Campaign tensions intensify in final days
News on Merit Anchor Lyndsay Keith shares her insights on the strategies both candidates are using to sway voters in these final days.
News on Merit Anchor Lyndsay Keith shares her insights on the strategies both candidates are using to sway voters in these final days.
Are podcasts the future of political campaigning, and can they really convert listeners into voters?
Election Day is 13 days away on Nov. 5, and early voting has started in more than 30 states. Nearly all states have either started early voting or have mailed ballots.
Merit TV’s “Dr. Phil” McGraw spoke to a bipartisan group of Texas legislators Monday to advocate for death row inmate Robert Roberson. The 57-year-old was scheduled for execution last Thursday for the 2002 killing of his 2-year-old daughter Nikki Curtis – who reportedly died from shaken baby syndrome – a crime he and his advocates say did not happen. But the execution was halted after the Texas House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence issued a subpoena for Roberson to testify about his case. A longtime supporter of Roberson, McGraw has reviewed transcripts multiple times and supporting documents from his trial. He has also done an intensive forensic interview with Roberson. Having spent spent decades of his career in the legal arena, both civil and criminal, McGraw also has extensive training in clinical, psychology, and behavioral medicine. “I do not believe that Mr. Roberson has had due process in this case. I do not believe he has yet enjoyed a fair trial in the matter,” said McGraw. “I believe that in the United States of America, if we are going to deprive someone of their liberty, that comes at a very high standard. If we are going to deprive someone of their life that comes at a very high standard, a very high standard of proof, a very high standard of evidence.”
Robert Roberson’s life has been spared, but his battle continues. News on Merit Anchor Loni Coombs reports on the latest developments in his ongoing fight.
Dr. Phil McGraw is in Austin and will testify on Roberson’s behalf. McGraw is one of many advocates for Roberson and has visited him in prison.
Robert Roberson, the 57-year-old man scheduled for execution on Thursday, has been spared for now, though his future remains unclear.
The Texas Supreme Court halted Thursday night’s scheduled execution of a man who would have become the first person in the U.S. put to death for a murder conviction tied to a diagnosis of shaken baby syndrome.
Less than 90 minutes before his scheduled execution, Texas death row inmate Robert Roberson’s life was temporarily saved.
The Texas Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence has subpoenaed death row inmate Robert Roberson to testify before a committee that’s reconsidering the lawfulness of his conviction.