tv [untitled] October 26, 2021 2:30am-3:01am AST
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on how to optimize facebook and good actors, good publishers are already publishing all the content they can, they can do. but bad actors have an incentive to play the algorithm. facebook executives know this, says francis, how going? but the reason they haven't changed the algorithm is money. they think user engagement would decline. and with it add revenues. i think there is a view inside the company that safety is a cost, a cost center. it's not a hunter, which i think it's very short term and thinking us congress and regulators are investigating facebook. part of the deadly storming of the u. s. capital, an independent report commissioned by facebook, said it failed to stop the platform being used to incite ethnic violence in me and mar. so miss how god believes as a real world cost in lives, i have no doubt that the trap like the events for scene around the world. things like me on martin if those are the opening chapters because engagement based ranking does 2 things. one prior prioritizing, amplifiers, divisive polarizing extreme content and to it's hyper concentrated in, you know,
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5 percent of the population. and you only need 3 percent of the population on the streets to have a revolution. facebook says, much of the reporting is based on a false premise. yes, we're a business and we make profit, they say. but the idea that we do so at the expense of people safety or well being misunderstand where our own commercial interests lie. the truth is we've invested $13000000000.00 and have over $40000.00 people to do one job. keep people safe on facebook. but with a consortium of news organizations going over the thousands of pages of lead, internal memos, facebook crisis isn't over yet. reach helen's. how does era? ah, i'm how am i here with the headlines own al jazeera, a state of emergencies known for since the dawn after the transitional governments
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that was met to usher in democracy was dissolved. the health ministry says 7 protests have been kilts during protests against the military takeover. the biden administration says it will suspend $700000000.00 of aid to sit on in response to the coo egypt as joint cutter, france, and the un envoy to sit on in colon for restraints. i'm asking those stakeholders to return to dialogue in restores the constitutional order, as well as not to poach domestic peace and political transition at risk. we stand ready of course, true. forbes of support the country on its part, tolls, domestic peace and political transition. people in haiti are observing a general strikes protests against the worsening security situation and still no word on the face of the american and canadian missionaries who were kidnapped by a gang over a week ago. well, that's your state. still stay with us here on aisle to sarah fought lines us next
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in the vietnam war, the u. s. army used to heidi talks a car beside with catastrophic consequences. agent orange was the most destructive instances chemical warfare. a decade later, the same happened in the us state of oregon. these helicopters flying over the ridge, bringing something they didn't even see the kids foot 2 women are still fighting for justice against some of the most powerful forces in the world. the people versus agent orange coming soon on al jazeera to some police operator. oh, oh hi. i have a missing employee and i'm wondering if there's a possibility of doing a checkup of the house last time i saw them was tuesday. what address are you doing?
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yeah, which is the 22, i believe some other employees have noticed that you've had some argument with what she said was her husband at work. i'm please megan or can i have a wellness check on my daughter, lyla, and everything had a check book fair. she didn't go to work for the last 2 days. the guy she with car eating her so i don't know she's alive. oh, i need somebody to check on her. i'm going there right now. my friend was with me. we got to her house. everything was dark and quiet. we broke the window and i climbed through and i went through the house. mm hm. mm. i opened her bedroom door and i seen her in him
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in there. your mind is weird things to you. cuz at 1st i thought who was that girl? they look like dolls actually in the room was so quiet and i knew she was gone because there is no spirit in her room. there was dead on january 18th, 2018. jasmine willis was killed by our partner terrace for dillard. he shot or at least 6 times with a glock, $22.00 pistol. then he turned the gun and himself. jurors should never have had a gun. fillings and some people convicted of domestic violence are banned from having firearms under us law. but these are ineffective and rarely enforced
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gaps in the system are allowing domestic abusers to keep their guns with gently consequences in awe. every month, an average of $57.00 women in the us are shot and killed by their intimate partners . a number of these offenders were prohibited from having guns because of their criminal records. but we don't know how many because no one's keeping track. for nearly a year, i've been collecting and analyzing data on domestic violence homicides, and more than 20 states coming through thousands of pages of court filings and police reports. i found that over a recent 4 year period,
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at least 90 people were convicted, charged for implicated, and the death of their partners and others using guns they weren't allowed to have under federal law. johnson partner terrace was one of them. oh, in 2014, he was convicted of domestic violence, assault against girlfriend. he lived with which should have prohibited him from having a firearm. but this was spell out how guns should be relinquished or taken away, their enforced sporadically or in turn his case not at all. no, he carried a gun throughout his 3 year relationship with jasmine. i remember him showing me a gun or something. i don't know if i saw him carrie or son in their room on time
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when he saw the gun was there for protection or something. we really know that i knew that i had a gun. did you worry about your sister and i'm currently a father. you know what that means? i always think of the videos we have of her when should just be goofy and laughing . jasmine very charismatic. she fun. some are she ok? she went to college and she was 17. she graduated pretty young. she was one of the lot of energy she like to dance in pictures and art work. she just amazing person. yeah. ah.
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she bought a house at 21 years old. she still worked 2 jobs aren't played soccer and was abused. i just don't know how she did all that exercise with kitchen. oh, why? she sent me a video some more on january 16th. my faith is gorgeous. she was taking care of one of her patients years. you can tell me, i just want to do exercises with you. crazy home. i know my hands are always cold, but my hearts were right now. last time i heard jasper's voice. when was the 1st time you had a bad feeling? who's kind of from the beginning? he would always be where she was. if they were here, he was here with her. if she had to go to work, he would go with her. that was my 1st clue and i was like, doesn't this guy have a job or something like he never left her alone?
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i went to the house in less than a handful of times. i wasn't allowed to go over there and he would isolate her, keep her away from us. we didn't get us here very often. or if we did it was he was around like look at her like she couldn't laugh or being goofy anymore. ringback that's how i kind of started noticing her personality changed. ringback ringback ringback we knew something was wrong, so interesting. not knowing that like my sister is getting abused by somebody that we talked to on a daily basis. we were totally oblivious for like 2 years because they were together for awhile and i think it was like in the summer we found out like she like randomly something like a dr.
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house in time doing that to me like thinking about everything a be an interview with the victim. jasmine, well i understand you fuck somebody down. what led to that ellen and he got the gun and i thought he was there bulletin to maxine that she floated. okay. do you think i should still with you? and i was like on the ground is saying please, please, please, please. okay. like went in to the room. hello. i'm on the back and it does run
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a been through the question, iraq, because i didn't want to run the road. i've been in a coma, a big me with question i came up here to stop like i was trying to fix it. like one of the security cars i went on a call i long ago was scared. like he's in a okay. that would be the 1st person that he did go to her. i just wanted to let her know, i think over
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a number it at all. and when she came to hug me, she didn't have shoes on and she add marks on her neck marks on her arms. her back was all tore up and her shirt was basically barely hanging on the sleeve was talking. she's like, mom, it was my fault, it was my fault, my. it's not your fault. you for deal? i didn't find charging you semester friends are going to solve the deadly weapon. domestic violence, kidnapping terrace was arrested and liter charged with 2 felonies. he was ordered not to have any firearms under $7500.00. here to quit, no acts of domestic violence, possession of firearms,
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have no contact with jasmine of any sort except for legal proceedings. and you're not to go back within 3 blocks of her residence to understand that. yeah, thank you mr. for doing. but the judge stopped there. once again. terrace was in order to surrender his gun despite his domestic violence record. the laws are incomplete. it doesn't say that the judges have to order police officers to go get those guns. it doesn't say that they have to do a follow up hearing to make sure that the person actually turned in a gun like they were ordered. so basically we're operating on, on our system, but i think it since a really terrible message to both survivors who are being told we don't really have her back. and we are going to issue this order, but we're not going to do anything to make sure that you're actually safe. and i think it, it also sends the absolutely wrong message to perpetrators that they can break the
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law that they can endanger the lives of their partners. and other people ah, after 2 weeks in jail terrace was released on bond. and according to police reports he went on to abuse. jasmine in november 2017. jasmine ran out of her house to escape terrace. some of it was caught on a neighbor security camera. she told detectives about that night. i was about to take a shower and i just got scared. i just ran. hi, jasmine is heard yelling for home as terrace leads her back inside. oh with can you tell me why you got scared? he was upset. i didn't do i just. it is when we get away to feel
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like a village leave like i like i'm being pushed and pulled in feeling you dinging a bigger hole. i don't know what to do. jasmine was killed 2 months later, 6 months, 6 times 30 name that the court allowed him to be around her knowing he had a gun, the cards knew, the investigators knew the police knew he had a gun. and there is nobody in forest
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i found these gaps in the system, in cases across the country. i knew that he was, i supposed to have a gun because he was a convicted felon. i figured that they would keep track of that, you know, the officers, the officials that are supposed to, oh, lisa rucker's older sister ashley began dating chad after in 2014. by then cat had been convicted of stocking, an ex girlfriend, and shooting into her house as a felon. under both federal and florida law. he was prohibited from possessing a firearm. but he carried one. anyway, multiple people and told ashley, including my father that he was going to killer, we had heard about him hitting her with a pistol. she told me that she told me that he hit her in the head with a gun. not someone told me they will not get
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out of my apartment. my sister's boyfriend. why have any weapons you know? so that night when did you realize he had a gun? when he pulled it out. he walked past me past ashley. he pulls out a rifle and he points it out and every part of me was like, not really going to shoot me. as i turned my head down, it was everything with black. i heard a loud noise. hello, guys, remember my god. when i came to the 1st time, ashley was about 6 feet away from me. i just saw blood around her head.
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chad shot lisa and ashley before fleeing. according to police. the bullet had way in the back of my head here in came out my cheek. it next my carotid artery, and it basically shattered my mandible bone in to pieces. oh oh, i kept saying help me. i'm dying. help me. i'm dying. but apparently my, my jaw was so messed up the you couldn't even hear me, sir. hello. that was just gurgling. i, ashley and lisa sons were there. we were $9.00 and $4.00 at the time. i looked over and i saw my nephew standing over my sister. and he is crying. and i as cold noticed that i was awake, ears,
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he came over to me and i said, mommy, please don't die. well ah, lisa was in a coma for 2 days. ashley was shot once in the head and died of her injuries. she was 30 years old. do you think if he had his gun taken away ashley would still be alive. yes. i do. if he wasn't there with the gun, that would have happened. oh. ringback chad was indicted for several felonies, including 1st degree murder. i contacted him in jail for an interview. i wanted to ask him how he got the gun, but he and his lawyer didn't get back to us in the long run around here. and my daughter's caught someone needs to start being
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held accountable. and what happened with chad is not unusual. over the past several months, i've spoken with a number of families whose loved ones were killed by their abusers. and that is exactly what happened to my domestic violence. fenders are rarely ordered to surrender their firearms and women are 5 times more likely to be murdered when their abusers have access to a gun. why should be here with her son? a son should have his mother. what should happen if i had an answer? i would have my daughter here. who was at fault here is that the justice system is a long foresman. is it that we have weak laws? all of the above. i think enforcement is expensive and it's challenging. it requires a lot of coordination between all different stages of law enforcement rate between police and prosecutors and probation officer is and sheriff's department to make sure that that gone is actually taken away. and that type of coordination is just
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not something that people have decided it's worthy of putting resources into why was no one, no one from the judicial system or lease officers, no one decided to say, hey, this is a convicted felon. and is reported that he has a weapon. so why don't we just go and, you know, get a warrant search or house to find it. take it, let's get it back. you know, obviously the legal we failed that victim because we didn't have a framework in place where we could go and take that fire right now. is the wild west as far as guns in the hands of abusers. and i introduce legislation because i don't believe has to be that way. congressman swallows legislation would require the federal government to develop procedures for abusers to relinquish their guns,
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but without enough support. the legislation died in congress twice. he introduced it again earlier this year, but it's unlikely it'll pass in today in america, the right front of the user to own a gun is greater than the right of a victim, to be se, finding a way to account for the number of firearms that someone has as important as to enforce relinquishment. we are truly flying in the blind. so why have a law on the books if it's not being in force and it's not working right, we need to fix that. we shouldn't have laws in the books that are just for show. the laws really can't do anything if we don't have a way to verify whether a defendant has a firearm in the home. we don't know of the country how many people are prohibited who have firearms and that's terrified.
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ah, is anyone we know it's the bureau of alcohol, tobacco, firearms and explosives? are the atf agency in charge of enforcing the nation gun laws? how many people are prohibited from having guns because of felony convictions and qualifying domestic violence, misdemeanors. oh, i don't know that number. i'm not sure anyone knows that number with precision and how many domestic violence homicides are being committed by people who are not allowed to have gone. i don't have that number. so you don't know how many people have died at the hands of partners who are prohibited possessors, and we don't know how many parameter possessors are out there. i don't we certainly track the number of firearms that we c 's. but our mission is focused on investigating violations of federal laws and not following up on local
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misdemeanor domestic alex convictions. as far as we know, we reveal are the only ones who've been collecting data on prohibited offenders who kill their partners. the reason that the federal government isn't doing this is complicated. most convictions that make people federally prohibited happen in state courts and not information doesn't always make its way to federal officials. just the american system that it's very decentralized. these convictions and domestic violence restraining orders are issued across the country and local courts. and in each of those places, i have an opportunity to identify the violations early on. tragically, a lot of these only come to law enforcement's attention when something terrible was happen, shot worth in the heart was the lay shot in the hem,
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the entire sport kill them. so this country doesn't do prevention particularly well. the fact that the system is reactive is really the core of the problem. we don't take the trouble take the time to actually take the gun away before they can harm another person. we punish them on the back end. and by that time, it's off until the hang up is that americans love their guns. americans own more guns per capita than any other developed country. and we are loath to take them away even in situations like this one. we don't know how terrorist got the hand gun he used to kill jasmine or how chad got the rifle. he's accused of using to shoot ashley and lisa and we may never know
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there were reports of him having a weapon. he should have been more regulated. not only are there very few mechanisms to make sure guns are taken away from printed offenders. there's also no national firearm registry and federal law and some states don't require background checks for private gun sales. there needs to be a better way to enforce that. felons don't have access to weapons. i know it's hard . i get that they can get one way or another, steal it, buy it off the streets, whatever. so go one step ahead. be one step ahead of them. i feel like a lot of government people don't see how bad of an issue. it really is. they don't see the ripple effect from it. after ashley's death, her son moved to another state to live with his dad, who lisa hasn't seen her nephew in several years. and her son hasn't been the same
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since a shooting. he is withdrawn. he used to be just o been different. he always tells me how much he misses my sister and my nephew, i'm worried that it will stick with him forever. you know, they say children are resilient or they're, they're not supposed to see that there as, as a go through that. it's crazy to think it'll be 22 next year they made she was a hit me like clever, weird birthday next year. it's just hard not having jazz around
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with the option of extending it for another 15 days without congress's approval, with detailed coverage, with his rights group in southeast asia, say they confirmed about the rise in reported cases of working conditions from around the world government, unsecured agencies up described, arisen incident as warren with the aim of this stabilizing the country. ah, this civilian lead transitional government should be immediately restored. the bypass administration condemns the coincidence and suspends millions of dollars of aides in results. ah, lose it on thousands. cameron's in the streets to protest against the numbers you take over. the 7 people are killed in firing on security forces.
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