approach they wanted to take, and thenit approach they wanted to take, and then it became a global story. i don t think nazanin fully realised until perhaps today how big the story this was here in the uk and around the world. story this was here in the uk and around the world. exactly, because initiall i around the world. exactly, because initially i believe around the world. exactly, because initially i believe her around the world. exactly, because initially i believe her family - around the world. exactly, because initially i believe her family had i initially i believe herfamily had the idea to keep this very quiet but her husband what s very adamant from the very beginning to make this public, to build awareness about this. i know you must have been working very closely with what the family wanted, their approach to how to deal with her detention, her incarceration. to deal with her detention, her incarceration. exactly, the advice from the fco incarceration. exactly, the
while. so i knew him when he first came here. he was a young kid that liked to raise hell in jail. i think from the beginning, i think he was just doomed to go down this path that wasn t going to lead anywhere positive. and it s unfortunate that this was the answer that the state had for, you know, his earl i incarceration. why would you bet on him to be the first person to do a victim/offender dialogue in the state of alaska? what i have to trust is terria s opinion. she said, i want to do this, and i think he s the right person. is hhow long have you known terria? me and terria have been bumping into each other for a couple of years. she has a powerful voice in the addiction and re-entry community. and if somebody s lived a hard story, and they ve turned that around, that s the kind of people i need coming in here to support what i m doing. what do you hope comes after this first dialogue? what i hope is this helps
justice system, and i ve seen lives devastated by violence. we like to imagine that after the verdict, the story is over, the victim and the offender are never meant to meet again. but for some, the only way to move forward is to come face to face with the person who shattered their lives. i m here in alaska, and they ve got so much just untouched, unspoiled, beauty. but they also have a really ugly problem up here with a drug epidemic. there s a real cycle of addiction, crime, incarceration, release, still addicted, back to crime, back to jail. it s just an endless cycle, and
this plan rolls out it s going to out shiny other urban plan that any other president ever did. let me have you react to that. you ve been working in venture capital with focus on american cities. how participatory of a plan you see this to be? i would love to know how many black companies are driving this. 68% of our investments are in black or latino or female founders. and i know what it takes to be inclusive. and i m not sure pastor scott is up to it. what i do know is this president has increased in cmass i incarceration. he is going to return to the failed war on drugs. i don t know what you ve learned
enforcement want to know. you know, whitey bulger spend a lot of time out there obviously because he corrupted a number of fbi agents, but there are other people in laws enforcement or politics we don t know about yet. he has a lot of information in his head, should she choose to share it and should he use it to cut a deal for himself. i mean, he s not stupid. he knows he s not walking out of there. the best he can do is make hi incarceration a lot more pleasant. what is this we hear, kevin, about some sort of a secret stash inside a wall in that santa monica apartment? we re taking a look at that building where he was found. this is not the first time he secreted things in the wall. he had used his former live-in gish friend teresa stanley, i guess you can call her a common-law wife. he had used her walls to stash