in was 424. i locked his door, went to 418. locked his door. went to the next cell, 410. i said, come on, go on in your cell. he said, i m not going in. i said, just go in. and i had never had an incident. never had cross words with him, and he kept slow walking and this was totally out of the norm. at that time a sick feeling just overcomes you and you think, wow, something is not right. so i called for my sergeant on the radio. he said it ll be a minute. and the guy just hit me. and the first hit, i believe, knocked me out. i remember going down and i don t remember the actual impact of hitting the ground. she was up against the expanded metal in the fetal position and he kept kicking at her, aiming at her head, her stomach, trying to get to her
disappoint disappointed. contrary to rush limbaugh and members of congress, not a single person suffered over it. here are actual examples of people that are suffering from the sequester. the 418 people at the army depot in pennsylvania who lost their jobs over the sequester. and the other 5100 people who are being furloughed. the lateral people in southwest georgia who received meals from local council on aging, which is having its budget cut, the director says i hate to say it, but we might have have to possibly ration things, like somebody coming three days a week to eat, and the others two. people living in a wildfire prone area in nevada anxious about forest service having 500 fewer firefighters and 50 fewer engines with crews as a result of sequestration. in an interview this week, president obama tried to explain to george stephanopoulos there are worse things than cancelling white house tours. you have been taking heat for
never imagined it. at the time of the attack, officer talley was responsible for supervising b cell house. an important part of her job was securing the inmates back in their cells with a system called, rolling of the bar. an older, manual cell locking device. that day, chow lines had run late. i said, come on, guys, go in your cells. you miss roll-in, you know what happens. i figured all of them would be in. i rolled the bar. bigger than anything here is three of them didn t make it. so i went down the range. i started at the end and worked my way up. the last cell that missed roll-in was 424. i locked his door. went to 418. locked his door. went to the next cell 410. i said, come on, go on in your cell. he said, i m not going in. officer talley alone on the tier with the inmate says she knew immediately she was in trouble. at that time, a sick feeling just overcomes you, and you think, wow, something s not right. so i called for my sergeant on the radio. he said, it ll be
york state. 90% of the guns we confiscate here come from other states. they come from south, we call it the iron pipe line-up 95. we need a national approach to a gun control. we have the toughest laws in the country now in new york, but if other states don t have that, it s simple to go to other states. so, background checks will address some of the issues in other states, but, you know tough gun trafficking laws will help, as well, right? that s correct. we hope that comes out, you know, from washington. so, you ve got the toughest, some of the toughest laws in the nation in this city regarding guns and state. what are the results? the last year. death by guns. how are we doing here? well, we had a total murder of 418, which is the lowest that we ve had in at least 52 years.
congressman, your home state of virginia has been cited by mayor michael bloomberg of new york as the source of many of the guns that make their way up the i-95 and onto the strides of new york. according to the atf, in 2011 over 1,700 guns from other states were recovered by law enforcement in maryland alone. 418 of those were from virginia. and virginia ranks in the top five among states that export guns used in crimes. so how would this bill stop the flow of guns into your colleague congressman cummings state? well, martin, this bill is a direct reflection of the wisdom and really the advice and council of our men and women in law enforcement. they re telling us the federal law is insufficient, it s ambiguo ambiguous. they ask us for help, that s why