He [Anderson] did not die of natural causes. |
He was there. He heard our opinions. He did not object or defend himself. |
I don't have any personal upset at the death penalty as an abstraction, ... What I do realize is how many mistakes can be made with the way things are being done now. |
I take this personal. I own these blocks. |
If it's the perpetrator, there's a possibility that he's taunting the police. He knew the area. This isn't anybody from Boston who came down to kill her. This is homegrown. |
It could give the false impression that they all died as a result of the storm — and that whatever actions or mistakes were made by local, federal and state authorities didn't contribute to the deaths. |
It didn't happen the way she was being charged, |
It takes some learning, ... but we each have our strengths. Linda's a great writer; I'm a great copy editor. I did a lot of copy editing at my college newspapers and other things, which I enjoyed very much. And I never saw anything that couldn't be changed: 'Four score and seven years ago?' What is that? Eighty-seven years ago! |
It's a deep, irregular cut and it was cut by some sharp, jagged object ... a jagged piece of glass or a knife. My opinion is it was most likely broken glass. |
It's likely there was more than one perpetrator, ... It's hard for a single perpetrator to control two victims at the same time in a public place. |
My opinion is that he died because of what you see in the videotape. |
My opinion, ... ... is it was not caused by somebody's fingernail. |
She was a very sick child, |
Tape is wonderful at preserving evidence - fingerprints, hairs, .fibers. Tape preserves this, especially on the sticky side, even if the body's been out there for a year. |
The people who died were hit by shrapnel. |