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Jan 17, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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. >> that is cpb? >> it is i.c.e., cpb and everything together., if you want to the play defense and offense also, you are to go, and you have seen football as an analogy, you can see playing on the 20 yard line instead of the 1 yard line, and that is what you said, you expand the perimeter, and that is working where the country s can help you. i was reminded, and this is maybe what looks familiar the southern border strategy that mexico has with guatemala, because if you are trying to keep things from coming in, you use the 20-yard and the 1 yard line where we spent so much money on the u.s. border. and if you are able to do that this and mentioned it also that mexico at times has stopped more people and deported more people than what the u.s. border patrol. so if they will play matador, and a bullfighter and say, ole, and just go f that means that all of the people trying to come in, are going to be over here at the border patrol. remember that some of the people coming in at the border, some of them will come through and some in between and som
. >> that is cpb? >> it is i.c.e., cpb and everything together., if you want to the play defense and offense also, you are to go, and you have seen football as an analogy, you can see playing on the 20 yard line instead of the 1 yard line, and that is what you said, you expand the perimeter, and that is working where the country s can help you. i was reminded, and this is maybe what looks familiar the southern border strategy that mexico has with guatemala, because if you are trying...
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Jan 2, 2018
01/18
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CNBC
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eastern and was resolved at about 9:30 p.m a cpb spokeswoman released a statement saying all airports are currently back online, which is good news the spokeswoman said during the disruption the agency had access to national security related databases, and this allowed cpb officers to screen travellers as quickly as possible while maintaining the highest levels of security. at this time there's no indication that the service disruption was malicious in nature it's unclear what caused the computer glitch. back over to you >> thank you very much for that. >>> still ahead on "worldwide exchange," anti-government protests turn deadly in iran the latest on the developing story. >>> and as we kick off the new year a look back at the biggest dow winners of 2017. boeing, caterpillar, visa and apple with double digit returns. we're back after this break. i love taking care of my mom. it wasn't easy at first. she learned how to better communicate her needs. and you learned how to not ignore yours. i discovered how to make healthier meals. and i discovered how much i enjoyed them. narrator: beco
eastern and was resolved at about 9:30 p.m a cpb spokeswoman released a statement saying all airports are currently back online, which is good news the spokeswoman said during the disruption the agency had access to national security related databases, and this allowed cpb officers to screen travellers as quickly as possible while maintaining the highest levels of security. at this time there's no indication that the service disruption was malicious in nature it's unclear what caused the...
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Jan 29, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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it's cpb's mission to keep these drugs from entering our country. that mission has unfortunately become increasingly more difficult as the number of inbound international packages has skyrocketed. i would like to say, i think the chairman mentioned a needle in a haystack. when you're looking for a needle bigger -- in a haystack there's a couple of the things you can do about it. one is make the needles bigger or make the hay stacks smaller and we need to do both of those. but the postal service alone, volume has nearly doubled growing from about 150 million pieces in fiscal 2013 to nearly 500 million in calendar year 2017. until recently, cbp was forced to sift through this massive number of packages from the postal service manually. today, automation and the use of advanced electronic data has improved the targeting of data but the process is far from efficient and effective. our investigation revealed that a 2015 joint postal service cbp pilot project at jfk airport suffered due to the agencies' differing mission, a lack of koord thags zblooinchts
it's cpb's mission to keep these drugs from entering our country. that mission has unfortunately become increasingly more difficult as the number of inbound international packages has skyrocketed. i would like to say, i think the chairman mentioned a needle in a haystack. when you're looking for a needle bigger -- in a haystack there's a couple of the things you can do about it. one is make the needles bigger or make the hay stacks smaller and we need to do both of those. but the postal service...
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Jan 16, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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what happened is cpb needs to release the number to the public. right now we're catching an awful lot of people that are claiming to be from bangladesh. but our agents believe they are from afghanistan. when they're interviewed, because we don't have those language skills, so we have to use at&t interpreters or other interpreters, and they are telling us they are not from bangladesh. so we are not just dealing with people from the country of mexico. we're dealing with people from all over the world, include prg special interest countries. >> absolutely. and i brought this up to the homeland security representatives. i did not get a good answer why we are not telling the american people we are capturing al qaeda and isis operatives coming over our border. i think the impression i'm getting is they don't want to talk about how we caught them. fair enough. we don't have to do that. but the american people deserve to know that we've had suicide bombers try to come here. i think that that would have a more unifying conversation with what we need to do
what happened is cpb needs to release the number to the public. right now we're catching an awful lot of people that are claiming to be from bangladesh. but our agents believe they are from afghanistan. when they're interviewed, because we don't have those language skills, so we have to use at&t interpreters or other interpreters, and they are telling us they are not from bangladesh. so we are not just dealing with people from the country of mexico. we're dealing with people from all over...
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Jan 6, 2018
01/18
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KRON
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he's a bright young man hes pretty resourceful by himself so he sort of knew that his detention at cpb illegal and filed a complaint while he was there and sort of hussled things alongmora's lawyer says he and his mom came to the u.s. on a visa when mora was 11 years old. his mother came to california for cancer treatment.he didn't know at the time that's why he was brought here. she enrolled him in middle school to ensure that he could have a better life because she thought she was going to die basically.but fortunately his mother survived.. and returned to mexico in the last year when he transfered to uc berkeley. undocumented students on the campus are fighting for mora's release.because rise has worked with so many people in detention. we know how cruel and dehumanizing the immigration system can be so sadly this didn't come as much of a surprisebut they say.. they'll keep fighting on.i think that personally like i feel like in my heart there's no more room for fear after everything that is happening i think it's mainly a need to continue fighting not just for luis but for the mill
he's a bright young man hes pretty resourceful by himself so he sort of knew that his detention at cpb illegal and filed a complaint while he was there and sort of hussled things alongmora's lawyer says he and his mom came to the u.s. on a visa when mora was 11 years old. his mother came to california for cancer treatment.he didn't know at the time that's why he was brought here. she enrolled him in middle school to ensure that he could have a better life because she thought she was going to...
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Jan 7, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN2
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all-white jury whose conviction was thrown out because of errors in the trial at the request of the ins aa cpbgoal request defense fund to see that dynamic at work. with not some diversity. >> there can be a wrongful conviction but even if they are guilty and imagine what he and his family in black community when they come out to see a white prosecutor, white judge and all-white jury? even if he is guilty. >> and that applies to the diversity of our country for the sake of the justice system. i say that judiciary has no army or police force it depends on the trust and credibility. how do they fear with that overall respect? >> to ask that question by and large anyone who loses the case things we are terrible. on a good day we please half the people if they didn't have the wrong personal case for the most part you have adequate marks. they are thinking more of a supreme court decision with the day-to-day workings of the federal district court and they are well-regarded. so i think it is okay. it could always be better i know our court makes a huge effort for what the courts are doing. and then
all-white jury whose conviction was thrown out because of errors in the trial at the request of the ins aa cpbgoal request defense fund to see that dynamic at work. with not some diversity. >> there can be a wrongful conviction but even if they are guilty and imagine what he and his family in black community when they come out to see a white prosecutor, white judge and all-white jury? even if he is guilty. >> and that applies to the diversity of our country for the sake of the...
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Jan 14, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 69
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stephen is here from the center for asian american media, one of cpb, is also aof veteran independent filmmaker, and somebody who supports independent filmmakers and has also been involved in creative creating archives we can all draw on. i would love to hear you talk about the filmmaking that goes to fuel the big anthology series. actually, if i could, i would like to make a reference to the panel. the seeds of the minority consortia independent, and diverse filmmakers goes back to the same era of the great society. so many of these entities were founded in the 1970's. he came out of post-civil rights and on the rapidly changing demographics of the country, which will start to be recognized. wasimmigration act rewritten in 1965. even though it would take the generation, it has reshaped america. from theime period 1960's until now, the asian-american community went from 1% of the population and now we are 6%, we are over 20 million and the fastest-growing. and also the statistics for the latino community. as the whole enterprise was giving -- getting under way was where were these voi
stephen is here from the center for asian american media, one of cpb, is also aof veteran independent filmmaker, and somebody who supports independent filmmakers and has also been involved in creative creating archives we can all draw on. i would love to hear you talk about the filmmaking that goes to fuel the big anthology series. actually, if i could, i would like to make a reference to the panel. the seeds of the minority consortia independent, and diverse filmmakers goes back to the same...
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Jan 6, 2018
01/18
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KRON
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eye 153
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he's a bright young man hes pretty resourceful by himself so he sort of knew that his detention at cpb was illegal and filed a complaint while he was there and sort of hussled things alongmora's lawyer says he and his mom came to the u.s. on a visa when mora was 11 years old. his mother came to california for cancer treatment.he didn't know at the time that's why he was brought here. she enrolled him in middle school to ensure that he could have a better life because she thought she was going to die basically.but fortunately his mother survived.. and returned to mexico in the last year when he transfered to uc berkeley. undocumented students on the campus are fighting for mora's release.because rise has worked with so many people in detention. we know how cruel and dehumanizing the immigration system can be so sadly this didn't come as much of a surprisebut they say.. they'll keep fighting on.i think that personally like i feel like in my heart there's no more room for fear after everything that is happening i think it's mainly a need to continue fighting not just for luis but for the
he's a bright young man hes pretty resourceful by himself so he sort of knew that his detention at cpb was illegal and filed a complaint while he was there and sort of hussled things alongmora's lawyer says he and his mom came to the u.s. on a visa when mora was 11 years old. his mother came to california for cancer treatment.he didn't know at the time that's why he was brought here. she enrolled him in middle school to ensure that he could have a better life because she thought she was going...
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Jan 10, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 58
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working at the port of entry than the women of cpb are the driving force the kind are for security operations. the nation is fortunate. the agents willing to take significant risk on every single shift to ensure that cartel do not smuggle drugs and dangerous individuals across the border. it's dangerous work made more dangerous because agents are subject to frequent assaults. some of them have the potential to kill or cause great bodily harm. a few weeks ago an agent in san diego was patrolling the border and altering it -- vehicle when he was struck in the chest causing them to lose control of the atv was subsequently rolled over on him. thankfully the agent was released and will recover but this type of assault is far from an anomaly. many agents have been seriously injured by sizable rocks thrown over the fence. on the screens to the left and the right we put up autographs of some of the gruesome injuries suffered by our brave agents during these attacks. unfortunately such assaults are becoming more commonplace in part because of an increase in the number of criminal aliens attempting to
working at the port of entry than the women of cpb are the driving force the kind are for security operations. the nation is fortunate. the agents willing to take significant risk on every single shift to ensure that cartel do not smuggle drugs and dangerous individuals across the border. it's dangerous work made more dangerous because agents are subject to frequent assaults. some of them have the potential to kill or cause great bodily harm. a few weeks ago an agent in san diego was patrolling...
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Jan 25, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN3
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eye 67
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to their credit, the postal service and cpb started a pilot program in late 2015 to target suspicious packages from china using advanced electronic data, but our investigation found a lack of planning, the different missions of the agencies, and personality conflicts hampered the success, even of the pilot program that was started in 2015. that pilot program, by the way, started at jfk and our investigators were able to see that in action. despite these problems, the postal service is head of global trade compliance wrote that pilot programs allowed them to put a positive spin on stopping opioids. while both cpb and postal service agreed the pilot program should be rolled out to all postal facilities, they only started that after the may 2017 hearing. we're glad they did it. we learned that this process was conveniently completed just days in advance of this hearing. so, earlier this week, again, i think, this hearing probably motivated some action, which is good, but it should have been a priority without having to hold this hearing. it shouldn't take a congressional investigation in
to their credit, the postal service and cpb started a pilot program in late 2015 to target suspicious packages from china using advanced electronic data, but our investigation found a lack of planning, the different missions of the agencies, and personality conflicts hampered the success, even of the pilot program that was started in 2015. that pilot program, by the way, started at jfk and our investigators were able to see that in action. despite these problems, the postal service is head of...
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Jan 26, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 34
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>> that would be cpb. >> how do you determine there is a clear benefit with aed intellectual propertybut not opioids? >> first of all i will clarify this is an internal memo from one office to the leadership of that bureau so it doesn't reflect the views of the department per se it is an internal discussion. but the use of advanced electronic data for aviation security or thank you would agree is a concern with other high-priority concerns these are the uses for that data that are well-established familiar in the environment talked about for many years the use of data to target synthetic opioids and that reflects and that interrupts the novelty. >> this memo is from last year. may 2017. so you say the state department didn't know we had an issue may 2017? i am not trying to put you on the spot personally but it reflects an attitude and lack from mr. nevano to be aggressive instead of the attitude we've been doing it with very little success we just need more information on the barcode. i hope that doesn't reflect the state department attitude so to understand electronic data is import
>> that would be cpb. >> how do you determine there is a clear benefit with aed intellectual propertybut not opioids? >> first of all i will clarify this is an internal memo from one office to the leadership of that bureau so it doesn't reflect the views of the department per se it is an internal discussion. but the use of advanced electronic data for aviation security or thank you would agree is a concern with other high-priority concerns these are the uses for that data that...
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Jan 26, 2018
01/18
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CSPAN2
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eye 116
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. >> that would be cpb. how did you determine there was a clear benefit for using it to target intellectual property but not opioids. >> senator, first of all, let me clarify as you point out this is an internal memo from one office in a bureau of the state department to the leadership of that bureau so it doesn't reflect the viewsre of the department. se. it is part of an internal discussion. the use of advanced electronic data for aviation security with high-priority concerns and expeditious mail handling, these are established, these are the uses for this data that are very well-established that are familiar to people in the environment that have been talked about for many years. the use of this data for law, for specifically targeting synthetic opioids is no older than the crisis itself so it was less familiar. >> let me just interrupt you for a second. >> it reflects the novelty of it if anything else. >> this memo was written last year. may of 2017. so you're saying the state department didn't know tha
. >> that would be cpb. how did you determine there was a clear benefit for using it to target intellectual property but not opioids. >> senator, first of all, let me clarify as you point out this is an internal memo from one office in a bureau of the state department to the leadership of that bureau so it doesn't reflect the viewsre of the department. se. it is part of an internal discussion. the use of advanced electronic data for aviation security with high-priority concerns and...