we spoke with paul white, who is the executive director of the human rights defense center. he says, the paper violated basic journalistic standards. most of the other media outlets that reported on it all described the suspect, as i recall, being a skinny black man with dreadlocks from the also journal stays there. i mean they're very well respected newspaper, but even the not perpetuating stereotypes seems kind of problematic. that's a critical thing. i don't think that journals should be in the business of withholding information from the public basics of journalism or reporting who what, when, where, and if you know what, why. i think that to the extent that the police rely on cooperation help from the public and solving crimes or, you know, finding stuff specs. i think there withholding information i think definitely slows on slow that down. while the us president was touring europe back home, his attorney general unveiled a new national strategy for countering domestic terrorism. with one of the biggest name threats being violent white supremacists is our correspondent