tv CNN Newsroom CNN June 16, 2020 10:00am-11:01am PDT
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i strong oppose the radical and dangerous efforts to defend, dismantle and dissolve our police departments now and especially now. the lowest crime rates in history. americans know the truth without police there is chaos. without law there is anarchy and without safety there is catastrophe. >> abby philips is live in tulsa, oklahoma ahead of the president's rally there this weekend. the president is pressured to address what is happening across the country. what is he going to offer? >> he has. this is part of the effort of the white house to show he is gauged on this issue that he is listening to what is happening out in the streets. he met with some families of victims of police violence and at the white house before coming out to the rose garden.
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this executive order and it's being described by some as modest. by and large, it provides recommendations. it establishes standards for police officers or police departments to follow that are aimed at reducing these kinds of use of force but it does not necessarily mandate it. it tries to incentivize those standards by tying it to prioritizing those departments to federal funding. among those standards would be, you know, trying to create standards for how force is used in those departments but also this national database of so-called bad cops. again, the questions about whether or not this database would actually really be effective or to come into existence in part because this e.o. does not actually fund it. but it does encourage departments to put data into this database.
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now one of the things about this is that activists have been saying that these sorts of recommendations at the federal level are good but they are not what is needed in this moment because there are so many different standards all over the country and departments basically can decide whether they want to participate in it or not. the president also addressed cho chokeholds. he would ban chokeholds as part of this executive order but that is not exactly what is going to happen. the issue on chokeholds is again, incentivized by federal funding but not mandated. it's one of those things it's up to individual departments, up to individual states as to whether or not they actually engage with the recommendations that are put in place by this executive order. >> he's been incredibly murky for instance on cheokeholds. he claimed that president obama never worked on police reform?
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>> reporter: right. which is clearly not true. the obama administration did work on police reform and it was notable that while president trump tried repeatedly to take credit for what has been done, whether it is the first step act or this executive order, he did not acknowledge that one of the main obstacles for police reform in the past has been the republican party, by and large. these reforms are not necessarily popular among his own party and it's in some ways reflected in how modest this executive order is. the president is moving forward on certain things by offering recommendations but it will still be left up to congress and up to a bipartisan effort which will involve republicans and democrats to see where there can be common ground on these tough issues and a sense that republicans are not willing to do as far as some democrats are. the obama administration did spend quite a lot of time on
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this and put in measures at the department of justice that were rolled back by the trump administration. that part of the president's remarks were clearly not true. >> all right. there is other stuff we will sort out in this hour. thank you. joining me now, is a former police officer in richmond, virginia, for us you. joe, what kind of impact will this executive order actually have? >> absolutely nothing. it will not do anything to correct police brutality which is the issue. you can't have a recommendation that is fixing police. that is not going to work. police entities operate within their own culture. they have been doing it for many, many years. we need real legislation that is going to stop and punish. in my book, police brutality, i gave recommendations and people in congress really want to stop this police brutality issue. i'll be more than happy to volunteer my services.
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what we need to do is we need to understand the root of the problem. a lot of these recommendations, a lot of the departments already have that in policy. we could take officer pantleon. there is policy saying you don't do that. they are not being punished or held accountable when they violate policy. since the police department don't want to hold them accountable, we need legislation that is going to prosecute and convict officers when they don't follow procedures and don't follow policies. i drafted a whole list of recommendations that i know working from the inside/out in the culture of policing that would just wipe away police brutality. we got to stop playing games and understand what the real issue is. >> david, what did you think about what you heard? >> yes, ma'am. >> the president announce? >> i haven't had the chance to take a look at the executive order on paper yet. but based on what i heard, i am disappointed. i think it is a slap in the face
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of every who has been out protesting around the world for the past several weeks. i think it's a slap in the face of those who have lost their lives where they were talking about minneapolis, atlanta, or right here in dallas, texas. i think it's a slap in the face of those who mourn the loved ones they have lost. i base that on ten years working daily with law enforcement. this executive order will not change anything and, right now, the public is asking for meaningful change. this is not it. >> then what does it say, david, we had initial reporting that the president might include guidelines that would limit the use of chokeholds and then we don't hear him talk about that. what does that signal in look. i think a number of policies we have heard president trump, even sometimes on foreign policy, he'll essentially have a policy and then he doesn't quite describe it the same way as he is messaging it. what is the effect of there even perhaps being a discrepancy there? >> the effect is a complete lack of any meaningful change. in order to change the culture
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of policing in our country, we are going to have to change the way we assess police conduct. right now, it always turns what the officer believes is reasonable and not what is actually reasonable. i didn't hear any discussion about that at all. but i think that idea is really hard for people to understand sometimes. i'd like to use a common sense example. there is a notorious story of me in my family of me kicking a soccer ball through a church window. when my mom showed up, she said what happened? i said i didn't mean to. she said you didn't mean to but you should have known better. if we put that language into the way i told my mom i thought the way i kicked the soccer ball was reason. my mom would say it doesn't matter. it isn't reasonable. compromised yimmunity stops us having that conversation. that's why we need measures that will hold officers accountable when they use excessive force. >> joe, can we talk to the idea
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of incentivizing? basically, that is not having negative consequences but emphasizing the positive consequences for doing things correctly but not as much the negative consequences for doing things incorrectly. look. lives hang in the balance here. what do you think about that? >> i think that is ineffective and not going to work. you allow a police department to do what it's been doing and policing itself and trying to -- with good behavior that is not going to work. the police culture is always going to do exactly what it is going to do until we implement something that is going to say you know what? if you don't follow policy and training we hold you accountable and that means you commit a crime, you get prosecuted, go to jail, to prison. it takes one officer who violate a policy. a strong message.
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we are not playing. we provide you training and we provide policy and give you all of these tools and measures to go out and serve a community and when you violate it there is repercussions from if. i guarantee you that will change the mindset of law enforcement. >> you talked about pantleo. it took five years before he was fired. thank you both for the conversation. armed militia members arrested in new mexico after shots ring out while prefers try to pull down a statue. see what happened. hear why more officers are resigning across america as the unrest continues. a new model projects a second wave of coronavirus will hit america sooner than expected? airlines are starting to ban passengers who refuse to wear masks. this is cnn's special live coverage. t-mobile and sprint are joining forces to power your business. we're building a 5g network that will deliver unprecedented reach and reliability, and the highest capacity in history.
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it is quite a chilling projection. a closely watched model estimates the u.s. could see more than 200,000 deaths from coronavirus by october 1st. this is coming as a new study shows just how susceptible different age groups are to the virus. cnn senior medical correspondent elizabeth cohen is joining us now. >> we heard from the beginning young people are not as affected by this illness as older people now it's nice to have numbers to put on it. this was a study done out of the united kingdom and it looked at numbers in various countries. not the u.s. but in many other countries. what they found is if you look at 10 to 19-year-olds, 21% of
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them show symptoms of coronavirus. people 70 and older, 69% of them have symptoms. we knew this a general concept but to see those numbers it shows you how much of a higher risk you're at if you are older. >> tell us about this preliminary study that is showing a commonly used steroid could actually reduce the risk of dying of coronavirus. >> actually, this is sort of interesting. it falls in the same category of we kind of knew this but it's good to see the data. so hospitals, especially in places like new york city that have seen a lot of covid patients, they have been treating patients who are very sick on ventilators with steroids. steroids are used in the hospital all the time. often for illnesses like covid where there is inflammation involved. so they said these are very sick people, they are on ventilators. we will try the tools in our arsenal that have worked in similar situations. and the doctors that i've talked
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to said they always kind of knew this might work. in their own experience it did. now there is data that shows that it actually does work, that it can cut these rates by about a third. so that is super important. anything we can do to get the mortality rate down in covid is important. doctors who have not been using steroids should certainly take a look at that. >> what is this we are learning that people are contract coronavirus from a toilet? how can sd thdoes that happen? >> you can contract coronavirus in so many different ways. basically, are you getting the germ from -- into your nose, into your eyes? so if you touch certain surfaces and then touch your face, you know, that can certainly happen. still when infectious disease doctors talk about the risk of getting covid, they are much more focused on what is going on person-to-person, person-to-person is, you know, still the leading way that people are getting coronavirus.
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>> be more afraid of people than toilets and services, right? it's very important to remind people of that. >> right. >> moments ago, elizabeth, at this white house event, this was not on coronavirus but we noticed there that there was a lack of socially distancing and masks among the leaders who are essentially in charge of controlling messaging. what do you think about this? >> it sounds like theater to me more than anything else. i'm going to assume that they have enough space at the white house that they can socially distance. if they choose not to social distance and if they choose not to wear masks, it's because they are trying to send a signal, hey! everything is fine! what are you people worried about? everything is just fine! look how normal we are! that is such an incredibly dangerous and irresponsible statement or sort of symbol or to put out there. that is not the case. hundreds of americans are dying every day of coronavirus.
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for the white house to put anything out that shows no social distancing or doesn't show masks, that is very dangerous. it's the opposite of the message they should be putting out. >> they are also testing everyone who comes close to the president, right? they are not mentioning that, elizabeth. there are precautions they are taking that they are not as public about as wearing masks so it sort of sends this message we are doing it this way, we are very cavalier. actually, they are not as cavalier as they are giving off there. elizabeth cohen, thank you for updating us on all things coronavirus. we know wearing masks cuts down on the risk of contracting coronavirus massively. we have seen so many people and including the president they won't wear one and forcing people in industries to make hard decisions. western learning that house speaker nancy pelosi may make is a requirement for lawmakers to wear masks at committee meetings. many airlines mandate passengers
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to wear masks and they say not enough so they are upping the penalties. cnn aviation correspondent pete will join me now. what the changes that the airlines are putting in place and why are they doing this now. >> reporter: airlines say they have to put teeth behind the rules they have had in place a few months. now if you refuse to wear a mask while on board a commercial airliner, then you will be banned potentially from flying on that airline again. seven airlines have banded together to do this. industry announcement and not something from the federal government. they have not instituted any requirements for masks. the d.o.t. sports this but stopped short of creating rules for things like seat belts and cigarettes. united's policy goes into effect on thursday and it says, in part, quote, any passenger that does not imply will be placed on an internally travel restriction list and then put up for review. now passengers have to ignore
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4r5a lot of instructions to be banned. flight attendance are trying to de-escalate situations like this and offer you a mask if you refuse to wear one and then you're written up. the goal is not to remove passengers from flights or turn a flight around. this is a really critical time for commercial airlines. passenger counts are trending up a little bit but they are still very low. airlines are trying to prove that flying again is safe and they want passengers back. the d.o.t. says this is the way to keep passengers safe on board a small environment like a commercial airliner. airlines say that they cannot continue to block out middle seats, keeping seats empty and still remain profitable. so they see this as the way forward. >> pete, thank you for that report. ahead, the fbi is now investigating the hanging deaths of two black men in california. these occurred very close to one another in time and proximity. plus, a white house adviser
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again denies systemic racism exists and he says it's because barack obama was elected. rapper will join me live what he saw in the protests in atlanta, georgia and what he wants to happen to officers involved in the killing of rayshard brooks. tristan tweeted, 'remember when any footlong was five dollars?' hit it, charlie. ♪ oh, you're five, ♪ five. ♪ five-dollar, ♪ five dollar ♪ five-dollar footlong. ♪ it's freshly made ♪ with veggies. ♪ it's back. five-dollar footlongs are back when you buy two. for a limited time. mortgage rates have now fallen to all time lows.ca. when you buy two. that's good news for veterans with va loans. that's me. by using your va streamline refi benefit, one call to newday usa can save you $2,000 a year. that's me. there's no income verification, no appraisal, and no out of pocket costs. that's me. put your va home loan benefits to good use. call my team at newday usa.
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with a simple chant tear it down. referring to a monument of spanish statue and that chant was soon placed with the ringing of gunshots. those gunshots left one man in critical condition and they were fired by a man surrounded by a group of vigilantes, and heavily armed vigilanting wear cam orgecamo and vests. you can see how decked they were in all of this. josh campbell is joining me now from minneapolis with more on this. at first glance, you almost wonder if this is law enforcement or military. tell us about this group and also about the gunman in this case and if the gunman is part of the group. >> reporter: yeah. a good question.
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we have been covering these protests around the country and one question has always been are there other elements at play? obviously, there have been violent protesters and rioters engaged in conflict with the police departments but the question are there other elements out here, the vigilantes so to speak that might be upset what they are seeing and trying to take the law into hair own hantheir own ? we are hearing this is from elected officials in new mexico and especially the governor saying armed group that showed up at this protest that essentially tried to instigate some type of incident with these protesters. again, we haven't heard from members of the group. but the claim being possibly that they were upset with what they were seeing tearing down the statue and possibly trying to take the law in their own hands and stop thee protests which is a crime. you have the police there a reason. there was violence at this incident and one person was shot and taken to the hospital. police later arrested a 31-year-old male who has been
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charged with aggravated battery and we are sight sort out with police if this person was associated with one of these groups. a dramatic incident playing in new mexico. a lot of unanswered questions. to your point when you have people showing up to a protest or any kind of incident with riot gear with these tactical vests, it can be hard to discern them from police departments and this is why and this harkens back to washington, d.c. the protests we saw there, a lot of police officials that weren't wearing badges and were basically dressed in tactical uniforms, that was the question. are these people that are here that are acting outside the purview of the law or law enforcement people? a complicated issue there and a senator in new mexico now calling on the u.s. justice department to investigate this incident in new mexico to try to determine whether this was, in fact, a vigilante group that was acting outside the law. a lot of unanswered questions and a lot of investigative work to be done in new mexico.
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>> what is permissible when you're talking about vigilante group members, not only being kidded out like they are s.w.a.t. or military, but then really physically inserting themselves in the middle of what we saw going on in albuquerque? >> we have seen across the country different incidents and protests people show up in tactical gear. certain states that allow open carry. think about the images we saw at the michigan state capital. people were openly carrying weapons with fully tactical uniform and wasn't against the law. for law enforcement when these people then make that leap and actually start trying to take the law into their own hands, certainly try to instigate violence, that is then a crime and it's incumbent upon police officers to try to stop that. you see a lot of incidents where you do have people that want to show up and it's important to state that this is also their first right to counterprotest. regardless of what they are wearing, as long as they are
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acting within the bounds of the law that is not illegal. what makes the dissented in new mexico so critical for law enforcement is that you saw that act of violence. a shot that rang out in that crowd and now investigators continue to work to try to determine was this some type of vigilante group that was trying to take the law in their own hands ento try to stop this protest which is also illegal and a lot of work for the police there in new mexico. >> then just real quick. when you watch the video, the vigilante surround this man. he is dressed in civilian clothes and appears from the video that he had like a handgun tucked into his stretchy shorts basically, right? >> reporter: that is right. the videos are so key and we have seen this in the violent incidents across the country. what we have learned in talking to law enforcement sources, it was their goal to go back and try to gather as much video as they could to look on facebook. we know that here in minneapolis there was a suspect that was arrested because authorities
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were able to look at social media and videos that were posted in order to try to connect the dots and try to put people in certain locations. a lot of video from that incident and law enforcement officers are going through that. this request coming from elected officials for a further investigation from the u.s. justice department. we expect if the fbi and other entities look at it, that will be a key piece of evidence. also important to point out that there is no so-called domestic terrorism law in the united states. so there has to be some other violation of the law for the federal government to get involved. were these people coming in from out of state? that would be a federal violation if they were involved in violence. not an indication this would be a role for the federal government but that is something, obviously, that they are being called upon by state officials to look into. >> josh, thank you so much. here why more officers are resigning from police departments across america. plus, you can call me, a snitch, quote.
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we are hearing from the dispatcher said in the george floyd case before he died. a dispatcher could see what officers were doing on video. the vice president tells governors to use a misleading claim about the pandemic? we are learning when the president last spoke with dr. anthony faushy. fauci. to close, twist until it clicks. tide pods child-guard packaging.
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the killings of george floyd and now rayshard brooks have prompted intense scrutiny of policing and now we are see ago growing number of resignations in police departments across the country. in minneapolis where floyd was killed, seven police officers have now quit the force. authorities say more than half a dozen other officers are in the process of leaving for unknown reasons. in buffalo, new york, two policemen were suspended after shoving an elderly protester and walking past him, 57 officers have resigned from the emergency response team. that man ended up in the hospital for sometime we should mention. in south florida after the police chief and other officials took a knee with protesters, the entire hollandale s.w.a.t. team quit the unit, ten officers in all saying they felt minuteimal
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equipped. 27-year-old rayshard brooks was shot in the back and killed friday night, after he fired a taser at police in what started as appeared to be a sobriety check. the city's police chief has stepped down. the officer who killed brooks was fired and the second officer was put on administrative duty. eight officers have resigned from that department this month. i'm joining by rapper jeezy who helped lead a rally for criminal justice reform yesterday in atlanta. thank you so much for being with us. >> thank you for having me. >> so what do you think -- you've, obviously, been talking to so many people as you've been organizing. what do you think? what have you heard what should happen to the officers involved in the killing of rayshard brooks? >> i think the fact that they have been fired is a clear sign that our mayor won't tolerate
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that. i think them stepping down is a clear sign that some line has been crossed when it comes to the community. you have to have the trust of the community that you protect and serve and i think those lines are being blurred. i really do. i think we as civilians, you know, we are concerned. you know? we are fearful and we shouldn't be. >> what is your reaction you hear all of these resignations from police departments across the country. what is your reaction to that? >> i think it's a few things. i think one foremost is, you know, most of them don't think that they are cold is being honored, meaning they took a job and took an oath to protect and serve and that is not happening and they are having problems with the people they protect and serve. you know, few might just feel
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like therapist being represented well by their brothers and officers by committing these crimes' getting away with it. and, you know, you might have some that just feel like, you know, that they are not being able to do their jobs the way they want to do their jobs, how they have been doing their jobs since the beginning, you know? by excessive force. you know, stereotyping people and pulling people over because of the color their skin or the way their hair is or what neighborhood that they find them in. there is a number of things. you know, we can't just single out one thing for the reason, but i definitely think that movement is happening. we are all starting to realize that. >> jeezy, there is an african-american sheriff from burke county who is going to be joining us later in the program and he says that based on the video that he has seen of the shooting of rayshard brooks, the fatal shooting in atlanta, he says that it was justified and he says this is different from george floyd. he says -- and ahmaud arbery
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that brooks stole a weapon from the police officer and fired it at police and making it, quote, completely justified. what is your response to that opinion? >> i never been tased before because i haven't been in that position. but i'm assuming that those taser guns only fire once, i would assume. i could be wrong. so there would be no threat there. as far as the resistant part, you know, i totally can see, but nobody should be killed -- i don't know that -- that that goes hand in hand. if you're pulled over, maybe a dame in the county, a night? a morning? you wake up and you go em home and you get your ticket and have to deal with some things. i can't put those two things together. i just cannot. >> do you think this would have been different if rayshard brooks, the person they found in
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the drive-thru line at wendy's would be different if he was a white man? >> i do. i absolutely do. i feel -- i wasn't there. so i just feel that there's tension between black men and white officers of the law. don't get me wrong. we don't have a problem with the police. we have a problem with the racist police. the racist judge, the racist d.a. i just feel that that situation could have been handled -- i've seen videos online where that happened in the case with a white male and they give them several chances. some of these people they drive them home and give them rides home and make sure they are okay. so i don't understand how a dui can get somebody murdered cold
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blooded. >> president trump's top economic adviser larry kudlow is saying that systemic racism does not exist. he says that it's because of president obama. let's listen to some of what larry kudlow said. >> here is the thought. president obama, the first black president, was elected twice. and he got 79 million white votes. 79 million in two elections. now, therefore, i find it hard to understand something called systemic racism. now can changes be made? absolutely. >> wow. >> jeezy, what do you say to that? >> clearly, he has been under a rock somewhere. i mean that with all respect. listen. when it comes to our housing, our health care, our criminal
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justice, our employment, all of these things. it's clear to see. you can have, you know, a person of color go to college and can't even get the same jobs. you can have a person of color -- i've been to the bank several times and tried to get a loan for real estate ventures and had to have so many extra conversations about something that i know i'm good for. it's been times -- >> but tell us about that. when you go and you have to have conversations, what do you feel like someone is sort of coming with an impression of you? what conversation? >> it's a stereotype. i've had loans and properties that i tried to buy and i had to go actually buy them through shell companies because they couldn't sell them to me personally. i've had situations when i went into banks and i wanted to do business and i had to team up with other people to get it done because they clearly didn't want to do it with me which is why i started dealing with citizens
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bank here in atlanta which is a black-owned back. they made it that much easier. you have to understand, i mean, college and school, all those things are about relationships. when these people graduate, they have great relationships. they know people, their parents are in better positions and how it works. if you will look at the walmart family, if you will look at all of these billion dollar corporations, they started with family -- they started with family wealth. you know, we don't have that at our fingertips and we are not crying victim. it's clearly set up that way and we understand that wen' work even harder but it's harder to build our neighborhoods, build our community when the economic is all off for us. >> as you bring up that, i've been thinking a lot lately about dignity. i watch the video of those two boys, 13 and 15, who were stopped by the police for jaywalking on a street that didn't have sidewalks. and one of them was clearly upset. you can hear, you know, some people make an argument that
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this young man shouldn't have been kicking his feet at the police officer. on the other hand, someone would make an argument that this is someone who doesn't understand why they have been pulled over. they feel thery that it's ridiculous. what does it do to the dignity of, say, a boy like this, 13 years old, for that to happen? >> well, clearly the history of it. i've been harassed and treated unfairly because of the color of my skin, but i continue to go the route that i've been on and with success. for somebody that young who doesn't understand what is going on, they clearly could be scared, they could be frustrated with the fact that they are not doing anything wrong from where they stand. and it can clearly be a thing of what is going on in the world today if you just turn it on to the internet or to the news station such as yourself, all you see is bad things and the
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police and men of color vr have been clashing. it's like why not be upset? if you're jaywalking, i mean, just think about it. rayshard brooks lost his life to dui so what could jaywalking get you at this point? >> yeah. jeezy, thank you so much for joining us. we appreciate it. >> thank you for having me. >> we really appreciate the conversation. we have breaking news now. we are learning about the arrest of a suspected member of an anti-government extremist group accused of murdering two police officers. the fbi says he was trying to hide among black lives matter protesters and that what called a ghost gun was used. i just love hitting the open road and telling people that liberty mutual customizes your insurance, so you only pay for what you need! [squawks] only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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we have some breaking news. a man already charged with the murder of a sheriff's deputy in santa clara, california, has been charged with the murder of another police officer. steven correa was believed to also kilpatrick underwood at a federal courthouse in oakland may 29th. senior national correspondent kyung lah is on this story. i know you got a lot of information about his ties to an anti-government extremist group. tell us more about this. >> reporter: well, first, brianna, let's first explain what we're talking about here. two separate shootings that have now been connected to steven
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koreo as a gunman. these two men under custody for what the fbi said was, quote, kill cops. they are tied to this extremist group. heard the complaint that was just unsealed by federal tlorts. on may 29th, as a black lives matter protests were taking place and law enforcement were trying to keep people safe during these protests, these two men were in communication, that they were not connected to these protests at all, but they were going to use it as a cover to scope out and kill law enforcement. so on may 29th, they drove to the oakland federal courthouse, the federal building. they staked out two law enforcement officers who were outside the federal building. one of them was pat underwood. and then in the drive-by shooting murdered underwood. then there was a call from the public, ask for help from law enforcement to the public to
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look for the getaway vehicle. the vehicle that was used in the drive-by shooting, a van. the public then responded and law enforcement on june 6th was brought to koreo's house. it was there he then also attacked the sheriff's deputies who were responding, killing sergeant damon gutts-willard. how is this all connected and how are they connected to this extremist group? here is what the u.s. attorney's office just said. >> on the ballistic vest was a patch. the patch could be described as follows. it had an american-style flag with stripes like an american flag, but with some notable differences. one difference was that in the area where the stars appear on an american flag there was, instead, the picture of an igloo. one of the stripes on the american-style flag on the patch recovered from the vehicle associated with koreo was a
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hawaiian-style motif replacing one of the stripes on that patch. in addition, he appears to have used his own blood to write phrases on one of the car he car jacked. they are associated with the so-called bugaloo movement. >> one other thing, brianna, that the atf said, that the rifle that was used in these shootings is known as a ghost gun. it's where you can order parts and assemble them privately. it's something that the atf has long been frustrated by because there's simply no way to track them. brianna? >> kyung, thank you so much, live from los angeles. ahead i'll be speaking live with an african-american sheriff from georgia, who says atlanta
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officers acted properly in the death of rayshard brooks. plus, college football players standing up to their coach wear iing a t-shirt. see how he responded. deliver unprecedented reach and reliability, and the highest capacity in history. with more coverage and more bandwidth to keep your employees connected, you will get the largest and most reliable network at an unbeatable price. t-mobile for business.
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departments, president trump just signed an executive order to reform law enforcement, laying out measuring to incentivize good behavior rather than guidelines to mitigate bad behavior. this was a speech very much in step with the president's law and order messaging. he spent a lot of time praising and defending police. here are the more specific things he says will be included in this executive order. >> as part of this new credentialing process, choke holds will be banned, except if an officer's life is at risk. and i will say we've dealt with all of the various departments and everybody said, it's time. we have to do it. additionally, we're looking at new advanced and powerful, less lethal weapons to help prevent deadly interactions. departments will also need to share information about credible abuses so that officers with significant issues do
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