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tv   CNN Newsroom  CNN  January 24, 2023 11:00am-12:00pm PST

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nng to become pregnant. tepezza may raise blood sugar even if you don't have diabetes. and may worsen ibd such as crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis. (bridget) now, i'm ready to be seen again. (vo) visit mytepezza.com to find a t.e.d. eye specialist and to see bridget's before and after photos. this is a tempur-pedic mattress and it's designed to help make aches and pains a thing of the past... by relieving pressure points and supporting your body in a way no other mattress can. experience the mattress ranked #1 in customer satisfaction by j.d. power, four years in a row. hello. i'm victor blackwell, and welcome to cnn newsroom. >> i'm rodriga, and alison is
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off today. now, we are looking into the first move the blockbuster anti-trust game against a u.s. company google. >> now, some sources say that the attorney turned over the classified record to the fbi, and the fbi and the justice department's national security division have now launched a review of the documents and how they ended up in pence's carmel indiana's home. and we will begin a look at how this happened with pence, and tell us more about what you know about the discovery.
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>> what happened in light of the biden documents and of course, the trump documents, we are told that the former vice president mike pence asked his personal lawyer to go back and triple-check that there were no classified documents, and he went through four boxes and he found roughly 12 documents with classified markings, and they informed the archives immediately, and the archives informed the justice department and last week, january 19th at 9:30 p.m., the fbi showed up at the pence home in indiana and picked up the classified documents, and the boxes had not kept in a secure place, and our understanding is that it is likely that these documents were inadvertently packed up in the rush of the final days. it appears that they were at the vice president's residence and that is why they did not have
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them kept at the white house. and so first they were kept at a temporary rental house in virginia and then moved to their home in indiana. however, we are told that the boxes had been sealed and that once the classified documents were found that they were put in a safe for safekeeping, and as you mentioned, victor, our colleague evan perez is reporting that the justice department's department national security division and the fbi have launched a review of the documents. who packed them up? how did they end up getting there, and exactly what is in the documents, because we don't know yet the level of classification or how sensitive they are. >> and jamie, these revelations must have come as a surprise and shock to the former vice president given what he recently
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said to this issue on cbs a few weeks ago. >> our staff reviewed all of the materials in our office and in our residence to ensure that there were no classified materials that left the white house or remained in our possession. i remain confident that was done in a thorough and careful way. clearly in the waning days of the trump/pence administration that process was not properly executed by staff around the president of the united states. >> so given what we have just heard from him, how does his camp plan on responding now? >> so, he said that to cbs. he said it to abc, to a.p. and he has repeatedly said that they didn't have any classified documents. i think that it's clear that
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they thought that they didn't think that they didn't have any classified documents just as president biden didn't think that he did, and -- >> sorry, jamie, we have to go to the department of justice and marek garland is speaking. >> to clearly diminish any dominance over the digital technologies known as ad tech known as online sales to an ad ver tirz. when they open it up to sell, the ad tech will almost immediately match for an advertiser looking to promote products and services to the server, and this process is going to involve if use of an
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exchange. this exchange is using a high-speed auction designed to identify the best match of a publisher ad space and advertisering looking to match, and as alleged in our complaint, google has halted rival technologies and manipulated auction tech necks to insulate from competitors and insulated publishers to use its tools, and in so doing, google has engaged in competition to weak even if not destroy competition in the ad tech industry. as in the complaint, we say that google's conduct has extended into the three ad buying process. first, google controls the technology used by nearly every website publisher to offered a
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ver -- offer advertising space for sale, and second, they are offering publishers and advertising is put together each time space is sold. as a result of the scheme, advertisers are paying less, and that means they can offer more content without subscribers, paywalls or other forms of monetization. our complaint alleges that google has violated section 2 of the sherman anti-monopoly act by monopolizing the market, and for monopolizing the ad market for
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digitizing ad space, and our complaint says that google has unawfully tied the ad exchange and the publisher ad server in violations of acts 1 and 2 of the sherman act, and we say that the united states has incurred damages as a result of the google anti-trust laws. in addition to declarative relief, our complaint seeks damages and the divestiture of certain google ad products, and seeks an injunction to prevent google from continuing to engage in the anti-ad practices in the complaint, and with the same purposes and effect of the challenge practices. i am appreciate of jonathan canter, and attorney domehecci and others in their tireless work on this case. monopolies threaten the free and
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fair markets upon which our economy is based. they stifle innovation. they hurt producers and workers and they increase costs for consumers. today's complaint is only the latest example that the department's work is to challenge anti-trust competition and harm the american people. no matter the industry and no matter the company, the justice department will vigorously enforce our anti-trust laws. we will aggressively protect consumers, safeguard competition, and work to ensure economic fairness and opportunity for all. i will now turn the podium over to associate general general vinita gupta. and this is the first major anti-trust suit in the biden administration against a behemoth google for the
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dominance of the online advertising, and goe the matt egan who is going to break this suit down, and this is what we see from the european regulators and not the united states. >> yes, they are flexing the muscle here, and first time going after the big tech on an anti-trust run, and it is important that some of the complaints against google are not new, and agent garland said, that they are not new, and for 15 years they have pursued this anti-trust techniques, and that google has tried to destroy the competition, and this lawsuit brought by the doj and eight states, and it saying that google has stayed dominant throughout the campaign to thwart the competition. and this is a key line from the complaint, and the doj said that having inserted itself in all aspects of the digital
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advertising marketplace, they have used anti-competitive and diminished any dominance over the ad competition. and google says that the doj is attempting to pick winners and losers in what they call the highly competitive advertising sector, and they said that this is avation and raising advertising fees, but this is a big step for the biden st area. >> and if we hear that the attorney general takes any questions of the discovery of documents at pence's home, we will of course take that to you as well. >> let's get back to the question to jamie gangel of the discovery at pence's home. and joining us is also a partner
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the law firm of beth sayed, and also, beth, joining us here we are again, and another discovery of classified documents at the home of a former president, and this time, a vice president, and we are hearing from the elected officials, democrats and republicans who are outraged walking us through the process of their seeing classified products and they go into the skiff and they have to check them at the door, and what happens when the people like the president or the vice president are given the classified documents, because clearly that is not the case, and they manage to inadvertently or intentionally bring them home. >> yes, that is different than the white house compound which is considered much more secure, and has many more rules about the classified documents, and so it is correct, i think that, you
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know, in the case of the center that you go into the skiff, but you can also in some cases, the committees can access classified documents up to a certain level in the committees, and so liked the arms services committee may be able to access information, and they are not supposed to go anywhere outside of the rooms, but there is needing to be more control over the documents both in the case of the hill, if it is outside of the committee intel rooms and certainly at the white house where we are seeing a systemic failure. >> brad, to you. these three cases of the trump documents and the biden documents and the pence documents, and they are not iden identical, but i would say that the pence and the biden documents are more alike than the trump discovery, and so you have had two counsels
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investigating these two, and what do you see? >> i am appointing a special counsel just like biden to conduct the review in coordination with the fbi, and wait for any review of the special counsel, and i don't think it is necessary to determine how these records got to former vice president pence's house who was involved and if vice president pence decides to run for president, that is going to be a different factor just like when president trump did, and right now, you play it by the book just like with the biden probe and the trump probe, and figure out who got there, and who was involved and to what extent if any, there was any intent to move them, and if there is any obstruction to return them to the u.s. government. >> and jamie, we are just
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hearing about this in the reporting from you in the last hour, and we are hearing from president trump who went to truth social and defended his vice president, and he said, and he called mike pence an innocent man who had never knowingly done anything wrong, and quite the opposite of how he characterized how biden has classified these documents, and that having been said, what does this revelation, and does it impact the investigation in both legally or politically into both the former president and the current president biden and their handling of the classified documents? >> absolutely it does. and for joe biden where it is inadvertent and a mistake, this is a political gift to him, because he is not alone. mike pence also found classified documents. i also would not be surprised if in the next couple of days we see the archives reach out to all of the former presidents and all of the former vice presidents and asking them to
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review their records. for donald trump, it does something else, and that is i think in his case, it may take the heat off of him legally, because it is establishing a pattern that as beth said, this is the system that is broken and that needs to be fixed, and even though the trump case is completely different from the biden case and the pence case where they were immediately cooperative, i think that it may help him with how merrick garland moves forward. >> thank you, jamie gangel for moving forward and with the analysis, brad. and now, there is an urgent manhunt in washington after a man shoots and kills three people at a gas station. another fatal shooting in california involving a suspect
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over the age of 65. a look at the gun violence in our country. and also, is there another look at the case filed on behalf of donald trump in the 2016 elections.s. ♪ pop rock music ♪ >> tech: ...so he brought it to safelite. we replaceced the windshield and recalibratated their car's advanced safety system, so features like automatic emergency braking will work properly. >> tech: alright, all finished. >> dad: wow, that's great. thanks. >> tech: stay safe with safelite. schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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there is no break from america's gun violence epidemic, and now we are learning of yet another incident in yakkima, washington, where this man is on the run. and now there have been mass shootings in three communities. the community of half moon bay is in shock where a man shot and killed people in two locations. >> that is after a man shot and killed people in monterey park. and then in oakland, someone started to shoot and kill people on the street, and eight people died. now 38 mass shootings since the start of the year. and since 2019, they are sharply on the rise. >> well, we are going to go first to the manhunt happening now in washington state, and lucy kavanaugh is tracking the
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latest. the yakima, washington, police are able to identify the suspect, and they are describing him as armed and dangerous. they are surrounding a home there and identify him as jarid h haddock, and they are saying that they have arrived there at 3:30 in the morning, and when they got to the circle k, they identified three dead people, but listen to yakima police chief. >> this is a random shooting,
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and there is a danger to the community, and we don't have a motive and we don't know why. >> he is a danger to the community, and he pulled into gas station and tried to get in, but he couldn't and walked across the street to the circle k and walked in and shot two individuals and walked out and shot another individual outside and shot into a car and got awayk and the police described ate as carjacking, but they believe it is his vehicle, and then the s.w.a.t. standoff is under way, and they are urging people to stay away from the area. back to you. >> thank you, lucy kafanov. and now we go to half moon bay. it is reported that some children actually saw these shooting. >> yes, it is so disturbing there. are rv homes here, and that is because here at the mountain mushroom farm, it is not only a place where the people work, but they live here.
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the two shootings happened in the afternoon after school, and so the authorities are asag that children were here and present in the time of the horrific shooting. now, we understand that these shootings happened at two locations, and one here where the authorities are saying that 66-year-old chunli zhao, the shooter, may have been a employee violence, and some of the victims were fellow employees. and then fifeve minutes here wa the scene of another shooting, and they have not identified those victims. i was at the police substation where he was arrested yesterday and taken into custody. i was there this morning, and there is a man who showed up and said that he was looking for his
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ex-wife and he had not heard from her, and she worked at one of the farms and he has been frantically trying to get a hold of her. this is what he said. >> i want to know if she is okay. i want to know if she is okay. and my kids are really worried about it. >> he told me that he gave the information to the sheriff, and they would not release any information to him, and there are a lot of people in the community checking in on the family and the friends, and making sure that those who have been killed, they are not close to him, and it is a devastating reality of this mass shooting here, and the suspect is now in custody, and he is expected to be arraigned tomorrow. victor and biannabianna. >> than you. a and now, we turn to nick watt. all 11 victims at the ballroom
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have been identified and what do you know? >> well, all of the people here in this community want to know what would have caused a murder of people who were out dancing here. and they say they knew the suspect, and they have not seen him in a while, but this man, adam hood says that the suspect did not trust people, and he did not like people, and he led a simple life, and he had few friends and hobbies, and this is a direct quote, he hated people to the bone, but apparently, he did not act on it, and he was not a fighter or arguer, obviously, until he came into the club on the lunar new year. he danced a lot, and he complained a lot about the people who owned studio where he worked and about the other instructors. and he targeted a second ballroom in alhambra, and this is a family who owns that hall
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and what they said about that suspect. >> he had a very bad temperament, and people said that he was a little bit sipsyc in a sense, and pushed a little bit, and not satisfied with the little improvements of the students that he had. >> he was 72 years old, and investigators found ammunition in the home, and he was making suppressors and silencers there in the home. and 11 people dead, and six women and five men and ages ranging from 57 to 76, and of course, others here still in the hospital, and local leaders are telling this community, that we have to rally around and help the injured and also to try to make sure that this is once again a place where people are feeling safe to socialize. >> nick watt, thank you for the report. and charles ramsey is a former
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cnn contributor to cnn, and let me start with you. you have a shooter who is over the age of 65, and no connection, but it is fair to question whether one potentially hastened the other. what does experience tell us about that possibility? >> well, you do have to look into that, and it is unusual that you have one suspect who is 72 years old and another 67. when you are looking at the mass shootings, and the shootings in general, you don't find people of that age involved in that, so we obviously have to take a look at that, and one of the monterey park appears to be a personal grievance, and the other example of the workplace violence perhaps even though they have not clearly come up with a motive yet. but you know, you have to look
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at all avenues when you investigating these thing, and one of the things that i am always concerned about when we have a high profile incident about this when it occurs is that you could have a copycat. >> and jennifer, the half moon bay shooter had a semiautomatic firearm, and the other shooter had a semiautomatic firearm, and this is in a state that has some of the toughest gun laws in the state. >> well, the semiautomatic gun was registered to him, and that means that he went through a lot of vetting to get the license, and today, you had on the sheriff, and she said that maybe more frequent security checks should be done on the gun owners and maybe instead of a renewal,
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you have a psyche exam, and that would get a lot of political pushback, but that is how they do it in other countries. and this is said that the one shooter hated people, and that is something that would have come up before he got a gun license, and all of that behavior would have risen to the authorities and he would have been denied, but that is not happening in this country. >> and so, jennifer, more mass shootings in 2023 than any other year to this point, and is there a clear understanding of why so many now? >> we had a huge gun sales boom in the pandemic, and it put 20 million guns in a lot of the first-time owners hand, and when there are more guns around, there are going to be more shootings, and that is something that the numbers bear out.
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in 2021, we had more on record, and 41,000. and maybe it should be asking, should this be on legislators, and where are the gun companies in this? they are silent when this happens, but they are profiting when this happens, and they could be setting requirements, but they are not. >> and chief, given the monterey park shooter, he took his life, but according to the half moon bay shooter, he is fully cooperating with the investigation thus far, and what does that mean? he is providing motive, specific details or how do you read that? >> yeah, you will get a clearer motive, and i thought that this is one that they could establish a motive relatively quickly, because when he was captured, he had gone to the police station
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or the substation which is not what an average mass shooter would do. so that indicated to me that he wanted to turn himself in, and if he turned himself in, he would want to cooperate, so they will have a lot of questions answered as a result of that, and it won't change the fact that seven lives were lost in that event, in that incident, and so the tragedy is still there. and very quickly, when you are asking about, you know, the mass shootings, it should not be a surprise. i mean, we have got millions of guns on the street, and where many of the guns are semiautomatic, and many of them assault rifles and many of them capable of firing multiple round, and it is not different from the crime scenes where there are multiple shells on the ground, and people are not just hit one time, but hit multiple times, and they are hit multiple times from guns that are
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devastating, and this is why the numbers are where they are, and the numbers will rise and not go down, because nothing is going down. >> and 70 lives lost in the first three weeks of this year alone. we cannot grow numb from statistics like this. mascia and charles, thank you. and now, there are questions if a judge is going to release a special grand jury report of whether there are going to be charges against president trump and his allies of whether there is going to be a report released to the public, and why a fulton countyty judge does not want it released. bacon and garlic . i've tasted greatness. great garlic though - tastes way better. can't argue with that analysis. try subway's tastiest menu upgrade yeyet.
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we want to take you back to the top story which is another batch of documents found at the home of former vice president mike pence. there were documents marked classified last week, and they have since been turned over to the fbi. just moments ago, merrick garland was asked about it. >> and this is the answer that i am giving to the last question, i am not able to comment. >> so lauren is there on capitol hill, and how are the lawmakers responding? >> the lawmakers are headed to the democratic and senate lunches as the news was breaking, and so we are getting the initial reaction and sometimes breaking the news, and
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lisa murkowski was saying, wow, this is now a part of the growing trend that we are seeing with the folks leaving the white house or the vice president's office and then finding themselves in a position where there is classified information found in their homes. i also talked to mark warner, the chairman of the intelligence committee and he said quote "holy heck" and he said i would have thought a year ago when this was coming that anyone who had one of these jobs would have gone back to check, and then he said, "check your closets." and he is trying to get briefings of how this classified information is handled, and then lindsey graham is asking how classified information is handled. this is what he said earlier. >> i don't know how this happened, and we need to get to the bottom of it. i don't believe for a minute that mike pence is trying to
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compromise national security, and i can't think that about biden and trump, but we have a problem here, and maybe when this is done, we are overclassifying things, but count me in for getting this fixed. >> reporter: and james comer the chairman of the oversight committee who is in charge of this with president biden says that he is going to be fully cooperating with the house investigation. >> interesting piece of advice from senator warner there, check your closets. lauren fox, thank you. the lawyer for the family of tyre nichols said that the police treated him like a human pi pinata, and telling us whahat t video showed. we will discuss thatat video wi the family ahead.
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in atlanta, a judge just wrapped up a hearing to determine whether you will see the report by the special grand jury investigating whether donald trump and his allies broke the law. >> for months now, the grand jury examined the efforts of donald trump and his allies to see if they should overturn the election results. the prosecutors should determine if they are bringing charges. with us is sarah murray in atlanta. so, sarah, the fulton county d.a. and made their case before the judge today, and what did both sides say? >> that is right. the judge did not make a ruling, but fani willis did say that she would recommend indictments, and she was talking to the judge and referred multiple times of
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preserving rights of defendants and saying is multiple. and this is what she had to say in court, and what the attorneys in court said for the attorneys arguing to release had to say. >> at this time in the interest of justice and the rights of not the state, but others, we are asking that the report not be released, because you having seen that report, decisions are imminent. >> the faith of the public and the court system is much improved by operating in a public way. the jurors themselves have asked for it to be published. there is enormous public interest in what they have said. >> reporter: now you heard willis there saying that the decisions are imminent, and presumably the decisions on whether she is going to be bringing charges or not, and we don't know who is on the table for possible indictments and we don't know if it is the former president or his associates, and all of that is what is included
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in the report, and so highly anticipated. the judge said that he would not make any rash decisions when it is coming to the release, so it sounds like we will be waiting for a little longer to see if the public has a chance to take a look at that. >> we will wait. sa sara murray in atlanta. and the u.s. is finalizing plans to send tanks to ukraine and it is coming as germany is deciding whether to send the leopard ii tanks. that move is straight ahead. s to get started. then work with prorofessionals to assist your business with its forms and submit the application. go to getrefunds.com toto learn more. hi, we've both got a big birthday coming up. so we have a lot of questions about medicare plans. we've got a lot of answers! how can i help? we for starters, do you include hearing benefits? how about a plan with dental, vision and heari benefits? i sure like the sound of tha then how does a $0 monthly plan premium sound?
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we're learning new details in the investigation into the
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deadly police beating of 29-year-old tyre nichols. two members of the memphis fire department were terminated because of their involvement in the quote initial patient care of nichols. >> the five police officers who were fired in violating for department policy in connection with his death. individual dwroef january 7th arrest could be made public this week or next. the nichols family reviewed the footage yesterday. >> our son ran because he was scared for his life. he did not run because he was trying to get rid of guns, he ran because he was scared for his life. when you see the video you'll see why he was scared for his life. >> an attorney for the family of tyre nichols, thank you for your the time. the description of this video ben crump who's also representing the family called it appalling, heinous.
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you called it violent. his stepfather called it horrific. what can you tell us about what's on this video, more than just the description of how you mad -- it made you feel? >> lot more we can add, brutal, savage, i thought of a new one today as i reviewed that video in my head over and over because i can't unseen it. that's how violently intentional it was. there really was just a heinousness to it that a call callousness seen memphis police officers in their uniforms, under the color of law, beating a citizen so savagely, really without any cause. because we hear, we hear tyre over and over, what did i do? he's asking them, what did he do
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to deserve this disproportionate use of force on him. we have to lead off with the premise that this was a traffic stop. that's what this led to. it was so needless and unnecessary. and there's about a 3 to 3.5-minute period of time where it's a consistent overall beating and use of force on this young man. you know, we can't forget that he's -- he's a son, he's a brother. he's a co-worker. he's so many things and for -- to see this several-minute unabashed, unabated beating and use of force, for what? a traffic stop? and for this young man crying, what did i do?
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for this young man crying literally, screaming for his mom. he's not fighting the officer. >> at the top of the block i said the memphis fire department, two employees for their initial patient care, they were fired. what can you tell us about what they did or didn't do, those two fire department employees? >> so, understanding that i still have some limitations on what i can say, during a period of time before the ems services arrived on scene, fire is on scene. and they are there with tyre and the police officers prior to ems arriving. >> okay, all right. is there -- i wonder, as you watched this video and you now have the names of these officers, have you started to do the work to determine if there are -- if they have histories,
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or past allegations against any of these five? >> that's all beginning right now, victor. we're in the process of doing that. understand that, you know, we had a very productive meet yesterday with local government officials, the state's attorney's office and also the federal government. and we hope to work cooperatively with them and i left that meeting very encouraged by what they told us and by what we told them in terms of all of our investigations moving forward. >> all right, thank you so much. a manhunt is under way in washington state for this man. who investigators say fatally gunned down three people. we'll have a live update on the search ahead. to destroy 5x more p plaque above the gumline than floss. for a cleaner, healthier moutht.
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