campaigning for his brother s release since his arrest and joins me now. thank you for being with me. thanks for having me. i can t imagine what you and your family are going through right now. 13 months, 13 months that he s been sitting and waiting. how is he holding up? it s tough. he s really isolated, by himself a lot of the time. he s a social guy so that s taken a toll. you don t know what happens from day to day. they don t tell him when he s going to go to court. they take him around with a blindfold on wherever he goes. it s really scary. your mother has said it s highly unlikely she thinks he will be acquitted. is that how you feel? i think the iranians have the opportunity to do the right thing, to look at the evidence and say there s nothing there to support that. at this point she s been there for several months and it s obviously very difficult for her but i feel like the more people see it on the outside around the world, the more people hear about the story, t
instant instant, a split second. could he have made a mistake? obviously the grand jury had to look for their lower standard of proof there at what they thought he was trying to do but what you seem to be saying walk us through protocol is he shouldn t have necessarily pulled his gun in the fis place in this interaction. right. if you watch the video closely, you see the officer s hand reach down and it grabs the door handle of mr. dubose s door and the officer is saying unhook your seat belt. what he is clearly trying to do is open the door and get him to exit the vehicle. what mr. dubose does is same time trying to start the vehicle. he s trying to start the ignition to drive away. and the officer, you know within a second draws his gun and all he had to do is step back and what his job to do is get on the radio and, you know get in the car and chase. i m drilling this point because it s so crucial. what you re saying in law enforcement expertise is that even if this individual
patients. some of them went through the operating unit last night and some are left today. and we talk about what safety precautions should be going forward and should there be seat belts and that type of thing and until this happens you don t realize how quickly a patient is how quickly a train is moving. and the patients i had were more in the back. and they didn t tip over as much as others. and they described it as happening in a split-second and they had luggage on them and when they were injured, it was people fell on them. and even seats were ripped out of their mooring. and did you hear about people with teemg broken?
a problem. intent can be formed in a split second and prior to shooting the fatal shots. that will undermind herself defense. it happen in the condominium that they shared. two people know what happened and one of them is dead. it is a circumstantial case. how can they prove it was intentional homicide? if i was the prosecutor, i would harp on the 911 call. i admit i have not personally heard it but this is where the jury will make their decision. does she sound like a dam sel in distress or does she sound calculating and telling a tall tale. when the jury evaluates the testimony one of the many things they look for is demeanor and it is where the case will hinge.
parking spot, but the truck doesn t come to a stop. it barrels over a concrete parking block and crashes directly through the glass door front. i heard a big explode like a bomb. and i kind of check up and see what happened. i thought for a second, what s happening? where the sound came from? glass, cigarettes and shelves go flying. customers inside scramble to get out of the way as the store seemingly implodes. customer got shocked. his eyes was wide open. to see how that truck can come in. he was keep saying what the hell is happening? what happened? the truck idles for a split second and then unbelievably, the driver puts it in reverse