with ped feel ya or anything else. they say sandusky acts inappropriately to get attention. >> but with children, it doesn't make any -- >> but it's not a defense. this is not insanity. criminals throughout the united states have personality disorders. that doesn't make them innocent of the crime. you have to be insane to be innocent of the crime. >> i'm not a lawyer. but it seems like your case isn't very good. >> i'm betting the judge won't allow testimony about this disorder to come into evidence. >> his lawyer indicated something that he could take the stand. should he? will he? >> he said, you will hear from jerry, jerry will say -- he said it repeatedly in his opening statement, amendola. i don't think it's going to take the stand. amendola will play videotapes and that's how he's going to ultimately say to the jury, you heard jerry say -- i'd be shocked if he takes the stand. you could imagine the cross-examination he'll be subjected to. >> paul callan, appreciate it. still coming, are lawmakers working on a secret deal to avoid the fiscal cliff? that means a big tax cut? and we take you inside the world of the drug linked to zombie-like attacks. we have exclusive information. >> she was picking aparther skin saying that she felt when she was on it that she had bugs on her skin. so many tough decisions i felt lost. unitedhealthcare offered us a specially trained rn who helped us weigh and understand all our options. for me cancer was as scary as a fastball is to some of these kids. but my coach had hit that pitch before. turning data into useful answers. we're 78,000 people looking out for 70 million americans. that's health in numbers. unitedhealthcare. throughout our entire lives. ♪ one a day men's 50+ is a complete multi-vitamin designed for men's health concerns as we age. ♪ it has more of seven antioxidants to support cell health. that's one a day men's 50+ healthy advantage. blast of cold feels nice. why don't you use bengay zero degrees? 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[ male announcer ] new bengay zero degrees. freeze and move on. welcome back to the second half hour of "outfront." we start with our stories we care about, where we focus on our own reporting from the front lines. the house oversight committee announced it will consider a measure to hold attorney eric holder in contempt for failing to provide information related to the fast and furious investigation. a statement from the panel says it will consider the citation on june 20th. if the panel decides that holder is in contempt, the measure will have to get approval from the full chamber. the justice department called the committee's actions unfortunate and unwarranted. commerce secretary john bryson is under investigation for a possible felony hit and run after allegedly causing two car accidents in california. the commerce department says secretary bryson suffered a seizure. police say he was found unconscious at the wheel of his car. he took a breathalyzer test that did not detect alcohol use. there was no indication that drugs played a role. secretary bryson was issued a citation. authorities have to decide whether they're going to formally file charges. a navy drone crash today near salisbury, maryland. the crash was extremely rare and costly. this drone costs $176 million. a spokesman from the naval air station patuxent river say the drone went down over a routine training flight no. one on the ground was injured. but that is an incredible loss in air to lose a drone at that expense. iranian sanctions losing teeth and steam. today, the usa gave waivers to india, south korea and turkey among others, allowing them to buy iranian oil and still access the u.s. financial system. that's how we get the sanctions to work. that usually is incredible leverage. but we gave these waivers and they are just an example of how u.s. sanctions with iran are sometimes more bark than bite. iran is india's second biggest supplier of oil. it makes up about 12% of india's crude import needs. india provides a lot of money to iran. it's been 312 days since the u.s. lost its top credit rating. what are we doing to get it back? i have a terrible fear we're not doing enough to get that number to 365 this summer. it's been called a ticking tax bomb approaching the end of the year when the bush tax cuts are expiring unless congress acts. remember the whole thing where they were ten-year tax cuts, which was ridiculous to begin with but that's what they do when they want to get a good score from the cbo. republicans are hoping democrats will extend the tax cuts for everyone, no matter how much you earn. the president said he would veto that. but now reports there could be a secret deal on the democratic side. here's the scenario. it goes like this. democrats would let all the tax cuts expire on january 1st. then they come back a few weeks later for the new year session and cut tax rates on the middle class. why? . because that would mean if republicans don't like it would have to vote against tax cuts. steven moore, roland martin and john avlon. this is genius. gets tax cuts for the middle class, republicans don't want to vote against tax cuts. >> erin, i don't think we can wait till january to get this resolved. you have a lot of issues out there right now. every business in america don't know what the capital gains tax is going to be -- >> yeah, but, what about this specific issue. >> holding back the economy right now has to get resolved as quickly as possible. if it doesn't, it hurts the president's reelection prospects. who wants to invest in this tsunami of -- >> hold on, stephen. would the strategy work where you let them go away for everybody? that's playing roulette for the democrats. >> i don't think that republicans quite rightly are going to go ff any deal that doesn't cut the rates for everybody -- keep the rates where they have because they're all scheduled to go up next year. i'm not so sure that that strategy is so smart because i don't think it's going to get through congress. by the way, the problem with that theory is we don't know what congress is going to look like in january. we don't know if it's going to be run by the democrats or republicans. it's all a wild card right now. >> here's the fundamental issue here. this is a cute political game. at the end of the day, democrats should be talking about getting rid of the bush tax cuts for those folks over $1 million. the one thing i would love to hear from steech and all my dear conservative friends is owning up to the fact that you can't talk deficit out one side of your mouth and not own up to the fact that the bush tax cuts have contributed to this very deficit we have. so republicans can't keep saying, we love all tax cuts if you don't -- this is affecting the deficit. >> it is true. when you look at deficit contributors, stephen, bush tax cuts are right up there. >> you're not going to raise any revenue from raising the capital gains tax. every time we've done it, we've lost revenue and cut the rate. >> please just own up to what i just said. >> that's historical evidence. >> did the bush tax cuts contribute to the national debt? >> roland, how are you going to grow this economy if you're going to tax the business. we know that 70% of that income that you're talking about is business income, most of it is. >> just please answer the question. >> stephen, can you at least acknowledge that? it is a fair point. >> acknowledge which point? >> the fact that the bush tax cuts increased the national debt? >> wait a minute. okay, roland f you look at the four years -- >> oh, my god, come on, stephen. please! can you please -- >> let me finish my point. in the four years after the bush tax cuts in 2003, $800 billion of revenue, the biggest increase in tax revenues in history. the way you get revenues in, roland, i want more revenues, you do, you grow this economy. you're not going to grow the economy by raising tax rates on investment. erin, you know this. the big story with investment, nobody's investing. everybody's investing in ten-year treasury bills. >> the lack of certainty is a big issue. i give you that. but it doesn't necessarily dictate how you end up on a solution. >> things are always uncertain especially before an election. stephen's trying to square a circle. what's more important, cutting taxes to allegedly stimulate growth or dealing with the deficit? you can't do both, at least not in the near term. what the democrats are talking about right here -- they're playing poker in public. they're saying, we're going to call your bluff, let it expire. on the same side, i'd love to see an argument the republicans make about letting taxes -- why not make the top threshold be $1 million a year? not $250,000. that's tough to argue against. >> if i care more about the republicans than i care about the american economy, i'd want the democrats to do that. i would want the democrats to go in this election saying the tax rates are going to go up because it's going to hurt the economy and the economy before january. you're going to have a selloff of stocks. who wants to take capital claga in 2013 when you can take them now. the smartest thing the president could do is make an announcement that there aren't going to be any tax increases next year -- >> he can't do it. he said he would veto it -- >> stephen, are you going to be back in a grand bargain before the election, one that might lower rates but close loopholes to raise sflempb. >> i'm all in favor of that. but know is the worst possible time to raise taxes on investing -- >> investment is one part. for most people, it's income tax rates. >> you have a positive debate over tax reduction -- >> roland -- >> stephen, every republican who complains about the stimulus bill, $787 billion, 40% of that was tax cuts. but they still complain about it. >> i need to correct something you just said. you said that i'm supporting a tax cut. i'm not. we ought to keep the tax rates where they are right now. next year, we'll have a huge tax increase -- >> let's do it. and i don't want to hear you say a word about the deficit. >> all right. >> what about austerity in government? no tax increases, government spending cuts. >> there we go. >> i think we'll have to have you back. there will be a second version of this movie. >> he won't own up to it. >> thanks to all three of you. thank you. a drug bust in new hampshire raising fears about a new class of lethal drugs that can cause suicide and psychotic behavior. the drugs are those bath salts that we've been talking about recently and they were just found in big quantities in the small community of new hampshire. police seized more than $100,000 of the drug from a convenience store. this one, over the week. since last october, america has seen a concerning trend of bath salt use prompting the dea to ban three of the chemicals found in the drug. but bath salts are expected in the horrifying assault in miami, the man who ate off another man's face and other cannibalistic attacks around the country. we're keeping our next guest's tint hidden. good to see you, detective. tell me about this bust. how big was it and how did you find it? >> over the last several months, we've received numerous complaints about the bath salts. we've also seen an increase in bath salt related cases so we started to investigate the facility. in investigating it, undercover officers, myself, we went into the location, we purchased bath salts several times. >> we've all heard about the horrific case in miami. does that sound similar? have there been cases in your community where people have engaged in truly horrific behavior? >> we did have a female just before a couple of hours before hitting the police that her boyfriend called concerned that she was on her way to that location to buy the drug and she actually bought it, did half the container and she had told me that she went from being a heroin and an avid cocaine user to using bath salts. she was actually picking apart her skin saying that she felt when she was on it that she had bugs in her skin. she was severe hallucinogenics. she started feeling an out-of-body experience and extreme par know anoia was one indicator that is she said she often feels when she's on bath salts. >> is this something where you're seeing more people adopt it like they did in something like meth that became a national health crisis? >> i do. the reason why i think that we're seeing a great uptick in these bath salt related cases is that everybody's getting the buzz, the internet, that it's giving the same effects as ecstasy. it's been attributed to giving some effects like ecstasy, pcp, lsd, methamphetamine, cocaine. we think those users that are trying to seek out a way of -- that law enforcement really hadn't -- or a lot of law enforcement hasn't caught on to yet, they feel that they're using this in place of it. >> how do they make bath salts? is this like people at home making them and every combination is different and some can kill you and some might just give you a buzz? >> whenever i say bath salt, people think of the nice warm bath salt that is people put into a tub to get aromatherapy and stuff. that is not the case. this stuff is selling in half gram and gram quantities. it's selling from anywhere from $40 to $100. it's a white powder. looks very common. >> $40 to $100 for half a gram? >> yeah. it's been disguised as chrome cleaner, pipe cleaner, facial products. >> detective, thank you so much and appreciate your taking the time. good luck. next, new and exclusive detail ts into the family feud in the kennedy family. and british prime minister david cameron walked into a bar. what happened next, though, is no joke. 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[ spokesman ] when you refinance your mortgage with quicken loans, you'll find that our rates and fees are extremely competitive. because the last thing you want is to spend too much on your mortgage. one more way quicken loans is engineered to amaze. ♪ so today apple kicked off its big developers conference and everybody was wondering would they announce a tv? what they did was more features for its operating system and they have a new one which has maps, macbook pros and siri, that voice, coming to the ipad. siri gets a bigger brain and promises to answer some realtime questions like active sports scores, which according to some of our staff members, she was an utter failure at. we were also curious about the macbrook pro. it was unveiled with a retina display. and like everything apple builds, it's very pretty. but it's also pretty expensive. the base level for this new pro is $2,199. so i was curious of whether there was anything else on the market similar to the macbook pro. there's something close, the hp envy 14 spectra series. it is a smaller screen. doesn't have the retina display but other than that, pretty similar and it got the closest specs. the cost? that's our number tonight. $1,958. it is $215 less than the pro. it doesn't include insurance or other things like that. here's one other key thing, the new macbook pro has flash drive. the spectra has solid state drive. what? to any of you who are hard-core computer users, it's a very big deal. it may be worth $215 or not. let us know. we always want to hear from you. anderson, what's coming up on "a.c. 360." >> breaking news ahead. new numbers on the colorado wildfire that's already devoured nearly 40,000 acres, continues to grow. spreading at a rate of 40 feet per minute. they're fighting it hard. also, six words that president obama first had to walk back and may wish he could take back, quote, the private sector is doing fine. he said that on friday. republicans pounced but are the attacks released today truthful? at least one republican online ad is pretty much taik taking the president's comments out of context. also, robin roberts, another fight for her life. she has a life-threatening disease. she needs and she has found a donor. we'll tell you who that is and talking about the prognosis with dr. sanjay gupta. all that, the latest on the jerry sandusky trial coming up. new details surrounding the last days of mary kennedy's life. the late wife of robert f. kennedy, jr., was drinking heavily, was severely depressed. interviews were conducted including the housekeeper who was with mary to the end. and there's exclusive access to this 60-page affidavit filed by robert kennedy, jr., in which he claims he was physically abused by his wife. claims he was physically abused by his wife. lawrence, what was the most shocking revelation that you learned from the affidavit, from all these many interviews you did? >> i don't think there's just one. it was a magnitude of them. and, frankly, the worse ones i put in the article. the abuse of the children. i thought that was unnecessary. i don't want people to view this as an evil woman. she had borderline personality disorder. a very serious psychological illness that most people don't even know about. this is a result of this. it wasn't anything she meant to do or cared to do. >> i want to read something from the affidavit. bobby kennedy says, quote, mary's violence and physical abuse towards me began before we were married. did you find sources to substantiate that claim? >> well, before he was married, he says that she was a trained boxer and she hit him in the face with such strength that she hurt his eye ducts. you see him now, he'll just start crying out of -- his left eye for no reason. that's because of this. i found somebody who saw him right afterwards. saw his face like that. now, that person didn't know what had happened. and that's -- an awful lot of this was hidden. a lot of this violence was just in the house. the children saw it. the housekeeper saw it. the people outside the house didn't see it. >> what did the housekeeper tell you about the final days? >> just -- well, first of all, she -- mary -- the children were -- she was only -- because of the alcoholism, the trouble, she had two duis, she was only able to see the children when she was supervised. the housekeeper was in charge by the court to make sure she was okay. on sunday, she was with her four children and she started to drink and she had to call the court. and then she called mary's sisters and brothers and they said they would come over. according to the housekeeper, they did not come over. this was the beginning of the end for her. >> you said that day the housekeeper seemed to think she was saying good-bye to the chrn. >> yeah, she went -- the last weekend, her kids were in private school, she went to see them. the children thought, here is mom, she's okay now. she was so joyful and happy. when she saw one of her son, the housekeeper went with her and they stayed overnight in a hotel. the next morning, mary was crying. my children, my children. the housekeeper said, well, you'll be fine with the children it the housekeeper didn't know she was saying good-bye to her children. >> and it's such a tragic tale. i want to share what the family has responded. obviously, just read this to you. they said, mary's unconditional love for her children and unwavering support of so many people she held close to her heart are lasting legacies of her life. our hearts are breaking for what her children witnessed. they also speak about the affidavit. the affidavit which mary repudiated at the time is full of vindictive lives. the false claim that mary suffered from borderline personality disorder is an insult with those who struggle with the serious mental illness. that is obviously from richardson family. what's your response to that? >> about borderline personality disorder, this is one of the keys to the whole article. when we were editing it, tina brown was worried -- the editor of the daily beast and "newsweek" was worried because i didn't have an on the record source. because they're not allowed to speak about their patients. i knew the doctor, a therapist in new york, i knew from the affidavit she had been the one who diagnosed this. i talked to the leading authority in the world on bpd. he wasn't going to say it on the record. i said, i know, i understand the ethics on this. isn't there a higher reality here? if you go on the record this magazine is going to say she had this disease and millions of people across america next week are going to read about this and for the first time learn about this. this disease, 6% of americans suffer from this. if you look at the history of this, people think princess diana may have suffered this or marilyn monroe. the family -- i don't know why they say this. it's just simply not true. i talked to four or five -- >> and they supported this view? >> they said the same thing. there's nothing shameful about this. if she had died of cancer, she wouldn't be out here saying, oh, she didn't have cancer. there's nothing wrong with having a mental disability like this. >> lawrence lemur, thank you very many. you can read his full report in "newsweek." is the british prime minister an unfit father? 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[ male announcer ] it's a network of possibilities -- helping you do what you do... even better. ♪ elected officials are always trying to find a work/home balance. make time for voters but make time for your family. sometimes they're successful and sometimes they aren't. a good example is david cameron, the british prime minister. he's busy running the government but he still makes time to go to the pub with his wife and kids for lunch on sundays. they have a nice meal, catch up. he has a few really young kids. it works good. till it didn't a few months ago. he confirmed during one of the sunday excursions he and his wife secondally left their 8-year-old daughter at the pub. the press jumped all over it with articles and editorials saying he forgot, lost, abandoned his daughter at the bar. we think that's really unfair. according to the reports, for security reason, the prime minister and his wife always take separate cars. he thought his wife had the kid. that's the kind of thing that can happen to anyone. the child was only there