4.20.26 Two Supreme Court cases over fairness, markets pushing oil prices, and a father/son Boston Marathon team
4/20/202637 min
Two Supreme Court cases when fairness is in doubt, markets push oil prices lower, and the legacy of a father/son Boston Marathon tradition. Plus, the Monday morning news
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Clips
Transcript preview
First 90 secondsMary Reichard· Host0:00
[upbeat music] Good morning. Today on Legal Docket, who is responsible to speak up when one side in a criminal trial thinks the other side is discriminating?
Speaker 10:13
This is the most timid and reticent defense counsel that I have encountered. Any competent [chuckles] defense attorney that I knew would have spoken up.
Nick Eicher· Host0:23
Also today, the Monday Money Beat, how much longer before oil prices settle? David Bonson is standing by. And the World History Book, a family legacy races through the streets of Boston.
Speaker 3· Soundbite0:35
They made a decision right there in that moment. They were like, "Nobody's keeping us off the Boston course."
Mary Reichard· Host0:39
[upbeat music] It's Monday, April twentieth. This is The World and Everything in It from listener-supported World Radio. I'm Mary Reichard.
Nick Eicher· Host0:53
And I'm Nick Eicher. Good morning.
Mary Reichard· Host0:55
Up next, Kent Covington with today's news.
Nick Eicher· Host1:00
The clock is ticking in Iran, with the current US-Iranian ceasefire set to expire in two days. The two sides still have not scheduled a second round of in-person peace talks. US Ambassador to the UN, Mike Waltz, told CBS' Face the Nation: Anybody who has dealt with the Iranians will tell you it is often two steps forward, three steps back.
Mike Waltz· Soundbite1:23
They're incredibly slippery. Uh, they can't be trusted. They've cheated over the years.
Nick Eicher· Host1:28
Pakistan