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tv   Cuomo Prime Time  CNN  May 26, 2020 10:00pm-11:00pm PDT

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bob served two terms in the south dakota house of representatives after a career in banking. his son said his dad wanted to go in politics because he loved the state so much and wanted to serve the people of south dakota and he did that. bob glanzer was 74 years old. yasmin pena was in 12th grade at the waterbury magnet school in connecticut. yasmin was involved in theater and the performing arts. she was popular with students and teachers. they say she was the kind of girl, who always had a smile on her face and was always laughing. she wanted to go on to become a fashion designer and study theater. family called her their ray of sunshine and they say their home is now dark without her. yasmin pena was 18 years old. news continues right now want to hand it over to chris cuomo for prime time. thank you very much ander. i am chris cuomo, and this is "prime time." nearly 100,000 americans dead
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and this president is playing games over joe biden wearing a mask. not to mention, millions of other americans now doing the same. how about the clowns, who are ready to double down on the death toll because they want to get their party on for the holiday? let's bring back sanjay gupta with some new information about the antibody tests that we're all hoping will help speed up or make more clear, our ability to get outside. then, another story we just have to take on. i can't breathe, said this victim, over and over again. i'm not talking about eric garner. this obscene, new video showing a minneapolis cop keeping his knee on a suspect's neck, as that man begged for mercy, before he was pronounced dead soon after. demands, answers, we have senator amy klobuchar here for exactly that. remember, she's not just a senator from minnesota. she was a county prosecutor there. and should the arbery killing in georgia be treated as a hate crime? that's what the family wants, and for the first time since the arrest of william roddie bryan, the man who took that video, now he has murder charges against
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him. his lawyer is here. is he ready to answer questions? if not, it's going to be a hell of a short interview. together as ever as one, what do you say? let's get after it. all right. the three-day weekend was about honoring the ultimate sacrifice of our fallen warriors who fought for our freedoms. wi we know that, but let's be honest. it also marked a renewed enjoyment of those freedoms. people were able to get out. many, for the first time. parks, beaches, restaurants in a lot of areas, all open again. and look. let's forget this bs about who wants to reopen or not. we all want to reopen. we all want to see more of what we just showed you. the big concern was proved out as well. how you reopen matters. i could show you example after example after example of people acting like fools. not just, you know, not having any sense for their own safety
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but the safety of others. and that's not loving misery. that is embracing the mentality of caring for others. now, just to be fair, for every one of the examples i could show of doing it the wrong way, there are so many more who did it the right way. you wore the mask. do you want to wear a mask? no. but is it that big a deal? not really. isn't it worth it just to get outside? you kept your distance. you acted like you had some sense. like you care about somebody, other than yourself. video of that isn't going to get played on loops or shared all over social media feeds but it should. because reality here is going to be driven by two things. okay? perception and what i have been calling the x factor. tolerance. okay. there are only a couple options here. what we want to be true and what is demonstrably true. one is about feeling and the other is about fact. either way, i argue to you, the
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answer remains the same thing. testing. okay? and that requires more than printing up banners and saying the same thing over and over again. >> we have done more testing than any country in the world. we've done more testing than any country -- we've done more testing than any country. we've done more testing than every other nation combined. >> now, look, it's not about doing more than other countries. it's about doing enough for this country. and we all know we don't know what the hell's going on with our numbers. remember, the president has already told you why we don't know what's going on, because he doesn't like testing. >> when you test, you find something is wrong with people. if we didn't do any testing, we would have very few cases. >> see, it's not just that he's not so good with the language. he means what he says, and he said it the right way. for him, testing shows something that is wrong. he doesn't want anything to be wrong.
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he wants covid to go away. he wants to ignore the realities. that's why he is shutting up the scientists. see, thinking that way means that, somehow, the number of cases is going to prevent us from reopening as quickly. that's why he doesn't want to do it. but then forgets the simple fact. think about it. if you're like me and you want to reopen, finding the cases, giving me the facts, will do two things. one, give me some sense of how to make this judgment for me and my family. and, two, the more cases you find, the more people you test, what else will you do? you're going to bring down the death rate precipitously. why? because you're going to find a lot more cases, but you're also going to find that people aren't dying at the rate that we now believe them to be. why? because we have an exaggeratedly low number of cases. it's going to reduce fear and that's the true hurdle here to restarting our economy. it's not just about reopening the businesses. it's reopening our minds and our wallets to want to go out and spend, right? that's the semblance of normal. demand.
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that's commerce. the only reason to avoid testing isn't about bad outcomes. it's about bad politics. the kind of politics that turns the one thing that we could all do to stay safe into a symbol of weakness. >> can you take it off? because i cannot hear you. >> i'll just speak louder, sir. >> okay, because you want to be politically correct. go ahead. >> politically correct. right. right versus left. us versus them. even covid has become part of a political contagion. masks are worn because they help, but they don't help his cause and that's why he's mocking them. but remember what happened when it was about his heinie and not yours, right? when the valet, when the staffer got sick, what happened in the white house? check your facts. even on fox, they're going to get this right. they tested everybody daily.
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they traced. they all wear masks. so what is the truth? he's not wearing the mask, but what does he do to protect himself? masks. testing. tracing. even if you accept the absurd notion of trading lives for economic speed, think about this. the one thing that the cdc says the key to reopening schools, restaurants, workplaces, the same thing this president derides, cover your face. for a man who claims to be a super genius, you would think he'd be all over the branding opportunity to sell more merch. maga masks, baby. how about keep america safe instead of great? throw them on there. have them made in china like your other stuff. this is no longer about setting a bad example. he's now using the power of the white house to try to weaponize common sense. >> look. you know, the president's excited to see that joe emerged from the basement. it is a bit peculiar, though,
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that in his basement, right next to his wife, he's not wearing a mask. but he's wearing one outdoors when he's socially distanced. so i think there was a discrepancy there. >> discrepancy big word. the following question was isn't that the guidance? it's not about what you do with family and people you have already been exposed to. oh, yeah. got to check that transcript about the time she spent at harvard because that is just dumb what was said there. you know the guidance. we're not asking you to wear masks in your basement with your family. we all know that. why would the press secretary mangle it? poison politics. us and them. masks are dumb. going out during a pandemic with no mask, yeah, have fun! this is crazy town. the reason so many states have reopened without seeking or seeing a dramatic spike in bodies is because of people doing it the right way. it's not about reopening. it's always been about how.
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if you can't socially distance, you wear a mask when you're in close contact with people. not in your basement. we need more of that. and less of people who see this president and say stuff like this. >> i mean, if he's not wearing a mask, i'm not going to wear a mask. if he's not worried, i'm not worried. >> any reporter knows you can always find people to give you a few absurd sound bites. i've never been a big fan of that type of reporting, to be honest. but how many of those people you think are going to flock to charlotte if this president is able to bully his way to the made-for-tv moment he so craves. an arena packed with republican delegates? how many do you think will follow his lead on masks? you really think that guy is that unique? how many of them will then travel back to communities all over this country just like happened in spring break in florida. now, look. they may not want to count people who get sick and die in
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that state if they're not permanent residents, weird in florida with all those snow birds, what a nice choice for them to make. but then everybody else goes back home. what about everywhere else? what about everyone else? you don't have to be the chief doctor to know that is a recipe for harm. luckily, we do have the chief doctor with us, sanjay gupta, to help us out here. sanjay, always good to see you, brother. in terms of what you witnessed this weekend and what surveillance showed of how people handled this big appetite of getting back out there. what did you like? what did you not like? >> i think it's just how you framed it, chris. there's obviously some just absolutely crazy, unacceptable scenarios out there. the ozark, houston, you know, here, in atlanta. i mean, more than a dozen kids, high school seniors, all tested positive after a graduation party. so there is a virus out there. it is still very contagious. that hasn't changed. i mean, that's what always sort of alarms me about this, chris. when we first went into pause mode, back middle of march, fewer than 80 people had died at
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that point, and there were some 4,000, 5,000 people who had been affected. the virus hasn't changed and now we're at the numbers that we see. close to 100,000 people have died, and we're -- we're reopening. i think what the good news is, is the other part of what you said, though. and, that is, that i go around and i realize this isn't a bifurcated, either open or closed, situation. you do have people who -- who are out there, but are -- are practicing physical distancing, are wearing a mask. and we got better evidence now over the last few weeks that it really does work. new article just came out in "science" magazine showing the benefits, actually quantifying the benefits of wearing a mask in terms of decreasing your viral, you know, expulsion into the environment. we knew it was effective. but now, you're actually starting to quantify it. even seeing the numbers come down, the models come down, in terms of projected deaths. we'll see because the models are always wrong. some are useful. we'll figure that out. but yeah, it's alarming to see some of the scenes that we show. but i got to believe, chris,
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that the majority of people, more than half, are doing the right thing. >> and, look, doing anything is better than doing nothing in a situation like this, in terms of doing things that can have a preventative effect. now, one of the things i encountered was people come up to me and saying lots of nice things. but, also, hey, you don't need a mask. you got the antibodies. everybody's talking about antibody tests and the hope to have them. i saw all these people who were so upset who said i had the antibodies and then i got retested, and i don't have them anymore. am i going to get sick? what do we know about these tests? their reliability? and what they say about where we want to be going forward? >> yeah, i think it's hard to place a lot of faith in the tests right now, and it's for a couple of reasons. first of all, i will say that, someone like you, who's gone through this, you have -- probably have antibodies. i mean, the test may find them sometimes, may not other times. you probably have them and they probably give you some degree of protection. we don't know how long, how strong. we got to figure that out. as far as the tests go
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themselves, there's two points. one is there were probably 60, 70 tests put out in the market that were just not validated, not very good tests. there was this rush to get tests out there. now, they are trying to go back and validate some of those tests. but there is a nuanced issue. let's see if i can explain this. in a community where you don't have that many people that have antibodies, 5% to 10% of people that antibodies, they're harder to find. so, as a result, you sort of power up your test to find them and you lose what's called your positive predictive value. it's a statistic term that basically means you run the risk now of getting lots of false positives which is the worst case scenario. you don't want to tell people they have the antibody when they don't because it will give a false sense of security even though they shouldn't. as you get more people exposed, take, for example, new york. larger population actually exposed. the reliability, if you will, of the test, goes up.
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so as you have more people exposed to this virus, the idea that you're going to correctly identify those that have antibodies, the likelihood will go up. we're not there, yet, at this point. so someone like you, you know, you are sort of stuck in limbo. you know you have antibodies. a lot of people going getting tested right now. they're not going to get a test result that's going to give them confidence. and they're still going to wonder did i have it? did i not have it? and makes me wonder, chris, with you, you know, you went through this, and we used to talk every night about how you were feeling and all that. couple weeks out now, because recovery's a complicated thing, how are you doing now? >> it's a loaded question, sanjay, because you know the answer. look. people who've been through this have strange tales to tell and not a lot of great answers from doctors to weird stuff in their blood work. i'm one of them. i still have weird stuff going on with my lungs. i'm not back to where i was before i had the virus, but i can work. i can hang out. i can engage with my family. i'm going to be able to do plasma donations, which i want to do with you, together, to
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show the audience how it works if people are able to do that. but i'm not 100%. and there is funky stuff in my blood work that doctors say is what they see in people who have covid. so, freaks me out a little bit. but commiserate say word for a reason. people like to suffer together. so as long as there are other people who have the same kind of funky blood work, i'll just keep taking it one day at a time. thank you for asking. as relevant, i am always telling people about the experience. we'll do the plasma thing together and so people will learn about it. i got to jump. sanjay, you're the man and thank you, as always. >> you got it, buddy. >> now, look. we all want to reopen. i want to focus on the positive. i think it's really helpful for us to do that. that's why i'm pushing the testing and pushing numbers so much. i think more data's going to be more better, especially if we want to reopen. but this video from missouri that i showed you at the top. this is not freedom. okay? this is foolishness. the republican governor there says these were poor decisions. what does the mayor of st. louis call it? perspective from leadership. next.
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i'll start... oh, do you want to go first? new voltaren is powerful arthritis pain relief in a gel. no, no i don't...you go. i was just going to say on slide 7, talking about bundling and saving...umm... jamie, you're cutting out. sorry i'm late! hey, whoever's doing that, can you go on mute? oh, my bad! i was just saying there's a typo on slide 7.
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bundle home & auto for big discosnouts. i think that's supposed to say discounts. you sure about that? hey, can you guys see me? all right. did you see this? this video of the ozarks crowds standing elbow to elbow. i know it was firing all over the place on social media. the question is what message does it send? being like this. shoulder to shoulder at the lake of the ozarks in missouri. masks? nobody's masking anything in that scene, let alone their lack of concern for everyone they're going to go home to. now, why? because missouri has been completely spared? no. it's got about 12,000 cases. far from the worst in the country. but cases there, actually going up in the past week, somewhere around just south of 10%. and that was before this. now, why do we care? well, because it's about how we reopen and what is smart and what isn't.
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how scenes like this may slow down progress for the rest of the country. lake of the ozarks is a popular weekend spot for all over the state of missouri, obviously. so the behavior could have an impact on other cities because, remember, those people are going back to other places like we saw on spring break, in florida. in fact, several officials in nearby areas are urging people from their cities who parties at the lake over the weekend to quarantine for 14 days. good luck with that. one of those city mayors is st. louis mayor lyda krewson. ms. mayor, thank you very much. >> thank you, so much. appreciate being on with you, chris. >> the pleasure is ours. thank you for your service. thank you for being with us during this time. now, i want to contrast where your head is on this with the mayor of osage beach. okay. obviously, that's where this happened. the mayor there, john olivari, said responsibility is up to individual people. if people made the conscious decision to come down here and
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participate, they made the decision. do i feel bad the businesses have opened up and gave the employees the opportunity to go to work to feed their families, absolutely not. that is the binary situation that we find ourselves in right now. which is you either destroy business and ruin peoples' lives or public safety. we've been arguing it shouldn't be binary. but the mayor is playing on how most people see it. what's your message? >> well, chris, i don't think it's binary at all. but i think the folks that are in those shots engaged in very risky behavior, and i hope, you know -- the lake of the ozarks is a really popular place not just for st. louisans to go but people all over the midwest. and those people are going home either last night or maybe today to their own communities. and that is a very risky proposition. i know that they don't want their families to get sick. they don't want their friends to get sick.
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they don't want their grandma to get sick. but that risky behavior increases that risk every day. so it's certainly possible to go to the lake of the ozarks, and i know many people world health organization kept to themselves, kept to their own families and enjoyed themselves perfectly well. but this group of folks that you see in the videos were engaging in very risky behavior, which affects other people, not just themselves. >> one point of perspective on politics and then one on the past. the politics, major, this is all about the d next to your name. you want to keep people at home and afraid because it screws up the economy, and you think that helps you guys beat trump. and you just love the control and the power over people and their freedoms. that's what you democrats are about. you're playing the long game on the president's side and the short game of controlling peoples' freedoms because you love it. >> actually, i want people to be able to go out. i want our businesses to be able to open. and the more we're able to socially distance and wear masks, the more businesses will
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be able to open and the more people will be comfortable going out. this is a terrible decision, between health and business, because frankly, we need both and we can do both if we will just wear a mask. this is my mask that i wear most of the time. it's got a little st. louis flag on it. we can do both. it's not that much trouble for you to wear a mask. the mask should not be the third rail of politics. it should be the way, the path, to getting business reopen because it's not just about that business owner. it's about all the people who work in those businesses, who need to go back to work, who want to go back to work. but the way to have that happen is for all of us to behave responsibly, socially distance, wear a mask. >> and you guys have big portfolio on this, in pandemics past. st. louis did better than any other large city during the 1918 flu pandemic. why? implementation of early social distancing measures. they banned public gatherings,
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closed schools. you should see the chart next to philadelphia that was another mecca of the time obviously. and this is all data from the national academy of sciences. and the corollary is when they relaxed, in st. louis, social distancing policies, cases went up, and then they had to enforce them. that's the problem today. you can ask people to do things. but enforcement is a nightmare that nobody wants to take on. so how do you get people to do what you want them to do when you know you can't make them do it? >> well, i think we all have to understand that we are learning to, all of us, coexist with covid. we have to be able to do that because we don't know when we will have a vaccine. will it be six months, a year, 18 months? i don't know an answer to that. we have to figure out how to do exist with covid. and we think that the way to do that now is to be six feet apart from one another, wear a mask, and then continue to be able to have our businesses open. because we desperately do need to do that but not at the
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expense of our health. so the path to that reopening is social distancing and wearing a mask. >> major lyda krewson, thank you very much for having this conversation. i wish you good luck and good health going forward. >> thank you, chris. appreciate you. >> thank you. all right. so look. that video of people partying in a way that they really shouldn't be right now, that's one kind of problem. the next video we have to deal with tonight is an entirely different echelon of pain and should give us a different echelon of purpose. i'm not going to show it until we get back from the break, because it may be too much to take twice, frankly. but what happened in minnesota with these cops and this man, where he wound up dead, it's not just this this interaction between cops and a man of color resulted in a death. it's how it happened. and, frankly, it's about how it has happened too often, in that state and around this country. there are protests going on right now as we speak, and things are not going well. and i'm not talking about the weather. a man is dead. four cops are fired. but is that enough? senator amy klobuchar knows the
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police and the outraged are facing off outside a police precinct in minnesota right now. this is live picture from minneapolis. you see traffic moving. that's a good sign because it means that everything isn't shut down there outside the police precinct. i give you context like that because it was worse a little while ago. that's why you see the crowds. that's disbursement. offers fired that because there was too many daung rouse situations in their opinion. why the outrage? you see black lives matter signs. people have come there because of the death of george floyd, the black man who died yesterday
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in police custody shortly after a white officer was seen kneeling on his neck. cnn's team witnessed people throwing debris at officers, the front window of the precinct was also smashed during the events there. we will keep an eye on the video. i'm not going to show it gratuitously, but if there are changes, we'll go back to it. more important for point of analysis is to show you the video that fed into all of this, fed into the outrage. it was captured by a bystander. i'm telling you as always, this is not easy to watch. but if you want to know the truth of the situation, you cannot hide your eyes from what we're able to show. it's all ugly. imagine what it is for his family. imagine what it was like for him. if you care about this, watch this. where's the body camera footage? we're told it exists, but it is not released at this point so i can't show you what they have and what happened leading up to
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the arrest nor what police have described as floyd resisting arrest. here's what i can show you. >> i can't breathe. i can't breathe. >> i've been trying to help out. >> i can't breathe. >> one of my homeys died. >> what are you on? >> i can't breathe. please, i can't breathe. [ bleep ]. >> now look, you may remember that kind of saying, that kind of plea, i can't breathe. it became a metaphor for the eric garner case here in new york. this video goes on for ten or so minutes. people standing nearby -- you hear what they're saying. they're asking the officers to let him up. police say floyd died at a hospital a short time later and
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that no weapons were used at any time by floyd or the officers. four officers were involved. they have all been terminated by the police force. is that tend of the story? minnesota senator amy klobuchar says the firing is a step in the right direction. she joins me now. senator, thank you for making the time, especially last-minute notice. >> thank you, chris. >> i appreciate you taking the time to do it. what is your reaction to the situation, and why do you call it a first step? >> anyone that looks at that video knows that this is very, very wrong. inane cares about justice, about law enforcement, about our african-american community. i spent the day talking to the mayor, talking to the attorney general keith ellison, talking to our african-american leaders, and this is the first step because the police chief, our african-american police chief immediately terminated the four officers at the scene. and that was the right thing to do. but now the offices of the
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county attorney as well as the fbi and outside investigations are taking place from this state. so, these cases can be considered immediately fairly but swiftly for criminal charge because you just can't have something like this happen. he was pleading for his life, and outsider ws were telling th officer very clearly he can't breathe, he can't breathe. this was not a sudden mistake or a procedure gone bad. this was over a period of time. >> senator, what is your perspective on why there have been as many of these types of situations in minneapolis, let alone the state, in the last ten years? at least 11 have died in this type of scenario. of course 24-year-old jamar clark sparked week of protests. that case is still somewhat in
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dispute. but common elements are people of color die, almost always people of color, almost never any prosecution of the cops involved even if they are fired. and more often than not, settlements with the family. to the lay people, non-lawyers, what do you got to settle with if the officer didn't need to be prosecuted? why does it go that way as often as it has in minnesota, in minneapolis? >> i think the most famous case was the cass teal case was a young man who was loved who worked at a school got shot in his own car when he was pulling out his conceal carry permit. and that officer was prosecuted. that was in the neighboring county. i supported that prosecution. and the jury didn't agree with the prosecutor in that case. i think what is happening right now is that finally people are starting to see videos of some of these cases. i think over time that changes
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minds. but it is not enough time to change the life for someone like george flied floyd or mr. arbery, the innocent jogger who was running in georgia and gets gunned down. and those people were finally prosecuted after the video emerged. so, i think technology is changing things, and i think training is changing things. but there has to be so much more that happens. and mostly the public has to cry out for justice, not just the african-american community. >> obviously the arbery case which we're going to take on after this because we'll see one of the people charged there, his lawyer wants to come on. we'll see what he wants to talk about, what he doesn't. those aren't cops. those are private citizen who is thought they were cops in that situation. we'll take that on separately senator. a appreciate your context call on that. you know this. you have been criticized for not
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going after cops during your tenure. you would go to the grand jury if they didn't pass down a bill of indictment there with charges. then you didn't take it on your own to do so. was that worthy criticism of you at the time? do you have different perspective on it now? >> we look at each case and back then our practice was to bring the cases to the grand jury to present for criminal charges. and this happened all over the country. i have clearly said i think it is much better now for an individual prosecutor to make a decision on the case, to take that responsibility and that accountability. i know that's what will be happening in this case. that's what happened in the philan philando castille case. i think it makes more responsibility if you make the decision yourself. back then it was thought let the community help decide how these cases should be handled. and i think that you can have
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much more direct justice and responsibility if the prosecutor makes those decisions. body cameras -- >> they say they have them in this case but they haven't released it. i think that's always a mistake. the reason that you have it is for accountability to allow the police to show they were doing their job as well. the faster that gets to the ub approximat public the better. here you have bystander video. what do you say to the people of minnesota if the officers don't have charges and you see them kneeling on the throat of someone begging them to let up. no one is taught to kneel on a throat as a suppressive move. that's not proper training? what message would that send if there are no charges? >> first of all you've got to look at the evidence. to me this evidence is crying out for some kind of charge. that's the first thing i would say. i would say the second is that there are so many officers out there as you know in new york
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right now during this pandemic doing their job every day. and i know that officers including in my state look at that and they think that is wrong. that cannot happen. and that kind of message has got to be sent to the african-american community from the law enforcement community which includes the people that will be looking at that case, that they look at it fairly, that they look at this case, and that they do what's right under the law. and i can tell you there is -- and the police chief made this very clear. he met with the community -- that this is not -- this is not -- an acceptable police technique. and look what happened. >> senator amy klobuchar, it's good to see you again. i could be talking to you about covid stuff. i could be talking to you about your name about vp consideration. you didn't want it tonight. you said this matters more. that's why i'm not asking you about any of that. a appreciate and agree with your call. >> i do want to say i'm glad you got through covid like my husband did and i'm glad you're
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giving plasma like he is. that's a big deal for people to get out and do that when they've recovered from it. >> i've met him. he's stronger than i am, and he is good to be doing the plasma doe [ inaudible question ] . i hope to do the same. >> everybody wants to make sure that a use of force case is handled right so that cops don't get smeared by the bad actions of police and that we remember overwhelmingly those men and women are called heroes and for good reasons. that shooting in georgia does not fall into that category. ahmaud arbery was not killed by police. he was killed by private citizens nouchlt, the third man charges, roddie bryan, he's the man who generated the video that put all of our eyes on the situation, the video that cops had from jump and did nothing for over 70 days. his attorney is back to answer questions. if he does, we'll ask him. if he doesn't, it ends.
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developments in the case of
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ahmaud arbery in georgia. the doj is now investigating this case as a federal hate crime, which means the reason it happened was because of prejudice against color. that is according to an arbery family attorney. we have not heard from the doj, directly. most recently, investigators arrested the man who shot the video of arbery's death. william roddie bryan. he was on the show. he didn't want to talk. his attorney didn't want him to talk that much. bryan's attorney, though, kevin gough, is back he says to make the case for his client to you. welcome back to "prime time" counselor. what we've learned is from the false imprisonment warrant is that quote, the accused did attempt to confine and detain arbery without legal authority by attempting to confine utilizing his vehicle on multiple occasions with the intent of detaining arbery.
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we saw the same thing from the mcmichaels in the incident report. is that true? >> sir, mr. bryan has committed no crime. he bears no criminal responsibility in the tragic death of mr. arbery. we have demanded a speedy trial, and we're entitled to it. and we want to know when we can sit this case down for trial. and that's -- that's what i'm here to talk about. >> justice delayed is justice denied. but the question is, if you want people to believe he's committed no crime, explain why the mcmichaels and the gbi, both have determined that he tried to detain mr. arbery, with his vehicle. >> i can't speak for the arbery family attorneys. i'm certainly not going to speak for the mcmichaels' attorneys. i'm certainly not going to speak for the district attorney. and i'm certainly not going to try and prove a negative because we know it can't be done. what i am doing is asserting my client's right to a speedy trial. and we were in such a rush to have this gentleman arrested, where he is now sitting in lockdown, effectively, 23 hours a day for what may be two,
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three, or four years given the history of murder cases at glynn county. we want our speedy trial. if the gbi is half as confident of their case, as they suggested the other day in their press conference, let's go ahead and get it down. we don't need to spend weeks on jury selection. we can take the first 12 out of the box and get started. >> i'm all about not wasting time. i think we're doing a little bit of that right now. let me go at this one more time because the idea that he got arrested fast, this has been going on since february 23rd. and he's been sitting at home. so if you talk to the arbery family about what happened fast, versus slow, here, i think you get a different perspective. but let me ask you, again. you say he committed no crime. explain why the mcmichaels say he tried to detain or cut off arbery with his car. did he do that or not? you know the answer. what is it? >> i'm not chatter boxing with the mcmichaels or their attorneys. >> no, me. i'm asking the question. >> what i have said from the start is my client has committed
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no crime. he is a witness to the shooting. that is our position. we are ready for trial. and i'm just curious why we aren't asking the prosecutors why, having taken the trouble to arrest him, we're not setting this case down for trial. >> listen. there are questions for everybody. i don't think anybody can go after the gbi for taking too long, okay, after 70-plus days went by with nobody doing anything and certainly bryan didn't come forward to offer any more information on this. >> chris, let me be clear. if my client's out on bond, they could take 100 years to try this case. >> i don't care about whether he is out on bond or not. i care about you offering what you can in this forum, which is an explanation of what he did and why he did it. and i keep asking you, and you're not answering. i'm going to end it because i don't want to waste peoples' time. will you explain -- will you explain why he is accused, by the investigators and the mcmichaels, of doing what he did
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with his car? >> particularly, mr. bryan, of conduct that is not a crime. this is an unprecedented prosecution in the state of georgia. >> would it be a crime for him to try to block mr. arbery with his car? >> those are the questions that >> those are the questions the american people need to be asking. >> let's worry about what questions i'm asking. if he was blocking mr. arbery with his car in these circumstances, it would certainly be a crime. did he do that? >> you and i have a different view. what i'm not going to do is try this case in the media. we're going to try this case in court. >> but why would anybody think he's innocent? in would anybody -- listen, mr. gough, forget your lawyer hat for a second. just be a human being. if you're watching this at home, why would you think roddie bryan is anything other than he's suspected of especially when the accused pinpoint him in the incident report as trying to help their cause? >> i don't see anybody else taking polygraphs. to my knowledge, no other
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witness has taken -- >> polygraph isn't even admissible in court. polygraph is meaningless. >> since day one -- he did that without lawyers. he did that on the day of the shooting. >> polygraph is meaningless. mr. gough, here's the easy answer to the question. here's the easy answer. let me help you out and then i'm going let you go. did roddie bryan try to stop arbery with his car? no. oh, then why do they say that? because they're believing the mcmichaels and the mcmichaels are liars. oh, did he try to help the mcmichaels? no. >> i'm not going to -- evidence in this case with you. i'm sorry, chris. that's just the way it is. i'm sorry if you were misled. >> no, no, no. >> good night. >> well, you have a good night, mr. gough. but know this. if you can't answer the simple questions, people will come to simple conclusions. but i appreciate you taking the opportunity. whether or not you made the most of it is up to the audience. all right? but i'm going to end it here. >> have a good night. >> let's move on. listen, these are simple questions. okay? does he have to answer them? of course not. you can wait for trial.
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but if you want to come on and say your guy did nothing wrong and deserves a speedy trial, everybody deserves a speedy trial. nothing about this case is speedy. dozens of days with the videotape, gbi, own state's prosecutors say what, plenty of probable cause, no brainer. 70-plus days went by. that's where speedy justice comes into play, not what mr. gough is arguing right now, because this process has just been going. a reasonable amount of time. what is not reasonable, if your guy didn't do it, say he didn't do it and explain why people think he did. that's not proving a negative. that is proving a positive that you have a strong case. more on the big coronavirus news of the day. big questions on the antibody tests. i know everybody's wondering whether to get them. dr. william schaffner will help us understand the plus/minus next. okay, where were we? yeah, i'm done after this meeting.
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covid is political now. i cannot believe it. i really didn't think that we would get to this place, but here we are. masks, testing. they're a left/right issue. no longer about reasonable. just crazy because we should all be on the page of how do we get re-opened and be safe? dr. william schaffner has always been on that page and that's why we always ask him on. let's deal with a meatball and then i'll give you a curveball. the meatball is, masks? i'm not into political correctness, doc, they're a joke, covid's no big deal, i'm going maskless, i'm too pretty. what do you say, doc? >> wear the mask. please, wear the masks. the masks are absolutely critical. we know they work. they suppress infection and, remember, i'm wearing the mask to protect you. you're wearing the mask to
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protect me. we're protecting each other. we're in this together. if we're going to go ahead, and we want to do this, to open things up we must do it carefully and sensibly and that includes wearing masks. >> somewhere in the white house a man with a tan face is shaking his head and saying listen to these lefties trying to scare everybody into covering their faces. not on my watch. >> chris, as you know, the virus has no politics. it knows no boundaries. it doesn't care whether you're up, down, left or right. it's going to infect you if it can. and the only thing we medical people are interested in doing is prevention. benjamin franklin had it right, an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. let's try to prevent these infections and not have people get sick, particularly the elderly, particularly people with underlying chronic illnesses. they'll get severe disease. >> gotcha.
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>> let's protect each other. >> doctor, quickly, what is your level of confidence in the antibody tests and whether or not having antibodies is license to feel good about going outside? >> well, it's a bit of a longer story, now that we have these tests, what are we going to do with them? even the newer tests that are coming in that are pretty rigorous, let me introduce you to a concept. sanjay mentioned it in the previous segment. the -- this is a little like a fisherman fishing in two lakes, one with a lot of fish and one with few fish. if you fish in the lake with a lot of fish, you reel it in when you get a strike, you're very likely to have a fish. that's a true positive. but if you fish in a lake with very few fish and something holds your hook and you reel it in, half the time it's going to be weeds or a tin can. a false positive. if we start using these tests among people who have a very low risk of having been infected,
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we'll get more false positives than true positives and we'll be in an even more difficult situation because we can't tell the tin cans from the fish. they all look positive. >> you can't just test. you have to test in a smart way. to have the right test for the right kind of population. i got you, dr. schaffner. we've got to get it right. we just have to make sure we have the effort behind the need and right now that's what i'm not seeing enough of. i definitely get your analogy as someone who fishes a lot but catches rarely. thank you very much, dr. schaffner. i wish you well. good health and good luck. thank you. and thank you for watching. "cnn tonight" with d. lemon, the man, starts right now. there he is. >> don't i know how little you catch. i know from personal experience. you catch very little when you fish. >> first of all, listen -- >> it's the truth. >> you have seen pictures of what i've caught. you've eaten what i've caught. >> that's the thing. no, no, no, i've seen pictures of what you claim you caught. >> you have eaten what i caught. >> i've eaten what you claim.

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