picture and they don t even know you. does it surprise you officer brady doesn t want to be on cmera? no. same reason he didn t take the money. seems like this wasn t the first time that he s done something like this so to him this is not a big deal and he was just doing his job in miss mind but it was a big deal for us and it was a big deal for people that saw that picture. celeste and sydney are on the mend. and john has met them for the first time. i don t know how you guys are so strong the way you are. it s so inspirational. jeff reemerged boston strong. bill iffrig is still running. i m not going to quit doing anything. natalie stavas and andrew are back to business.
need to burden the military commission system with this kind of issue. that s really a political statement. now, i want to be clear about this point as a lawyer there are sometimes when the choice of which law to apply is a legal question. but in this case it s really more of a policy question and when you hear someone saying this person should be tried in a military commission, they are making a policy argument and not necessarily a legal one and it s important that we draw those distinctions. all right. thank you so much for your insight on that. thank you. pleasure to be with you. in the moments after the attacks here last monday, there was one person who really stood out. that was bill iffrig. he became a symbol after finishing the marathon despite the bombing and he spoke after returning home yesterday. i can t believe it. i called my son and talked to him from back there. he says you can t believe it. you are all over the place here.
yes, we will find you, and, yes, you will face justice. like bill iffrig, 78 years old. the runner in the orange tank top who we all saw get knocked down by the blast. we may be momentarily knocked off our feet, but we ll pick ourselves up. we ll keep going. we will finish the race. the president honored bombing victim krystle campbell, who was killed just weeks before her 30th birthday. he honored lu lingzi, recently moved to boston for graduate school to study math and statistics. she went with two new friends to see the boston marathon and was killed. and, of course, the president honored 8-year-old martin
wrong city to do it. not here in boston. not here in boston. yes, we will find you. and, yes, you will face justice. like bill iffrig, 78 years old, the runner in the orange tank top who we all saw get knocked down by the blast. we may be momentarily knocked off our feet, but we ll pick ourselves up. we ll keep going. we will finish the race. we will finish the race.
where they could be at risk or in danger, was absolutely fantastic and i think the boston athletic association and the boston police and the state police deserve tremendous credit for how they handled this when it occurred. they certainly do. probably saved a lot more death and injury as a result of their rapid actions. to me, the guy that sums up kind of stoicism, indeed heroism of the whole event, was bill iffrig. 78 years old, he s run 45 marathons, he was blown off his feet in images that have gone round the world and he just got back up and finished the race. what did you make of that, fred? you know, i think he speaks a lot to the spirit of the marathon. and the connection that so many people feel to this particular run and this particular distance, and you know, i feel terribly for the people obviously as we all do who have been injured and maimed or