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now summit of the u. n. n e u summit. this diplomacy is essential because no single nation acting alone can meet all the challenge we face today because the world is changing. quote, another arch priorities to the world, change change utterly. a terrible beauty has been born. were in a different place and we were 10 years ago. better position, but a different place. we have to build a shared future we seek future nations are free from coercion or dominance by more powerful states. we're the global comments, the see, the air, the space and space remain open and accessible for the benefit of all to tackle the century's most pressing challenges. we have to do it together. we have to end covered $900.00, not just at home, which we're doing, but everywhere. there's no wall high enough to keep us safe from this pandemic. for the next biological threat we face and there will be others and requires coordinated multi lateral action. we must all commit to an ambitious climate action if we're going to prevent the worst impacts of cl
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i guess this week has come in via libby as the u. n. n. geneva, how will this new government succeed? conflict? 90 minutes, dw, hijacking. the news where i go wrong. the news is being hijacked. journalism itself has become a script reality show. it's not just good versus evil us versus them black and white. in countries like russia, china, turkey, people are told and if you're a journalist there and you try to get me on that, you are facing scare tactics, intimidation. and i wonder, is that where we're headed as well? my responsibility as a journalist is to get beyond the smoke and mirrors. it's not just about being fair and balanced or being neutral. it's about being trues. my name is brent golf and i'm working in frankfurt, a international gateway to the best connection, self road and radio located in the heart of europe. you are connected to the world experience of standing shopping and dining offers and try our services. be our guest at frankfurt airport city, managed by frank board. oh, the news . this is the w news lie from berlin.
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and we fully understand the wrong, you know, research public law being going on in u n. n. and unfortunately, there were some pressure from the united states to but we also understand. so if you're interested off all the parties within the european union, as well as citizens of normal relations with you and trust for be a lateral relations in member states of the you. and that's the track we're going to build in the relations on how that has been the hall room organized by the russian council on a theory. it was opened by 3 minutes to love rob and his portuguese come to part they just got the prices of trust as a global problem in the entire world and circular hall about that you seem to be blocking a lot of initiative lately. and unfortunately, many of them have been just too much in a lot of initiatives were sort of tied to the story. so call european ukrainian prop coming back. another interesting issue probably not try for the russell to tie everything in a rush. you relation your brain, we need to address the problem rather than read the problem, we need to guarantee y
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u. n. u n. the refugee agencies being accused of improperly collecting and sharing personal data from rank refugees in bangladesh. a human rights watch report says the information was given to me, unmindful, using possible repatriation often without informed consent man, mar, supposed leader ensemble cheese expected to face more charges. on the 2nd day of her trial. on monday she was charged with reaching over 19 regulations, illegally possessing walkie talkies and breaking import export roles. her supporters say the trial is bogus and politically motivated. members of congress in the us have held a moment of silence as the number of cope in 1900. that's their approaches. 600000 . the u. s. accounts for 15 percent of the global death toll and israel's new government has approved a controversial march by jewish nationalists. a day after enough, tiny bennett became prime minister is feared the gathering. couldn't blame tensions with palestinians far right. groups planned to march around occupied th
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i guess this week as tommy invited to the u. n. n. geneva, how will this new government succeed? conflict 60 minutes. oh, the little guys. this is the 77 percent. the platform for african used to be issues and share ideas . you know, i know we are not afraid to capture and talk to africa population. if we try the young people clearly have the solutions, the future. ah, the 77 percent. now, every weekend on the w two's a warm welcome to a brand new edition of focus on europe. my name is liz show, thanks for joining us today. for many women from west africa, the dream of coming to europe often and in a nightmare. more than 10000 young women from nigeria fled to europe. many of them ended up in the hands of human traffickers, according to un estimates up to 80 percent of nigerian women who cross the minute to rein in a force into prostitution by their fellow countrymen. this man who calls himself david knows a lot about this dark business. 10 years ago, he was a member of the nigerian mafia earning money through human trafficking and forth prostitution. but then he quit. and since t
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u. n. so they're not based on nothing of it. well, the u. n is the same, is the same entity that supported the dialogue and supported the coming of the government into law. so the better the support, the, the baby supporters who were trying to bribe delegates to vote for him did they know in support that, that well again, these are allegations that has not been proven. resorts in nothing has been stated by the un to that effect. well, the un inquiry said the p. m. supporters of bribes those hi as $200000.00 to induce people to vote for him. un report was quite specific. he said at least 3 such bribes were offered, although all of them are apparently turned down. well, again, let's ask the went about that and why they supported the outcomes of the, of the dialogue and, and having the government come into into office. let's keep in mind again, it's a new government. it's a very well representative of the entire libya. it managed to bring the entire country together. this is the 1st time that we have one government, one legitimate, recognized int
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it is a-h-a-n-o-n-u. >> take you very much wrap my head around how a woman born into slavery, the oldestght children, becomes the head of the household, goes to college and has audiences with presidents, lives with constant fbi surveillance, have three children, was a schoolteacher, in a white male dominated profession, and she wrote an autobiography and became one of the greatest investigative journalists. all of these accomplishments. so where is her strength from. did she have anybody as a guide? >> well, she was in her mid- mid-20s. he definitely encouraged her and actually provided some opportunities for her. so she was a big influence. she actually was introduced to my great-grandfather. and she also had a lot of colleagues she worked with as well. and they had some interaction. it's almost the late 19th century, early 20th century. and it sounds interesting, but it makes sense because they are all working toward the same goal. and that includes the conventions during that time, they did interact with each other quite a bit. and you've mentioned mostly men, people with whom she int
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u. n. will not have to decide in the countries of the u. n. is exactly why right comb luggage is sent in order to serve the rest of his life sentence, which we know now has been up how it was that the verdict marks end of the un international criminal tribunal for the former yugoslavia. but does that mean it's work is completely done? well, i think the legal issues are pretty much completely done. there are a couple of contempt of court cases, still wheeling their way through the mechanisms here. but broadly, this is the end of the tribunal for those crimes that took place in the former yugoslavia. but the reality is, is that the political divisions, specifically in republic, a subs go which is a predominant view of ethnic region of bosnia and herzegovina, is still very much divided on the issues that led to the violence back then in the ninety's including miller, i told him who is the leader of that region. republic who is repeatedly said that the genocide is forever, needs to never happen on the right code. that is not a war criminal. so the
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u. n. so they're not based on nothing of it. well, the u. n is the same, is the same entity that supported the dialogue and supported the coming of the government into law. so they did the support the, the baby supporters who were trying to bribe delegates to vote for him. did they know in support that, that well again, these are allegations that has not been proven of any sort and nothing has been stated by the un to that effect. well, the un inquiry said the pm supporters of bribes those hi as $200000.00 to induce people to vote for him. un report was quite specific. he said at least 3 such bribes were offered, although all of them are apparently turned down. well, again, let's ask the wind about that and why they supported the outcomes of the, of the dialogue and, and having the government come into into office. let's keep in mind again, it's a new government. it's a very well representative of the entire libya. it managed to brain the entire country together. this is the 1st time that we have one government, one legitimate, recognized inte
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in the n, a diploma gets to james bay's asked the u. n. sex, general spokesman for his response to these latest killings. we cannot condemn strongly enough. attacks on humanitarian workers, humanitarian workers, whether in t gray or in south sudan, we've talked a lot about that as well. or all too often targeted with we fear the goal of scaring away humanitarians. but what it does is it denies men, women, and children who need help the help that they need. so we sent our condolences to our colleagues at it's still frontier 22 and a half years in prison for 9 and a half minutes of brutality from a u. s. police officer, direct shelven has been sentenced for murdering george floyd in minneapolis. laugh me, the judge saying he inflicted particular cruelty. it was the video of children you're going for its neck, which sparked worldwide protests against racism and police brutality. john henderson as this report from minneapolis for derrick jovan, his drawn the longest sentence for a convicted police officer in minnesota history for the murder o
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n. a analysis. melodic went on trial at the u. n. tribunal for the former yugoslavia. and in 2017 he was found guilty of war crimes and genocide for having committed these crimes the chambers, censuses, mister, outcome, luggage to life imprisonment from aladdin, challenged his genocide conviction. and the appeal verdict will be the last in the case against him. 60 kilometers from sarajevo in his home town of colleen, a vic melodic still revered. as a hero of you, held by many bosnian serbs, he's an honest man and honest commander who only defended his people. nothing else . i think he deserves to be released because he's not guilty of anything yet to those who lost loved ones in the genocide hope the final ruling will confirm a lot of guilt for them. it's a question of justice, not just for their families, but for all human kind of spring in catalina listed here. she's a researcher with the global and european studies institute lights a university. thanks for being with us this morning. dr. research. what are you expecting from the court today? if you think mr. melodic
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n. a analysis. melodic went on trial at the u. n. tribunal for the former yugoslavia and in 2017, he was fine guilty of war crimes and genocide for having committed these crimes. the chamber census, mister outcome, luggage to life imprisonment from aladdin has challenged his genocide conviction. and the appeal verdict will be the last and the case against him. 60 kilometers, some sorry, a voe in his hometown of colleena vick melodic still revere to the hero of you, held by many bosnian serbs important. he's an honest man and honest commander who only defended his people. nothing else. i think he deserves to be released because he's not guilty of anything yet to those who lost loved ones in the genocide hope the final ruling will confirm a lot of guilt for them. it's a question of justice, not just for their families, but for all human kind of w report to check power is standing by for us in the heck where luggage is awaiting his final verdict. john, what can we expect as a final rule in today? well, the judges are going to have a couple of options ahead of them. firstly, they can decide to hold the convictions for genocide, for persecution, and a number of other war cries, crimes that 100 dine to him in 2017. they could potentially acquit him with the prosecution of being pretty confident that the defense arguments were put up as part of this appeal on strong enough to do so. and in fact, there was a counter appeal from the prosecution. they are calling actually for additional convictions to be added additional genocide, convictions no less related to the 4th removal of non bosnians in eastern bosnia, in bosnia, in 7, in municipalities in 1992 to the quite a lot going on here. but this very much is the final day in this trial, right. so what else are we expecting to happen during this appeal hearing? well, here at the court in the hey, we've also got the mothers are strapped bernice. the campaign group has pressed hard for these convictions against the people that they deem to be most responsible for. specifically the massacre and the genocide instruct bernice but also the, the siege of salary, eva as well. so a lot of them here to try and take a look at exactly what's going on. and there's also a lot of attention, obviously in bosnia and herzegovina, and in serbia where some of these men specifically about comb luggage is revealed as a hero. that defended the rights of the people at the ethnic serbs in that region. in fact, recently as recently as a month ago, mirror mirror lot. don't, don't it. who is the leader of republic? a sub scott specifically said, but it was not guilty of the crimes and actually said that there was no genocide interpret nisa. so there is still a hot political topic as well. but as we say this will very much now be the final date of this court. for right co milady's, he may say follow rather rather than encourage it into a life sentence mean and they will be unlikely to ever be released from prison by the very today marks. also the very end of the work of the un international criminal tribunal for the former yugoslavia is that job really done well is certainly not done as we were talking about god. this political issue means that there are still a lot of political ramifications of whatever judgement comes ice. there are actually a couple of other residual cases here at the residual mechanism that is sort of mopping up the final work of the international tribunal for the former yugoslavia. things related to condemn contempt cases, but i think as far as justice watches go and people that are really concerned about trying to find justice to the victims of threat bernice or in the other war crimes that happened back in the ninety's. this very much is the final day, and now it will flip back into a political issue in the western vulcans, jack parents in the hague. thank you very much. let's have a look now at some of the other stories making headlines around the world. clean up assets on the way in pakistan after a trained collision that killed at least 51 people. the disaster took place in the southern provinces send an express train, another train that had derailed more than 100 people were injured. pharaoh's presidential election is still too close to cold, left as candidates, federal could feel has taken a slim league with over 95 percent of the vote. county it is right, being rival, take off which maury is alleging voting irregularity. she has a huge christy of supporters of stealing votes. kasteel party rejects the delegation. us authorities have covered most of the rents and paid to russian based hackers who launched a cyber attack on the country's largest fuel pipeline. crypto currency was recovered by a tough, full set up in response to ransomware attacks on critical infrastructure worldwide . based on our investigation. carla harris is on her 1st foreign trip as you, as mine. and her mission is to address undocumented migration to the us by tackling root causes, including poverty and political oppression. harris has now arrived to make the 54 tilts with president under manuel lopez oberon. she travelled from a mile up over the message of hope to the people of the country, but quite bluntly, discouraged them. i'm trying to come to the us at the same time. i want to be clear to folks in this region for thinking about making that dangerous track to the united states, mexico board or do not come me. do not come from all this. that's been jessica berlin. she's a u. s. political analyst and strategy advisor here. and do not come, that's quite you turn compared to the welcoming rhetoric in the campaign, isn't it? absolutely, though, while it's a rhetoric you turn, it's certainly not a you turn in us policy. success of us presidents, it's always been very tough on illegal immigration. and while the biden administration has certainly turned over some of the crueler and harshest aspects of the trump era policies such as child and family separations and the border wall at the end of the day, the biden administration is not going to overturn decades of american policy approach to illegal immigration from south america, and in this sense we can see the rhetoric from the campaign as just that campaign, rhetoric that will not shift the by the administration fundamental approach to illegal immigration at the border. well, you mentioned the policies in the past, more than 10000000 people immigrate to the us illegally. every year, most comes from via mexico. this has been the case for years. so what that has led kamala has to this change of tone. well this year in this fiscal year 2021, we've seen more illegal immigration to the us, more people being turned back at the southern border than at any point with 2006 and for a biden administration that's just come in. they are very keen to make sure that they are showing themselves as quote, unquote tough on illegal immigration. so it's not to open themselves to accusations of weakness or loss of control of the situation. and also, let's remember that come the harris. she has aspirations to become the next president of the united states following jo biden's, one or 2 terms as it may be. and in her situation as herself a child of immigrants, she is going to have to walk a fine line of showing that she is tough on illegal immigration, that she is not going to be seen as weak on it, but also without betraying or being seen as a hypocrite in her approach to immigrants when he, she, herself, comes from an immigrant family, political analyst, jessica, berlin of that. and every year, hundreds of thousands of people make the journey north was from central america through mexico, with the hope of crossing into the u. s. d w reporter i took serious travels to the city off top of shula and southern mexico, near the border to guatemala. it's one of the key arrival point for undocumented migrants from central america. the danny rios travelled from honduras to mexico with her 2 daughters and 2 nephews. they've just been detained, a checkpoint in tampa, tula, and don't know where they will be taken as they arrived last monday. we've been hungry and slept in the park because we had nowhere to sleep just trying to hold on none. august, sanchez has been running a shoulder for migraines and tap schuler for 3 decades. she's noticed that since you as president joe biden to power more and more women are arriving alone with their children. so, you know, sometimes there's a button like in the north and a bottleneck here. we don't know what to do, but people are still coming in by migrants are forced to seek asylum 1st and mexico before they can continue their journey towards the us. the authorities estimate will receive about $100000.00 asylum applications this year. that's more than double the number of last year. the paperwork used to take about 20 days to process . now it takes months. that's left thousands of migraines from haiti and central america, stranded in top of tula, struggling to survive. several and g o say it's part of a deliberate political strategy to dissuade the migrants from leaving their countries. the u. n. refugee agency says governments need to do more as a, when you're calling for a greater effort from all countries. if worse, there's not just one country that has to deal with this situation by you get to pick up, we're seeing it across the region and all the leaders have to be involved in custody. please. danny and her family spent all their savings to flee the violence in their neighborhood, and his father was recently killed by gang members. so the people who killed the boy's father a threatening us to. we don't want to go back to 100 know locked in this then and worried about deportation. they feared they've invested everything just to end up back where they started. police and candidates, a driver who mounted a curb and plowed his pickup truck into a family, deliberately targeted them because of their face. full members of the muslim family died and one child is in hospital in the ontario city of london. 20 year old man has been arrested and faces full counts of 1st degree murde
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n 95, i'd like to have it available within. reasonable time. u n 95 respirators. you know people are really tired of wearing a face covering and whether businesses will be required to verify vaccination status of the public and employees, so they're balancing the safety of the world because in one hand and the ability to implement the guy that lines you see hastings law professor dorit reiss says federal and state laws require cal osha to consider more factors in the health department. your right to go into a business without the mask don't necessarily trump the right of the workers there to be. safe. professor rice says cal osha must consider allowances for employees and customers with religious exemptions or conditions under the americans with disabilities act, the cowl osha board decided to take a vote, possibly as early as their next meeting on june 17th on new rules that could better aligned with the c d. c and the new state rules. jana katsuyama reporting live for us tonight. thank you on the peninsula, businesses are gearing up for tuesday when california fully rio opens its economy classic bowling center in daly city, is now operating at 50% capacity, but come tuesday, the owner says he will be able to fill all 60 lanes with bowlers. the owner says plastic partitions will remain and employees will be required to wear a mask for the foreseeable future. at maria montessori house, a daycare facility in south san francisco, the owner says the return to normal will be gradual. board of supervisor president we're going to follow state guidance like we have in the past and we're going to open up mateo county. there are a few exceptions to full reopening. they include large concerts and the airport. facebook says it will offer employees the option to keep working remotely if their managers approved. the company says it plans to fully reopen its u. s offices in october. mark zuckerberg told employees he expects to work remotely at least half of the year, he said spending more time with his family has made him quote happier and more productive at work. california is still attempting to find two of the 15 winners of the first back. for the win drawing each will get a $50,000 prize from that drawing that occurred last friday. the state is conducting its cash prize drawings for people who have received at least one covid shot vaccinated. people also have a chance that at $1.5 million grand prize police in palo alto are looking for 11 people who swarmed into the louie baton store and stole $100,000 in handbags as ktvu xas. a. smith tells us police are trying to determine if there were the same group that stole from neiman marcus last month outside the louie baton store at the stanford shopping center. shoppers will see more security after thieves made off with three dozen luxury handbags totaling $100,000, which shoppers won't see boarded up windows from shattered glass. police say the thieves just walked in. no way. what that's insane. that literally gives me the chills that's like crazy. the high end highest top in monday at 5 30 at night, a group of 11 people. ran into the store and swiped 36 designer handbags, then took off. one witness snapped photos of one of the thieves as she left hand bags in tow. this is such a nice shopping center where you don't really hear things like that happening, so it's just shocking to me, but it has happened before on may 19th at the neiman marcus a few doors down from louisville, aton, a group of at least 10, people stole 43 handbags worth $150,000. police are trying to determine if it's the same group the getaway. cars were different. i'm surprised about not being surprisedional coalition of law enforcement and retailers that deals with organized crime theft, shoplifting has gotten significantly worse since the pandemics will end up likely amazon or other online marketplaces. the nonprofit working on federal legislation to regulate it. i've been to a bunch of places where you know they have security, they're holding it back, but obviously that isn't working. last year, security cameras captured burglars using river rocks to smash jewelry cases at bloomingdale's $83,000 gone in a minute and 20 seconds. then there's this scene from six years ago, a stolen car drove through the bloomingdale's window and a smash and grab shoppers worry. who's next. any of these stores are on radar. it sounds like police say the suspects left in five cars. they're described as young people in their late teens, early twenties, all wearing face coverings in paulo alto. i'm as it smith, ktvu is l condition tonight after she was shot at a park in the north bay, santa rosa. police say the shooting happened just before three o'clock this afternoon at buyer park and gardens on west avenue, police say when with several gunshot wounds at this time, police do not any suspects. firefighter is in lake tahoe are monitoring a small brush fire that started this afternoon that fire is burning near rubicon bay along highway 89 north tahoe fire says crews have stopped the fire from spreading. the fire burned nearly three acres and is more than 50% contained tonight. the cause of that fire is still unknown, but cal fire says it was fueled today by those gusty winds. new at 11 p. jeannie says they are getting ready for an even earlier fire season. the director of fire science tells the sacramento bee. the dryness of the vegetation is at least a month ahead of where it would normally be. they've already began drills. prepare for possible power shutoffs utilitys caused by power equipment. controversial program towing cars with unpaid place to park those vehicles because the empty i won't stop giving them tickets and towing their homes away stealing that belonging. also ahead. tonight we are learning about how much the election to recall governor newsom could cost coming up after the break who will pick up the $400 million bill? another day, another chance. it could be the day you break the sales record, or the day there's appointments nonstop. with comcast business, you get the network that can deliver gig speeds to the most businesses, and you can get the advanced cybersecurity solutions you need with comcast business securityedge. every day in business is a big day. we'll keep you ready for what's next. get started with a great offer, and ask how you can add comcast business securityedge. plus, for a limited time,ask how to get a $500 prepaid card when you upgrade. call today. sleep, the marin independent journal reports that council members voted unanimously this week to ban camping within 50 ft of areas they deem critical. that includes schools, hospitals, police and fire stations and waterways camping on public lands will also not be allowed during the day. the new rules go into effect july 9th during the pandemic, san francisco stopped towing cars with unpaid tickets, but that practice will soon start up again as kate. reviews henry lee tells us protesters today said the decision unfairly. julie haener tell us that got protesters gathered outside sfm to headquarters on wednesday. they're upset because san francisco will once again tow cars for unpaid parking tickets, which they say unfairly targets the homeless. we're here today to tell the mta to stop telling people's homes stop poverty toes. protesters say the city had suspended these types of toes during the pandemic, but we'll once again tow cars with five or more unpaid tickets in a couple of weeks. people have no place to live but the vehicles and they have no place to park those vehicles because the empty i won't stop giving them tickets and towing their homes away. feeling their belongings. cities decision to resume poverty tones is shameful and it acts as a barrier for low income communities of color to get back on their feet during shelter in place, city officials say they are sympathetic to those who have to sleep in their cars. in a statement, the city attorney's office said in part, homelessness is a difficult issue that the city works tirelessly to address every day at the same time, homeless or not, if you have a car and park it on city streets, you have to park it legally. the same rules apply to everyone. these aren't for the health and safety of the community. these are for debt collection. these are, um not essential to the functioning of the city. tory larson is one of the attorneys representing the coalition on homelessness, which is a pending suit against the city over the towing issue, she says, towing cars belonging to the homeless is a violation of the fourth amendment against unlawful seizure. she's seeking a court order barring the practice. we're not asking them to apply the law unequally were saying that nobody deserves to lose their vehicle for this reason, even if your house even if you have the means to big of a punishment for a non crime, the same he says there are payment alternatives for those who can't afford to pay their tickets and that just letting them pile up isn't an option. san francisco resumes towing cars with unpaid tickets on june 21st henry lee ktvu fox two news members of san francisco's asian american community, are expressing concern over efforts to defund the police department. asian seniors and community leaders held a rally this morning on the steps outside city hall. they say, cutting funding and police staffing puts the aapi community at risk, especially while there is a rise. hate crimes. yesterday i learned that there's a group that is proposing to take 6.8 million more from the police department fothe homeless. we have a serious problem with the homeless. taking more money from the police department is not the answer. the group plans to deliver letters to the border supervisors, urging them to support near london breeze budget plan which protects police officer staffing an election to recall governor gavin newsom is expected to cost $400 million. and now there are questions about who will pick up the tab exactly. one year ago, organizers started gathering signatures to recall the governor now is planning for that election gets underway. some counties are wondering how they'll pay for it. as of right now, funding is not in the budgettate senator ana caballero, who chairs the subcommittee, overseeing the part of the budget dealing with the recall, says the state will be taking care of the costs. the state has never not that stood up and helped counties to make sure that we pay for elections. it's one of the state's responsibilities and quite frankly, we take it very seriously. so i wouldn't worry about it. we're going to take care of it. lawmakers have one week to pass a balanced budget, but lawmakers say funding for the recall election can be added later. president bind is in britain tonight for his first overseas trip since taking office, the president is planning to meet face to face with a number of european union leaders ahead of the g seven summer the president says he is looking to strengthen. u. s alliances with european countries to push back against russian aggression and for democracy around the world. after arriving in europe, president biden spoke to american troops and their families at a british air force base clear, the united states is back and democracies in the world are standing together to tackle the toughest challenges. issues that matter, most to our future that were committed today he was trend next week, president biden will attend the nato summit in brussels, and then he'll sit down for face to face meeting with russian president vladimir putin. president says he wants a stable relationship wit that the us will respond in a robust way if russia takes threatening actions. coming up young activists on a mission across northern california. why they're marching 300 miles from butte county to san francisco. plus why could soon be more expensive to camp at yosemite national park at a very weather today? one of the cooler days the week but we will soon more things back up just gradually. well, i born your forecast coming up. it's another day. and anything could happen. it could be the day you welcome 1,200 guests and all their devices. or it could be the day there's a cyberthreat. get ready for it all with an advanced network and managed services from comcast business. and get cybersecurity solutions that let you see everything on your network. plus an expert team looking ahead 24/7 to help prevent threats. every day in business is a big day. we'll keep you ready for what's next. comcast business powering possibilities. right now trying to combat climate change. ktvu deborah villalon tells us the group started in butte county and will finish monday in san francisco. tonight they sing tomorrow they'll walk seven women aged 16 to 29 are on a two week trek with blisters to prove it. we're marching 266 miles from paradise, california to san francisco to demand good jobs for everyone so that we can fix this climate crisis that jobs they're talking about are in president biden's civilian climate core part of his infrastructure plan, the c c c would hire you young people to work in parks, forest and public lands, much like the conservation corps. after the great depression each year that we don't act. the crisis gets worse and worse and that we have an incredible opportunity right now. you got to be careful with it. this is the final leg of their walk passing now through sonoma county fall without wild fires fires year after year make their activism very real. i want a future where i don't have to leave my home every year where i don't have to pack evacuation bags where fires don't destroy my community. yes you hit that and completed it. early stock was the state capital, joining up with other members of the youth led sunrise movement for me. i've been organizers since i was like 12 years old. um but i never done something so fun and cool like this getting to know one another, and it's been adventure and we're all here with the same goal, so it's been very empowering through this activism. i've just i see so much power in my generation, and even though time is running out, i'm really inspired and actually very hopeful. they walk up to eight hours daily and mostly camp out as they pass through rural areas. it's so incredible being being able to slow down and walk through communities that you would normally just like drive through their encouraged that even in some conservative counties, reactions have been positive. they would ask us what we were doing and we said we are fighting for good jobs to stop the climate crisis, and they were all for it in santa rosa deborah villalon ktvu fox two news. you're somebody. national park is proposing a feat increase for overnight camping to keep up with the rising cost of campground operations. if somebody says fee hikes would allow the park to do things like make upgrades to restroom and shower facilities restore native plants, park wide and repair and replace signs throughout the park. now proposed fee hikes range from fort $25, depending on the campsite and the size of the group, the seventies, accepting public comment on the proposed fee increases through july 10th. the proposed fee increases are slated to take effect in october. how had a barrier weather temperatures have been cooling off a little bit over the past few days, but we're going to work things up by just a few degrees tomorrow and probably more pronounced warming. as we head into the weekend, but no major heat waves in our near future just yet. take a look at some of the highs from this afternoon. in fact, no nineties, no eighties as we take a look at the maps right now, just some sixties and seventies, the warm spots only approaching 72 to 74 degrees. and what's interesting while we had some quiet weather here, we actually have been tracking some showers and thunderstorms up to our north. especially earlier this afternoon out toward reading. out towards chico as well. things have dissipated a bit, and still we have mostly clear skies are partly cloudy skies right now, some patchy fog is trying to regroup. there's still a breezy conditions out there winds around 16 to 18 miles an hour as you can see, sfo west relate about 12 miles an hour for this 11, 0 clock hour and current numbers, most in neighborhoods are in the fifties for tonight with the san francisco 54 overnight. we'll start out tomorrow morning if you thought that this morning was cool. tomorrow morning. pretty chilly as well. cool spots right around 40 degrees in santa rosa nap up so chilly start tomorrow morning, jeffy wanna bundle up and probably some patchy cloud cover as well near the coast and near the bay shoreline. so temperatures tomorrow morning 40 to 53 degrees and then into the afternoon hours. partly cloudy skies for the coast. more sunshine for the rest of the region and forecast highs from the fifties. all the way to the seventies. so here's this cooler weather pattern as you can see, setting up kind. really moved in yesterday and today tomorrow were to warm things up by just a few degrees in a few neighborhoods, and then we've kind of been watching this frontal system coming onboard friday. this will bring in a few extra clouds. we once had hopes that we could bring in some showers, but it looks like that the shower chances mainly to the north of the bay area, as you can see by friday up towards eureka toward cape mendocino. so for tomorrow, mostly sunny skies after some patchy cloud coverage temperatures in the sixties and seventies and look ahead pretty quiet. forecast but a little bit warmer as we head into the weekend, so it's looking pretty nice. yeah, it looks good, mark. thank you. nasa's latest rover on mars is now looking for signs of life on the planet, the agency says the robber perseverance has left its landing site and is now searching one of the oldest craters looking for signs of ancient microbial life. the six wheeled rover landed on mars back in february. nasa says the plan is to collect rock samples and test technologies that could support people. landing on mars old brilliant major league debut for young giants pitcher out of sacramento but was it enough to get the giants into the victory column? sports director marco baniyas up next. e to help more people pay for health insurance — no matter what your income. how much is yours? julie and bob are paying $700 less, every month. dee got comprehensive coverage for only $1 a month. and the navarros are paying less than $100 a month. check coveredca.com to see your new, lower price. the sooner you sign up the more you save. only at covered california. this way to health insurance. we made usaa insurance for members like martin. an air force veteran made of doing what's right, not what's easy. so when a hailstorm hit, usaa reached out before he could even inspect the damage. that's how you do it right. usaa insurance is made just the way martin's family needs it with hassle-free claims, he got paid before his neighbor even got started. because doing right by our members, that's what's right. usaa. what you're made of, usaa ♪ because doing right by our members, that's what's right. first place continue to be so at top of the word american league western division, looking the part six out of the last seven. nothing like spectacular. they're just playing good, solid baseball, in fact, a lack of home runs of late, no lack of sunscreen for that kid right there and lather it up. good dad. kids like hey, lay off, dad, you got scoreless into the second inning. mark canha. it's an important play right here could tell. marty a thought he made a great catch to end the inning with due out, but the ball as you'll see on the replay actually comes loose in baseball. you have to actively pull it out of your glove. it's ns, is a two run triple for canada, and he's going to score when jed lowry wraps it back to the mound. matt peacock can he hadn't leave the game with an injury? sean man, i'll. it's beautifully for the a's went six strong allowed. no runs two in the ames victoria to get ready for a weekend against the royals. four games. all right, the giants almost have that feel good story going for sammy long they kid out of del campo high school at fair oaks and his major league debut. in fact, he struck out seven of the first dead guys he faced nasty left hand stuff he went for indians gave up just one run, one hit and his. family on hand to see it. it looked like he would be victorious, too, because the giant scattered a couple of runs kind of had their b squad in there today. offensively jason vossler off the therapy pell oh, cal gibson, and it's one nothing. they go back to back to back up catcher ted with trump with a solo homer to now think it was to nothing and then to one into the ninth. the
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n a missionn to filill the worlrld with crereativity by peoeople like u us so it can n inspire the nextxt generatioion, join lififewtr's s movement to make e unseen artrtists se. to proveve our aa babattery is the wororld's s longest-lal, we tesested it agagainst our compmpetitor's best b batter. (meowing)) (c(clicking) and energigizer ultimatete lithium w wins aga! enenergizer, b backed by s sc. matched d by no one.e. ♪♪ ♪ bringng it first t time i i saw you, y you blew mymy♪ ♪ i g got this fefeeling everythingng was alrigight♪ ♪ i i've never r known sosomeone likeke you ♪ ♪ b but when i'i'm with yu every y day is brarand new♪ ♪ new new nanna be whwhere yoyou can see(e(ah-ah) ♪ ♪ our troroubles are all ththe same (ahah-ah)♪ ♪ you wannana be wheree everybybody knows s your nam♪ ♪ you wananna go where peopople know ♪ wewelcome backck, america.. itit sure is g good to seeee. calilifornia's c choice beau? wewelcome backck, america.. pretty b boy. or a a beast? john coxox grew up w with noth ; made himseself a remararkabe success.s. calilifornia's f falling offa clcliff. highgh taxes, ununaffordablele evenen elon musksk left! gavin's s mismanagemement of californrnia is inexexcusa l. we n need big bebeastly chanangn sasacrament .. i'll make e 'em. rerecall the b beauty. meetet the nicesest, smartesestt in califororni . john cox.. ♪ ♪ ♪ >> stephen: welcome back, everybody. joining me now are emmy award- winning comedians who star in the nenew movie "h"here today.y" >> excxcuse me. arare you by a any chance e loog for meme? i'i'm charlie e berns. >> i'm e emma payge.e. >> emma,a, pleasure,e, thank yo. >> s sorry i'm l late. >
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n. a analysis. melodic went on trial at the u. n. tribunal for the former yugoslavia. and in 2017 he was found guilty of war crimes and genocide for having committed these crimes the chambers, censuses, mister outcome, luggage to life imprisonment from aladdin has challenged his genocide conviction. and the appeal verdict will be the last in the case against him. 60 kilometers from sarajevo in his home town of clinic, milady still revered as a hero of you, held by many bosnian serbs he's an honest man and honest commander who only defended his people. nothing else. i think he deserves to be released because he's not guilty of anything yet to those who lost loved ones in the genocide hope the final ruling will confirm a lot of guilt for them. it's a question of justice, not just for their families, but for all human kind. and d, w reporter jack herrick is standing by force in front of the court in the hag jack the final ruling we expect to be coming down in just a few minutes. what are you hearing so far? hi, then it can be the presiding judge in this case is actually h
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n-word come u regarding diapers. that is a person who is comfortable using the n-word. this family that history and demonizing black and the number one reason, when i left the democratic party because joe biden, national brady up and said if you don't vote for me, you ain't black. this guy is a racist and he needs to look and the mayor and acknowledge that him and his family are racist. it's insulting. >> at that after hearing what obama said and now seeing these e-mails and then looking at joe biden, joe biden partnered partner with the former klansma the business. >> filibustered the civil right act the 64, the voting right back up 65, the former klansman to stop the integration of schools and school busing because he didn't want to becom racial jungles, and joe's respect the day and he prays this man when he died. what if any republican put the last thing trump ever did what hunter has done and had the history of joe. that they get the same pass tha biden has? >> of course not, sean. it's joe biden, this teflon coating that he has. this is projection by joe biden projecting his own family's white privilege could you couldn't get anyone more white privilege than hunter biden who has had everything handed to hi on a silver platter since he wa born. his father has made sure that his son has had jobs, has had university, has had clients shower him with millions of dollars. he has had at the door open to him and affect that is the way the joe operates with his entir family. white privilege. he projected his own racism ont the whole of america. he has sullied all of us. >> you are newspaper the new york post, broke the hunter biden laptop story to read now know that there are pictures. we p have tapes of joe biden tw times tonight that he suffered talked of hunter about this foreign business deal but we've got pictures of joe biden's vic president meeting prep hunter's for business partners. now, again, how does not a word how does the media get a free. that flagrant double standard? >> [speaking at once? please, go ahead, maranda miranda. >> quickly say we have pictures of hunter and joe media hunter' for clients at least ten of them . and he has gotten away with tha because the rest of the media about was doubly so that we hav the washington post yesterday back to check -- try to pack check our latest store and get everything wrong. all he managed to do was actually prove that where brigh cove that joe biden went to caÉ milano last year in 2015 when h was vice president and met with foreign clients of hunters from three different countries, from russia, kaz extent, and ukraine and he's pumping millions of dollars into the biden family. >> let's see how many democrats call out hunter biden, color jo biden for the these clan white statements against black people. if you don't have black voters, you don't have a democratic party. let's see if we have any lawmakers -- >> you know for fact is i do, you have sources as i do. there's a lot more to come on that laptop, true or false? >> what are preset there is a lot. and a book coming out. >> how bad a scale of 1-100? >> oh, 150. that's at my sources tell me. what do i know. i don't know a whole lot. think you both. from the come back from a obama. got to talk about hunter and jo pulling the race card yet again. stay tuned to see what he is upset with this time. we will compare it to joe and hunter next. it would be cool to ride a horse on the moon. another day, another chance. it could be the day you break the sales record, or the day there's appointments nonstop. with comcast business, you get the network that can deliver gig speeds to the most businesses, and you can get the advanced cybersecurity solutions you need with comcast business securityedge. every day in business is a big day. we'll keep you ready for what's next. get started with a great offer, and ask how you can add comcast business securityedge. plus, for a limited time, ask how to get a $500 prepaid card when you upgrade. call today. ♪ barack obama once again playing the race card, slamming conservatives over their legitimate concerns about par left indoctrination, critical race theory in schools. take a look. >> i also think that there are certain right wing media for example that monetize and capitalize on stoking the fear and resentment of a white population that is witnessing a changing america and seeing demographic changes and lowell galindo hold, the pacific bell most important issue to them to them right now is critical race theory. who knew. >> you might remember his remarks about other cases, ferguson, cambridge police, trayvon martin, i have a son, i want him to look like trayvon martin. >> the cambridge police acted stupidly and arresting somebody from the proof that they were i their own home. when trayvon martin was first shot, i said that this could've been my son. another brave saying that is trayvon martin car could have been me 35 years ago. his family will never hold michael in their arms again. than something like this happen the local on third authorities, the police have a responsibilit to be open about how they're investigating that depth and ho they are protecting the people in their communities. >> here put reaction, and might've hunter biden and joe biden pressed to history, a double interesting he picks and chooses only certain cases to comment on. >> it sure is, sean. and that meant doesn't get wher he got elected. he got elected because american thought he was going to be a uniter, not a divider. that that the guy that he hired was the guy he interviewed on 6 minutes when he was running and steve kroft asked him if he visits will that be because of race and obama said no. it would be because that articulated a vision that the american people can embrace. the person they thought they hired was a guy who gave a speech at a black church in 200 and as far as race relation can turn, we are 90% of the way there. he gets elected and what happens , the cambridge police acted stupidly and phrases in america's dna. and he invited all sharpton and to the white house of a 70 times . he played the race card every time he had no opportunity to b a that is what turned up americ and he still doesn't get it. >> you get the last word tonight . mr. obama is the last person wh should be analyzing the media and divide in this country. l president based on his action was of course to the press. this is a president who's justice department spied on a reporter from this network. that his parents. and then seized months of phone records secretly. >> i would like obama to come b and hunter's comments using the nrd. about holding my breath. more hannity next. ♪ ♪ that's all the time we have left . we hope you set your dvr see yo never miss an episode. tune in tomorrow night. my voice is coming back from that terrific allergies that we've had this year that is affected my vocal cords. might dr. won't let me take prednisone, which would bring m voice back quicker. let not your heart be troubled, laura ingraham. you don't want to hear about that, do you? >> and the other medical airmen ailments that you want to share? >> any other medical ailments you want to share with us? we are not going to go to hemorrhoids at any point are we? >> are you going to go there really? really? the joe biden hour. >> you just a little croaky tonight but it is exotic. >> the joe biden sipy cup. >> it is an exotic cup. and alluring voice.
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top of chula struggling to survive several n g o say it's part of a deliberate political strategy to dissuade the migrants from leaving their countries. the u. n. refugee agency says governments need to do more as a one my, your we are calling for a greater effort from all countries. if worse, there's not just one country that has to deal with this situation by you get and we're seeing it across the region. remember in all the leaders have to be involved in custody of danny and her family spent all their savings to flee the violence in their neighborhood. and his father was recently killed by gang members. so what the people who killed the boy's father are threatening us to we don't want to go back to 100 know locked in this than in worried about deportation. they feared they've invested everything just to end up back where they started over more of a speak to liz. sure. cuz she's the u. s. policy analyst at the homeless foundation here in berlin. so liz, this is harris's 1st foreign trip as vice president. what do you make of it so far? well, this is a huge melody for her. she is a coming from the congress and set it background, and this is g
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>> y yeah, when n i was thereree never r did that.. so when n i directted, , i u off of yourself and put you on to the other guy. to get frorom the otherer g guyt you wawant to get witithout precononceiving oror setting a a reresult. >>>> stephen:n: so it't's honest reaction to what you're perceiving in the other person in that moment? >> right, yeah. i did that in a couple of movies just, yoyou knoww, with kids, especially with young people. >> stephen: would you do one with me right now? >> yeah, what are you looking at? >> stephen: what are you looking at? >> i'm looking at you. >> stephen: you're looking at me? >> yeah. why are you looking at me. >> stephen: why are you looking at me? >> well, why are you looking at me? >> stephenen: why are e you lookoking at me.e. >>>> no, why a are you lookinngt meme? >>>> stephen:n: hi are yoyou log at me? >> because i ( bleep ) want t. >> stephen: i think you got it. ( applause ) thank you, robert duvall! "12 mighty orphans" is in thea rs now. we'll be ( cheers and applause ) ♪ ♪ >> stephen: that's it for the late show. j
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top of chula struggling to survive several n g o say it's part of a deliberate political strategy to dissuade the migrants from leaving their countries. the u. n. refugee agency says governments need to do more as a when you're calling for a greater effort from all countries. if worse, there's not just one country that has to deal with this situation by you get to pick up, we're seeing it across the region. remember, and all the leaders have to be involved. in consulting plato, danny and her family spent all their savings to flee the violence in their neighbourhood. and his father was recently killed by gang members. new people who killed the boy's father threatening us to. we don't want to go back to 100 know locked in this then and worried about deportation. they feared they've invested everything just to end up back where they started. and that was the day i've ever the conversation continues online at times on twitter at the w news news news, news, news i get started. deliver, deliver, deliver. go morning to get ready logins for pick up, started, deliver, deliver the china years, work 7 days a week. and if they are too slow their wages gob
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u. n. d. report which says the cumulative total of displaced people as regional as $82.00 and a half 1000000. it's risen from 9 straight years, mozambique t g i n e c o p, a, and africa broad. so how region are among the leading sources of new refugee movements due to conflicts at the impact of climate change? for the ivory coast president lauren back bow as told his supporters that he's happy to be back home. he was expedited for war crimes and spent 10 years in exile . the international criminal court tried and acquitted him on the charges. his refusal to concede defeated a presidential election in 2010 spots. months of violence more than 3000 people died. i'm have you been back and i was caught in africa because i know that i am from ivory coast but in prison. i knew that i belonged to africa. all of africa, all of africa supported me as well as my people when it's not peer. if i was return, we'll bring reconciliation or a new tension. so i'll just hear as i'm address reports now from other job related crowds. finally get a peek, a little buckle as he touches down in the junk airport to them. he's a hero coming home to the ivory coast after
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and international, n g o cannot fill the gap as hunger and malnutrition, gro aid worker, say the infrastructure set up in turkey to run, the operation can't be easily replaced. the u. n. is the largest actor in the humanitarian response. the home, one of them at the you and gives more than 50 percent of all way. if that stops him or the death sentence to the people in russia wants us operations. we routed through damascus, but human rights and aid groups warned against this. they accused the syrian government of using aid as a weapon by keeping it from its opponents and using it to benefit those who are loyal for months now, we have seen behind the scenes negotiations primarily between the united nations and between damascus to try to achieve one single cross line delivery from damascus to live until now those negotiations have led to nothing. the biden administration has been vocal in its criticism of how damascus handles a deliveries. and now with the u. s. envoys visit the stage is set for what will likely be an intense period of negotiations to keep open. the gate to serious opposition held the areas that are elsewhere. sri lankan no thought he braced for a possi
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n g o cannot fill the gap as hunger and malnutrition, gro aid worker, say the infrastructure set up in turkey to run, the operation can't be easily replaced. the u. n. is the largest actor in the humanitarian response to home, one of them at the you and gives more than 50 percent of all way. if that stops him at the death sentence to the people. russia was un operations we routed through damascus. but human rights, an aid groups warned against this. they accused the syrian government of using aid as a weapon by keeping it from its opponents and using it to benefit those who are loyal for months now, we have seen behind the scenes negotiations primarily between the united nations and between damascus to try to achieve one single cross line delivery from damascus to live until now those negotiations have led to nothing. the biden administration has been vocal and it's criticism of how damascus handles a deliveries. and now with the u. s. and voice visit the stage is set for what will likely be an intense period of negotiations to keep open the gate to serious opposition held the areas that are l 0. america's most restrictive abortion law will come into force in texas in a few months. it bands the procedure from his earlier 6 weeks, which is before many women, even though they're pregnant. however, a high school student has used her graduation speech to talk about what the law means for millions of women like her. i am terrified that if my conscious that this sale i am terrified that if i am rate than mine holds to aspirations and dreams and efforts for my future will no longer matter. i hope that you can feel how gut wrenching. that is, i hope you can feel how dehumanizing it is to have the autonomy over your own body taken away from you. i cannot give up this platform to promote complacency and peace when there was a war on my body and a war on my rights. a warrant on the rights of your mother, a war on the rights of your sisters. a war on the rights of your daughter. we cannot stay silence. nasa has announced to new missions to close his cousin venus, the 1st and more than 3 decades. the spacecraft are expected to learn sometime between 20282030 there off to map the rocky surface with boats of uncovering whether the solar systems hottest planet ever had an ocean. we hope these missions will further our understanding of how the earth evolved and why it's currently habitable, when others in our solar system are not planetary science is critical in answering key questions that we have as humans like, are we alone? what implications beyond our solar system? could these 2 missions have russell boyd is the chairman for intelligent space systems and director of the space program u. n. s w camera space that's at the university of new south wales and trailer. he explains to us why earth's evil twin sunlight to call it has so much to offer green . this is a lot like earth. it's a similar size to earth. it's the able twin because it's so hot there the atmosphere. there's something about the atmosphere that traps the energy from the sun, in fact, at the surface of venus. apparently the temperature is several 100 degrees celsius . it's. it's extremely hot and almost impossible to survive and infect humans completely in puzzle. in fact, one of these missions that nasa will st venus at the end of this decade will have a probe that will try to plunge down through the atmosphere to the surface. as i said before, near the service, the temperature, the so what that the electronics on the spacecraft warren survive very long. so the the ability to design a spacecraft that can we stand that it's been slowly growing. we can do a lot better than we were. i were to 3 or 4 days ago
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u. s. mainstream media aren't too bothered, but what if the laptop belong to the son of donald trump? they would lose their damn mines. it would be the number one story on c, n, n m s, n, b, c, and the usual outlets for week straight. but amazingly, they're 100 percent silent. fullness may be the silences because the story is a bit too old. oh, come on. when did that stop the corporate networks? and to prove that from junior does have a point. here's a story to compared with back in 20 thing, a former white house employee claimed from staffers had been aware of an alleged tape with the ex president saying the n word. years earlier when he hosted the apprentice. the existence of such recordings was never proven, but the claims were all over the prime time news. what does it say about this president that his own press secretary says she cannot guarantee that there isn't a tape of donald trump using the word anamosa has a recording that she says she recently made that see she secretly made of her firing by john kelly claimed by his former adviser and reality tv costar, alma, rossa mangold newman, that she heard mr. trump used racial insult. but the last name of th
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n her bladdeder lea. our softftest, smootothest fac keepining her comfmfortable, prototected, and undeniniably sleekek. depend. ththe only thihing stroronger than n us, is you. totodd! wait!! hohow are you u still so u une ofof this steveven? whwhat am i susupposed to o ? leavave my familily? -yes!! -stop p overthinkiking it stev! book t the bachelolor party in vegasas! ththanks, captptain obviouo. bobooking a trtrip can feel dramamatic, but withth free cancncellatin you can'n't go wrongng with h hotels.com.m. come i in for mambmbo sauce, but withth free cancncellatin leavave queen ofof the cooko. whatat we value e most, shouldn'n't cost morore. ♪ s sometimes y you wanna g ♪ ♪ where eveverybody knonows yourur name ♪ ♪ ♪ and they'y're alwayays glad y you came ♪ wewelcome backck, america.. it s sure is gooood to see y. ♪ ♪ ♪ l>> stephen: hey, everybody! say hi to jon batiste and stay human. the man with the plan. ( cheers and applause ) folks, check your calendars, this sunday is father day. of course last year-- yeah, give it up for the dads. why not. >> jon: yes, i like that? >> stephen: of course, last year, because of the pandemic, a lot of people had to skip father's day. so this year, you're going to want to make up for that by forgetting to buy your dad two gifts. and what dad doesn't love to get a father's day card? the thing is, all greeting cards had to start somewhere. and the people who write them don't always nail it on the first try, which is why tonight, we're taking a look at some early efforts in our ongoing segment, "first drafts"! >> no, stupid! >> stephen: as always, with "first drafts" i need a volunteer from the audience. i saw you first, young lady. get up here. ( cheers and applause ) populariall right, there you go. right here,s madame. hey. >> hello. >> stephen: hi, lovely to see you. >> lovely to see you. hi. >> stephen: i would say this, this right here is the only good thing that came out of covid for me is all the time that we got to spend together. >> it was nice. >> stephen: i want to show the people-- it was nice. >> it was, it was very nice. >> stephen: very pleasant. you turned out to be good company. which is nice. >> you used to always say we should never work together. >> stephen: i did. i said what if we department like it? then what? >> worked out. >> stephen: worked out fine. you actually-- one of the things people may or may not remember we did the first five months of the show down in south carolina. >> yes. >> stephen: in a little room, like a little library by ourselves with cables coming through the window and a satellite truck on the lawn. and you-- or one of the two boys-- >> it was the boys first and madeleine. and when the kids left it was me. >> stephen: it was you, exactly. and you would be on a sa satell, like on a head phone, working the camera. >> man, the people that work for you are so sweet. they, like, laminated instructions if are me. ( laughter ). >> stephen: sure. they pinned them to your sleeve like a child going out into the snow. >> they did. and i would get in there and and put on the headset, "okay, i'm ready," you know. >> stephen: look at the back of the camera, see the second toggle from the left. see the red toggle? don't ever touch that. >> and then you had to crawl over the sofa to get anything. >> stephen: you shot some footage right before we left that little studio down there. that is-- that's a little bookshelf. >> that was the spy cam. >> stephen: that's the monitor so we could see ourselves. >> lap top-- there were, like, five lap tops that did the whole thing. >> stephen: that's the camera that i would talk into. that's the prompter. that's the tangle-- >> oh! the wires! >> stephen: the wires on the floor. >> how many times did i say, "can i just clear the wires?" >> stephen: "you cannot touch any wires they would say to you." and then you get to your station right there. that's where you would sit. >> i would sit right there. >> stephen: that was five months. >> it was crazy. >> stephen: thank you so much for doing that. ( cheers and applause ). >> it was fun. >> stephen: here's a glass of wine for you and a cocktail for me. you don't have to drink it. you can be a party pooper. ( cheers and applause ). >> okay! the. >> stephen: darling, you know how this works, right? yes. >> yes. >> stephen: thank you ( laughter ) actions speak louder than words. yes, i have in my hand a father's day card, a greeting card that was successful, and then after i read this one, you will hand me the one that was the first draft that was not good enough to be sold. >> this part has not changed. >> stephen: premise established. >> we have done this, like, six times now. >> stephen: it's the first time we have done it in front of an audience. >> stephen: that's true. here's an inspiring one: "happy father's day. no one could ever fill your shoes!" it's nice. a little dark, though. why are my shoes empty? ( laughter ) here's the first draft: "happy father's day. no one could ever fill your shoes, because no one would be caught dead in those crocs." ( applause ) >> true. throw away the crocs. >> stephen: do you have any plans for father's day for me? >> i think you requested to sleep late. >> stephen: that is true. that is true. that is all i want is-- all i want is unconsciousness. ( laughter ) this one says: "i don't know how i lucked out with such a sensitive, emotionally available dad. but i am grateful every day that you are you." >> oh! that's true. you are that, though. >> stephen: thank you, thank you very much. >> very sensitive? >> stephen: the first draft said: "i don't know how i lucked out with such a sensitive, emotionally available dad. but could you please cry less around my friends?" >> that's also true. >> stephen: that is. >> that's very true. ( cheers and applause ). >> stephen: frequently. especially our daughter will go, "are you going to cry?" >> yeah. >> stephen: i love a good cry. love a good cry. here's a nice one that says, "dad, you're a non-stop fun machine! happy father's day." but the first draft said: "dad, you're a non-stop fun machine! but we're both too old for these horsey rides. i'm going to slip a disc." ( laughter ) very nice. now, what about-- what about your father? you got anything for peter. >> yeah, you know what i got him? i can't say that because he might watch this. >> stephen: does your dad watch this? your mom watches. >> they watched monday night and both told me i did a good job. >> stephen: when you came out. >> very sweet. >> stephen: whisper. what are you going to get him? that's perfect. he's going to love that. can't tell you what it is, but peter magee, you're going to love it. this card says: "thank you for always giving me a hand to hold. happy father's day." that is truly sweet. >> our kids won't hold our hands anymore, hon. >> stephen: however, the first draft said: "thank you for always giving me a hand to hold. but, like, whose hands were those?" a little dark. it's a little dark. there was some conjecture in rehearsal as to whether i would cut that one, because it's a little dark. i'm glad i didn't. you have to have the salty with the sweet. here's a card that says: "d.a.d." and inside, the letters spell out "down to earth, awesome devilishly handsome." that's nice. every dad would want to get that, want to get that. but the first draft read: "d.a.d., dad, a dad. damn, what else starts with "d"?" ( laughter ) ( applause ) any of the children going to be around? >> i think peter. >> stephen: okay, one of them will be around, okay. no pressure. no pressure, buldy. you have to have all the love of all three of you right at me. ( laughter ) here's a nice one: "now that covid's over, i can reunite with my favorite guy, my dad!" >> oh! >> stephen: see, look at that. they're doing their part, too, out in the audience. >> they really are. >> stephen: but the first draft said: "now that covid's over, i can reunite with my favorite guy, mom's new boyfriend, chris! he lets me borrow his jet ski!" ( cheers and applause ) >> they could happen. >> stephen: it could happen? >> i mean not for us. >> stephen: it could happen? >> not for us. >> stephen: all right. >> i don't want a boyfriend on the side. >> stephen: you don't? >> i'm too old for that. >> stephen: where-- where do you have him? #-r ( laughter ) if not on the side. >> yes. >> stephen: hold on. family show. okay. here's another one: i can't believe we're all together again this year. happy father's day. i can't believe we're all together again this year. happy father's day. >> this is the last one, everybody. here we go. here's another one: "i can't believe we're all thanks so much for being here. >> thanks for having me. >> stephen: and thanks for doing these cards with me in that little storage room down in south carolina every holiday for 15 months. >> it was fun. >> stephen: yeah, and this is how we discovered it was okay to work together. yeah. i shouldn't have been afraid of you this whole time. >> maybe. >> stephen: we'll see, it's early, it's early days. this one says: "dad's you're a star. thanks for shining your light. happy father's day." but the first draft said: "dad, you're's star. i couldn't exist without you but you're mostly gas and impossible to get close to." evie magee, everybody! we'll be right back with anderson cooper. ♪♪ comforort in the e extreme. ♪ the lincololn family o of luluxury suvs.s. we'r're for thosose who love to disiscover. who knknow an openen mind isis the only y kind. whwho don't neneed to traval to f find someththing new. and whwho know when you s spend less,s, you u can discovover even mo. at t.j. mamaxx and mararshal. was s nacho cheeeese even a a r before dororitos? were trianangles even nmy psoriasisis. i was cocovered fromom head toto toe with h it. it r really hurtrt. ththen i startrted cosentytyx. okayay, thanks..... that was f four years s ago. how arare you? see me. cosentyx w works fast t to givu clear r skin that t can last.. real peoeople with p psoriasis look andnd feel betttter with cosenentyx. don't t use if youou're allergc to c cosentyx. befofore startining, get chehed fofor tubercululosis. an increreased risk k of infecs and lowerered abilityy to figight them mamay occur. tell your r doctor abobout an i infection o or symptomsms, if your r inflammatotory bowewel disease e symptoms develop oror worsen, oror if you'veve had a vacaccir plan to.o. serious alallergic reaeactions may occur.r. i lookok and feel l better. ask yourur dermatolologist if c cosentyx could hehelp you movove papast the paiain of p psoriasis.. at panerera, dinner is s hot... if c cosentyx could hehelp you movove and ready y to serve.. ordeder our warmrm and toasty sanandwiches for r din
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n sudei wiwill tell usus what's nenext. we'll be r right back.k. u have a p parasitic i infectio. mamay cause heheadache, injejection sitete reactions, back pain,n, and fatigigue. ask your d doctor abouout nuca. find y your nunormrmal withth nucala. okok everyone,e, our missisn is to o provide cocomplete, balanceded nutritionon for strerength and e energy. greaeat tasting g ensure wiwith 9 gramsms of proteie, 27 vitamamins and miminerals, and nunutrients toto support immune heaealth. for peoplele who are a a litte intense ababout hydratation. ♪ neututrogena® h hydro boost. lilightweight.t. fragrance-e-free. 48 h hour hydratation. fofor that heaealthy skin nu've made plans this prime day, change 'em. even the way you celebrate. ♪ ♪ ♪ life's more funun with a dodo. and doglglife is morore fufun with mililk-bone. ♪ ♪ ♪ yoyour missionon: stand up t to moderatete to sesevere rheumumatoid arththr. anand take. itit. on... with rininvoq. rinvoq a a once-dailily pill can dramatatically improve sysymptoms.... rinvoq helelps tame papain, ststiffness, s swelling. and for sosome, rinvoqoq can eveven signifificantly reduce ra a fatigue. that's r rinvoq relilief. with r ra, your ovoveractive immune s system atattacks yourur joints. ririnvoq regululates it to help ststop the attttack. rinvoq c can lower y your abiy to fight i infections,s, includuding tubercrculosis. seriouous infectioions and blood clclots, sometetimes fa, haveve occurred d as have cecn cancers,s, includingng lympho, and tearars in the s stomach or intestitines, and changeges in lab r resul. yourur doctor shshould momonitor yourur bloodwork. tell your r doctor abobout anany infectioion
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n the fbi. >> understood. thank you very much. the gentlewoman from new mexico, ms. harrell, is now recognized for fiveze minutes. >> thank you, madame chair. i u ask unanimous consent that n johnson's june 27, 2021 letter to the department of justice be entered into the record. >> without objection. >> i ask den that the fbi respoo these questions in writing to our committee as soon as possible. right on this et because i know we're under a time frame. director wray, how much money and man power is the fbi using to investigate the january 6th riot compared to the monthslong riots l across the u.s. at fedel buildings and at the white house? >> i'm not sure iwhit can give exact figures on dollars and head count, but what i can tell you is that in both instances, we've been conducting hundreds of investigations, conducting hundreds of arrests and involved, i huthink, almost eve fbi field office in both. >>s okay. it'st been reported that facial recognition is being used to track down capitol hill rioters. it's the same technology -- is the same technology being used against those that rioted and damaged federal property near the white house or in portland? >> i i know we have used facial recognition in theav same way w haven been using in relation t january 6thng in connection wit some of thehe violence of crimil activity that we saw over the summer. sitting here right now i can't tell you whether it was portland, other w cities or allf the above. >> okay. madame chair, i'd like to ask for those answers to be brought back to the commission -- to the committee's attention and they can be put in writing. >>ld without objection. >> thank you. and then on -- director wray, on the scale of violence and damage to federal property during the 2020 summer was unparalleled compared tosu other recent incidents ofom unrest in u.s., wouldd you call the summer riot of last year a threat to our democracy? >> rwell, certainly the violenc over the summer was a threat to communities all across the country and to businesses and lawrc enforcement. whether i would call it a threat to ourr democracy, that i'd hav to think aboutto a little more. i'm not sure i can take it that far sitting here right now. >> okay. >> general piatt, i wanted to ask you if there were any questions or accusations from my colleaguesat you would like to respond to you r felt like you might not have been able to so far. >> thank you,r? congresswoman. what we wanted to make clear, we should have been prepared, had an integrated security plan, thosee questions did not come i and the time to respond to a crisis, sadly, when it was occur ingg we couldn't get there in time, we were not in position. but we learned from that. as we prepared for theed inauguration, that'sre indeed wt we did. we hadad that lead federalin ag, we had integrated security plan and we had shared indicators and warnings of the intelligence and securityty plan worked that's t role ofth the department of defense. people think wens may have delad the response. we had to form a new response and wee had to do it while the crisis was ongoing and your lives and many lives were in danger. >> great. thank k eryou. i want to thank all of you for your time today and obviously for your -- -- to mine on the border like my colleague, jim jordanh mentioned earlier today. i knoww our constituents are concerned about inflation, the spending. they're worried about domestic terrorism, they're worried about our global standing, they're worried about a lot of things. i hope for the sake of everything good, we can get through these committee hearings and get back on track andndom de work of the american people. and i yield back, ms. chair. >> the gentlewoman from michigan is recognized for five minutes. >> i appreciate this hearing. i think it'sg. incredibly important. i think before we begin, just ty be clear, the people that we're talking about that attacked the capitol live within our borders. some are coming from our neighborhoods and our communities across the country. that's why this hearing is so incredibly important. i also want to repeat, as i continue to repeat over and ovr again, immediately in the aftermath of this attack, i hear people talking about new surveillance powers, talking about the possibility of increasing national security powers and thatat kind of thing. it's incredibly important, no matter the intention, history shows us that every time we give our government new powers in this area, they're inevitably used to target people like me, oppress people of color and minority groups across our country. not those that attacked our capitol. director wray, in your testimony before prosecuteth the senate judiciary committee, you stated, and i quote, the attack, the siege was criminal behavior, plain and simple. and it's behaviornd we, the fbi view as i domestic terrorism. is that correct? >> sounds like a correct quote of what i said. >> sure. some of my colleagues, director, are calling the january 6th -- someme of them just look away a call them normal tourist visits or activity to the capitol. did you hear that had false description before?sc have been asked about that. and i wouldn't describe it that way. abo >> okay. well, unfortunately, that's how, again, january 6hath attacks ha been described in the past. it's really to downplay, excuse defend this really violent attempt to overthrow our democracyra and the constitutio itself by doing that, i very much believeco colleagues are endorsing those actions. director wray, what would happen if you do not hold those that were responsible for january 6th accountable? what do you think would happen? >> hawell, congresswoman, you know, i think it's -- one of the things that defines our country is a a respect for the rule of law. and there is a right way and a wrong way to express your unhappiness, your anger, your disagreement under the first amendment. andam that does not include violence against lawvi destruction of federal property and o the kindf behavior thatty we saw in this capitol on january 6th. and so, to me, the rule of law is at stake. and that's what we're trying to make sure wee endorse. thes ends do not justify the means, no matter how much -- do you think -- >> yeah. >> i'm sorry to interrupt. do you think, director wray, it would enable people to continue those efforts, it would enable what we some would refer to as white supremacists groups, domestic terrorist groups here, dohi you think it would enable them to continueti to attack ou capitol and our democracy?ur if we did not hold them accountable?bl >> i think if the criminal laws are not fairly and aggressively enforced, and if domestic terrorism is not fairly and aggressively pursued, then i think it will not only continue, but grow. >> in march of this year, i don't know if folks on the panel know, but the director of national intelligence released an unclassiied report rentitle, quote, domestic violent extremism poses heightened threat in re2021. the report identified the quote -- emboldened impact violent breach ofac the u.s. capitol as a development that would, quote, almost certainly spur domestic violent extremists to try -- to try to engage in violence this year. director wray, yes or no, do you agree with dni's assessment? >> yes, we contributed to that assessment and share it. >> do you believe, director, attempts to d discredit the november election, such as the absurd arizona recount and recent reports the former president believes heie will be reinstated, he still says this could potentially have similar effects? >> well, certainly i think that's a whole range of things out there that are contributing. you know -- >> well, dore you think it enabs that narrative that folks had a right to come here, had a right to come here and attack our capitol and our democracy? >> you know, i have tried to steer clear of weighing in on different people's speech. just because of my role. i certainly understand why you're asking. >> director wray, it's really scary to believe -- because i truly believe this. do you think if the people in that crowd looked brown or black majority, do you think we would be here in this hearing right now? >> you know, it's -- that's hard for me to say. i can tell you, we fbi -- >> do you think the riot gear would have showed up? do you think the national guard would have been called? because whatca i saw when black lives matter protesters were here and those defending their right to choose, it seemed like all of a sudden, all of y'all had resources, y'all had a plan then. whyouou is it when white supremacistest terrorists show up here to want to lynch the vice president, to attack the speaker, to attackk our democracy, threatening the lives ofng the members of congress, really the lives of just our whole livelihood and our country, that no one seemed to want to show up? >> congresswoman, i can only really speak to thehe fbi's rol. my vieww is we have one standar and we've tried to is we have o andto we've tried to apply it consistently in bothon situatio. >> thank you. i yield. >> the gentleman from louisiana mr.. higgins is recognized. >> thank you, madam chair. my, my, my. bless you, sir. my, my, my. my colleagues across the aisle will find themselves in ato bin this year because we're going to investigate.d we're going to investigate what exactly did happen leading up to january 6th.oc you would have had to be living under a rock in america to not know there was potential for violence, riot and mob behave on january 6th. anybody with an ounce of common sense and any kind of connection to the street knew that was a potential. the united states capitolat pole received intelligence from numerous law enforcement and intelligence s services which clearly indicated a likelihood ofd violence on january 6th an they failed to adequately prepare. let's look at why. mayor bowser, my goodness. december 31st, she had one tone when she requested the cooperation of the d.c. nationae guard. let me clarify. the commanding general of the d.c. national guard is subordinateub solely to the presidentau and the authority t activate the. d.c. national guad has been delegatebyd by the president to the secretary of defense and further delegated to the secretary of the army. there's a chain of command. itn begins with the mayor. the mayor made that request on january 31st. on january 5th, mayor bowser of d.c. d who's deeply connected wh my democratic colleagues here in this cbody, she had a change o heart, sent out a letter saying we don't want any national guardsmen here. i have national guardsmen just with safety vests, unarmed, working traffic control and crowd control herer in the city. certainly not t predeployed to react and respond quickly to the kind of thing everybody knew was ath potential to happen january 6th. what happened? were there communications between my colleagues inic the democratic party and their friend, the mayor of d.c., to have that change of heart the day before january 6th? we're going tose find out, i promise you. director wray, will you explain to my colleagues what in law enforcement a d show of force deterrence is, how meaningful and how effective it is as we deal with potential for violence, mob behavior, rioting, violent protests, when things can getwe out of hand and we kn it because of our intel. we have a show of force. can you share with america brieflyss how effective a show force is. >> with the caveat up front, of course, that the fbi doesn't do crowd control. >> but you're my thin blue line on this panel because the chief didn't come. the chief we invited is not here. you're the manth on the panel wh law enforcement reexperience. justue share with my colleaguesn america justf how effective sho of force is as a deterrent if you're facing potential violence. do you agree with that or not, good sir? >> my understanding is that a visible show of strength and security is a very significant factor. >> i concur. why do you think that show of force wasas cancelled the day before january 6th? i promise you we're going to find out. we will know exactly what happened. this body are not going to like it, because there was plenty of intel out there across the f country. many field agents had turned in reportsed at the federal level, low law enforcement, boots on the ground knew that there was potential foror violence in a m show of force is a peaceful deterrent. who could possibly benefit? let the world ask that question. who could possibly benefit? on the eve of january 6th? i'llll leave america with that cliffhanger. i yield. >> gentleman yield's back. mr. davis, we can't hear you. >> thank you very much. i want to thank the witnesses this n.afternoon. in the joint bipartisan report released byed the senate last wk the d.o.d. was designated as tha lead federal agency in charge of security preparations and response onpr january 6th. seemed tot dispute the justice department had been tapped as the lead federal agency. general, was it your understanding that prior to january 6th thehe department of justice had been designated as the lead federaled agency?? >> it is. we did not have an integrated securityk plan. >> according to documents obtained by our committee, initial hi it was recommended against mayor bowser's request for national guard support prior toto january 6th in part becaus the lead federal agency had not been designated at the time. that recommendation changed as soon as d.o.d. was designated as the lead federal agency. couldd you briefly explain the importance of designating a lead federal agency for large scale events like january 6th? >> weed recommended for a bette security plan to have a lead federal agency and an integrated securityty plan so we would hav unity of community and efforts so that if anything went according to plan, that means our agency would have the authorities required for requesting additional support. >> doj did not conduct any intraagency rehearsals on having an integrated security plan. according tod the senate report stressed the importance of integrated security plan and acknowledged had there been one on january 6th, d.o.d.'s response time would have been quicker. >> i can't answer for the department of justice. however, what w i would say is that integrated security plan federalizedli soldiers and airm a rehearsal and an integrated security plan would have assisteded us when the crisis rapidlys escalated and the violence went in a direction that was unforecasted. >> thank you very much. the documents released by the committee offer one reason the department of justice wasn distracted in the days leading up to b sixth, they seemed to b in full blown crisis mode with a desperate president pressuring them s to take action to stop t vote. thely results on january 6th we deadly. i yield back. >> f mr. collide from georgia i recognized. >> director wray, we know through various reporting including the june 8th senate report a january 5th report was disseminated to the capitol police through a a joint terrorm task force.ce we also know it went no further. would you agree the capitol police should be here answering questions about why they seem to have notot taken this report seriously and prepared accordingly, yes or no? >> i really can't speak for the committee'sy decisions about wh it calls as witnesses. certainly i agree with your description of what we did in terms of providing the report to the capitol police. >> are. you aware that acting chief pitman served as acting chief of the intelligence division at the time of the riots? >> r i've heard that through the course of the afternoon here today. >> as a leader of an intel agency, does it give you pause that pitman is the person responsible for coordinating the capitolth police's own intelligence asset that led to poor decision making, failed to assure thatt all officers has been briefed. does that give you pause? does that concerndo you, sir? >>th congressman, i certainly understand why you're asking the question, butqu i really don't feel comfortable armchair quarterbacking another law enforcement agency. >> it certainly gives me pause, especially she had a 92% no confidence vote inon february fm the department's union. did we have the ability to prevent a capitol breach on the 6th? >> i'mr? sorry, congressman, the was aco little bit of cross chatter there. would you mind repeating the question? >> did we haveve the ability to prevent aa capitol breach on th 6th? in other words would better preparation have prevented the breach that did occur? >> certainly i i think it's witn the united thstates' power with all the agencies working together and with proper warning to have prevented january 6th. >> for each of the generals, do you agree with that? >>it congressman, i think yes absolutely ife, we would have h an integrated security plan, the power of the police forces within the district and support from then national guard, absolutely. >> congressman iok echo what general pyatt mentioned upon reflection of what happened on january 6th. >> with better preparation, we certainly would not have had this issue. would you consider the breach a failure of law enforcement leadership? >> i'll go first. again, i'm just not really comfortable weighing in on other people's leadership in charge of their own agencies. >> agokay. it's gots to be a failure of somebody's leadership here. all htright. lastly, actually director wray on another topic we've seen in media reports where thousands of citizens' tax information has recently beenas leaked from the irs. isis that a felony? >> financial taxpayer information is a felony last time ich checked. >> would you commit to the person people that the fbi will fully investigate this leakfb until theul source of the leak found? >> ith will commit that i understand we have recently received a referral from the irs and i commit that we will look at itil carefully and take appropriate steps. >> to restore confidence to the american people that the irs can be secure with their personal information? >> certainly. we ally. want the irs to be sece in their information. >> absolutely. okay. we know that at 3:04 p.m. approvedth activation of the national guard. we also know that the capitol policece of its 1830 officers employed on the 6th the capitol policece is on record for admitting it was only able to account for the i location of 4 officers on the 6th and it could not account for the remaining 797. if the capitol police had close to its 1800 officers on duty that day, 600 more than were in the complex0 at 2:00 p.m. and a little over half of what the national guard deployed, would that have helped prevent a breach of the capitol? director wray, that's for you.ec >>dd that question is maybe betb directed to other agencies. >> the time of the gentleman has expired. >> thank you. i yield back. >> theck gentleman from california, vice chair gomez i recognized. >> thank you, madam chair. so january 6th is something that iso think none of us will ever forget, especially if we were in the capitol that i day, which i was,s, especially my colleagues and myself who were stuck in thl gallery, not only because we were stuck while everybody else was evacuated, we also had to crawl on the ground so we wouldn't get shot or something would happen. that is something that i will never forget. i'm still extremely, extremely angry about that day. i know we're talking about intelligence failures and there's t been a lot. but i have constituents who asked me, hey, are you concerned they're going to -- trump supporters and qanon followers are going to stop the certification of the electoral college.al no, no, no. we have capitoli police, we ha fbi. c if. we hear something or if the heard rsomething, it will get noticed. i'm not w concerned about that. these white nationalists literally planned this insurrection inna plain sight. my own constituents were following itit along and warnin me. staff tried to warn me even a few days earlier, but i thought fbi, right, they're going to know. but there wasn't a assessment. how can you prepare if there wasn't something ofho that sort? yes, iwa heard the testimony fr the director that there was raw data given to the capitol police, but the fbi claims it didn't produce a bulletinve ove first amendment concerns. do you consider threats of assault on the capitol to be freere speech? >>sp what i would say is we produced a dozen plus intelligence products on domestic extremism specifically geared towards the elections and protests related to the elections over the course of 2020 right up to and leading to and including the month right before january 6th in addition to the raw information that we just described. we're producing a fair amount of information,or warning about th potential violence in partisan political rallies leading up to the election. >>>> let me retain my time. the senatee report from the homeland security committee said neither the department of homeland security or the fbi issued a threat assessment or joint intelligence bulletin to the january 6th joint session of congress to e count the elector college votes. my own constituents were mentioning this. they don't work for the fbi. you know, some of them are just schoolteachers, but they knew it. why didn't you issue a threat assessment or a bulletin specifically regarding january 6th? >> normally when we issue a formal threat assessment, which is a something we don't do all e time, butha it's something tiedo an event where there's a whole process, something is d designa a national special event, kind ofe like the inauguration, planned months in advance by the department of homemade land -- homeland security designated the event. the rest of the t year we're producing intelligence products all the timedu and we did here well. theers finished intelligence products about domestic extremismuc and violence relati to thehe election including pas the election day itself. in addition to that the raw information was already discussed. >> youon t did not issue an intelligence bulletin, a threat assessment for january 6th. people were gathering with gallowsou and you didn't issue threatea assessment. let me ask you this. if you m had to do it over agai would you have issued a threat assessment or an intelligence bulletin for january 6th? yes or no? >> certainly if we knew all the information we've developed in ourth investigations before january 6th, we would have built an intelligence productou basedn that and provided it to all sorts of people. >> let me just point out that an intelligence bulletin was just issued regarding qanon followers being upset that their prophesies are not going to be coming to fruition. sor when it comes to the real threat that occurred leading up to january 6th, i think it was a failure of taking that seriously. it put not only members' lives in danger, especially the ones that don't have security, but also our democracy in danger. with that, i yield back. >> the gentleman's time has expired. theas gentleman from kansas is recognized. >> thank you. once again this committee had a real opportunity to hold a bipartisan oversight hearing to get to the bottom of the events of january 6th. we should have had witnesses such as the former capitol police chief and the former sergeantbr at arms. sadly that has not happened. our job should be to hold the leadership accountable, who failed, holdd the people who these crimes accountable, make sure this never happens again and, finally, focus onth bringing th country back together to work on their behalf in the halls of congress. that's what they expect. partisan hearings like this further o hurt our ability to d that. foremost, i want to ask director wray what have you learned over the last five months that willhe ensure that something like this never happens again? >> a number of things. i'llis just list a few that are top of dmind. one is we need to develop better humanr sources to be able to better anticipate violent extremism. second, we need to improve our data analytics, because as i said b in response to earlier questions, the volume, just the terabytes and terabytes of information that are descending upon investigators including at the fbi is like nothing we've never h experienced before. the need to get through it fast and separate the wheat from the chaff is at a premium. third, we're going to have to deal witho the encryption issue. what we've seen time and time again in relation to the january 6th attack and over theaw summe with the violence thate occurre there, the bad guys are communicating ing ways that ar right around the edges of first amendment one social media, but over to switch encrypted devices and encrypted messaging platforms to communicate the stuff that's most revealing and that's most likely to allow us to better spot the difference between the intention from the aspirations. there are goingrt to be a whole host of lessons we learn out of this. >> i also want to talk about a growing concern foror the peopli represent back in kansas as well as americans across this country. i know thattka it's a concern f you. you recently compared the ongoing ransomware threat to global terrorism and even 9/11. can you talk about how we can improveve the communication tha these federal agencies have with each other to better serve the private sector that is getting hammered with ransomware attacks?s? >> certainly, congressman, i appreciate the question. let meon first be clear. when i wasea using the analogy 9/11, i was referring to the challenge this prevents and what kind ofes response that is call for in response, as opposed to comparing the ransomware threat to the attack itself. >> i i knew what you meant and apologize for not being more clear. the challengege is just as grea i agree. gole ahead. >> what's called for is something similar to what this country did after it pulled together inov 9/11 which is a whole of society response involving all the agencies, involving the private sector, involvingg average americans evn with our foreign partners to disrupt in a coordinated way the attack. so we are working much more closely. we each have a role to play. we each complement each other. we try to communicate to the victim companies that if you reach out to one of us, you're out to both of us and we'll get the other involved so you don't need to call both right away simultaneously. they're focused on protecting the asset. we're focused on the threat. >> my concern before i run out of time, director, is that we have the fbi, department of defense. we have people involvedd on the offensive and defensive sideof this. my concern is we don't have one central force directing and coordinating all a of these federaler assets to make sure ts runs more r smoothly. do you have a comment on that? >>n i think as is true in terrorism,ru there's not one agency thatt coordinates all terrorism efforts, but what is clearly called for is coordination and joint sequenced operations. >> you don't begin by denying that it happened as many have on this side of the aisle. you start a commission. that's at least a good start. general pyatt, let me ask you and the quotes can be wrong, but the quote i heard is you said a military presence could make the situation worse if the optics were bad. this is anty opportunity for yo to clear the air. whatid exactly did you say abou your concern s of how a militar presence at the capitol would look and what was your thinking at the time. >> i only recall using that word on january 6th. it was an ugly sight. we wereio discussing a range of options that could be usedat fo theme national guard. i wast recommending we would no use themha as a clearing force. >> at what point did you say that? >>at? it was on the 2:30 phone call. we werel exploring a range of
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