ing move! don't you [ bleep ]ing move! i'm going shoot you. >>> the dead man was african-american and so one waswas one of the police officers which did not stop the decision to shoot. you can see it for yourself next. alka-seltzer plus cold and cough fights your worst cold symptoms plus your runny nose. oh, what a relief it is. you want i fix this mess? a mess? i don't think -- what's that? snapshot from progressive. plug it in and you can save on car insurance based on your good driving. you sell to me? no, it's free. you want to try? i try this if you try... not this. okay. da! only florida's natural brings you that "straight from the grove taste" from us, the orange juice growers... to you morin' ma'am. the orange juice lovers. enjoy. florida's natural. hey, jennar fuzz mike troober munny sling... awwwwww scram! i'm crust mike jubby roll bond chow gonna lean up an kiss bet. peas charty get town down. [laughter] ♪ borf a liver tute face stummy wag ♪ pow pam sha-beeps stella nerf berms. saxa-nay nay? badumps a head. temexiss gurrin. juppa left. fluppa jown! brone a brood. what? catch up on what everyone's talking about with the x1 entertainment operating system. preloaded with the latest episodes of the top 100 shows. only from xfinity. >>> tonight another deadly police shooting is getting national attention. this time a dashboard camera caught all of it. it happened last month at a traffic stop in new jersey. it came out this week. as so often happens, it answers some question, but raises so many more. the discussion on it shortly but first a report from randi kaye. >> i'm not armed. >> reporter: pulled over in a jaguar for allegedly running a stop sign, a routine traffic stop. bridgeton police on the passenger side of the car. just seconds later, the officer jumps back, pulls his gun, seemingly stunned by what he saw inside the car. it's all captured on police dash cam video on december 30th. this is where everything changes between the officers and passenger jerome reeve, a 36-year-old african-american man who had been in trouble with the law before. >> show me your hands. show me your [ bleep ] hands. don't [ bleep ] move. don't you [ bleep ] move. get him out of the car, we got a gun in the glove compartment. >> reporter: a gun in the glove compartment. watch as the officer on the right with his own weapon in his right hand uses the left hand to pull out of the car what appears to be a large sillver gun. watch again. >> don't you move. >> reporter: suddenly, the warnings escalate. >> you're going to be dead, i tell you. you reach for something, you're going to be [ bleep ] dead. i'm telling you. >> reporter: officer daiz appears to know reed, likely because he was one of the arresting officers last august when reed was picked up on charges including resisting arrest and drug possession. reeds also had been arrested six times by bridgeton police since 2009 and reportedly spent about 13 years in prison for shooting at police officers. on the dash cam video, reed can be heard telling the officer he isn't reaching for anything and then this. >> he's reaching. he's reaching. >> reporter: it's unclear but reed sounds like he is saying he's going to get out of the car, his hands at his chest. >> no you're not. no you're not. don't [ bleep ] move. >> reporter: shots fired. officer daiz, who is black, appears to fire first, possibly as many as six shots. officer roger worley who appears to fire once from the other side of the police car. reed collapses on the ground. the driver of the car who had both his hands visible out the window is handcuffed. the chorus of angry bystanders. use of deadly force when the officer reasonably believe such action is immediately necessary to protect the officer or another person from imminent danger of death or serious bodily harm. for now, both officers are on administrative leave while investigators look into how a routine traffic stop ended with one man dead, all in just about 90 seconds. randi kaye, cnn, new york. >> people look at that video, see such things. a lot to talk about. legal analyst, mark o'mara and sunny hostin. best known for defending george zimmerman and lapd officer david clinger who currently teaches criminal justice at the university of missouri in st. louis. so do you believe the police officer was justified in shooting this man? >> you know, i don't think that's clear. when you look at a case like this, the question remains the same. was the force justified and when you look at the use of force policy in new jersey, that officer had to believe he was in imminent immediate danger of death or great bodily injury, anderson, and the bottom line is he's getting out of the car, they've already retrieved the gun they've found in the glove compartment and his hands are up. i've said it time and time again, hands up is the universal gesture for surrender. why if someone is surrendering, why do you have to shoot to kill? >> sunny, it's interesting. we talked about race a lot in the wake of ferguson but this shooting, the officer is black, the passenger killed also black. do you think that changes some how the way people look at this? >> you know, i don't think it should. certainly many times we talk about race when it comes to interactions with police officers, and certainly, there is that racial bias that sometimes plays a part, that implicit bias that sometimes plays a part, but in large part, this is an issue of policing and anderson, we've talked about this time and time again. you know, we understand that police officers have a very difficult job, everyone understands that they are scared as well. but when you have a video like this which, in my view shows an officer who is very, very agitated, very tense using unprofessional language, expletive ridden commands, screaming at this young man, i've got to tell you, you know, it just doesn't seem to me that the appropriate decorum was taking place and that, for me, calls into question this entire incident. >> mark, i mean, does the language matter? a gun was found in this vehicle. the guy who was killed, he reportedly served a lengthy amount of time in prison for shooting at police when he was a teenager and one of the officers involved in this incident knew who he was, arrested him for a different crime just last year. i mean, do you buy sunny point of sort of the decorum? >> what's interesting in this case to see how it develops i disagree to the exthaent this off is ser was all up set, i dising a gree with sunny. disagree with sunny that he was upset. actually quite calm when he came up to the scene. i can recognize someone not only arrested before in a drug charge but much more importantly, he was somebody who shot a police officers before and that he's a felon and when you see a gun two feet away from a felon, that's going to ramp up the officer's fear. >> can i address that, because where, again, i am blaming the dead guy, the victim, we're going over his past criminal history and saying that is appropriate to take appropriate action, bottom line, martha stewart spent time in prison as well. so should martha stewart when she gets stopped get shot not be given the benefit of i just think it's ridiculous. the doubt? >> but sunny, isn't that -- >> should be shot. >> sunny, isn't that apples and oranges? i guess if martha stewart was buying stocks, you might give her a little closer inspection on her stock performance and what stock she's picking. if a guy has been arrested for shooting at police and a gun is found in the vehicle. >> when he was -- >> but those are elements that clearly would be in somebody's mind if they had that information. >> look, i mean i think we have to make it clear, he was 13 years old when that happened. we don't know all the facts surrounding that. he spent time in prison, paid debt to society, got arrested again, paid his debt to society and now is like every other citizen. >> i need to disagree a little bit. >> it's okay he got shot. >> the relevant question is this. was the officer reasonable in using deadly force and in looking at that question, then the officer's perception is very relevant and if the officer's perception is, this is jerame reed who has shot at officers before and a convicted felon and that makes it relevant. not just we killed a previous felon but what he was thinking in the split second he had to think it and reed refused to listen to a number of specific commands. >> to follow on one point, what the supreme court has ruled and all officers are trained in terms of a review of it is to the totality of the circumstances. we need to know what was going on in the officer's mind. how much information did he know about this individual, how much information did he know about this criminal past, standing in the officer, he was arrested before and he would know about the previous time he spent shooting at the police and tally the circumstances, as your other guest pointed out, a felon, a gun in close proximity, officers are trained with an ex-felon with a gun, dangerous sign and then spent hard time for shooting at police, greater threat level and all of that is reasonable for an officer to believe and the question becomes at the moment the shots are fired, was it reason for him to proceed that his life was in jeopardy? if he's told stay in the car and he doesn't, he forces his way out of the car and hands up is one thing, versus hands coming towards. and i can't tell from that video exactly what was going on. so that's why i think, once again, we have to wait to see what the entire investigation discloses about all these crucial points. >> okay, david clinger, i appreciate you being on. mark o'mara, sunny hostin. >> thanks for having me. >>> well, coming up next, with all the consequences of getting the shoot or don't shoot decision wrong in their life or death consequences, how officers are trained to get it right. we'll show you technology that brings police so close to life and death encounters, some police react physically like it's the real thing. >>> a police encounter left someone else dead. work better on pain than tylenol arthritis. so why am i still thinking about this? how are ya? good. aleve. proven better on pain. 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[ shots fired ] don't you [ bleep ] move. >> the entire new jersey incident last month took about a minute and a half, the decision to shoot, only split seconds. the stakes this time and always, life and death, which puts the focus understandably on training police get to try to get it right for everyone's sake. kyung lah with a new way to have officers train to make the important decision they'll ever face. >> you need to calm down. >> no, you need to calm down. >> reporter: a man being questioned suddenly turns, slamming a police officer with a snow shovel. the suspect is shot and killed by police. >> you have to put your hands back on your head. >> reporter: this suspect, at first calm with police officers, rushing for a knife in his car and tries to stab the officers who shoot and kill him. >> i didn't see the knife. >> reporter: