Sheriffs of Los Angeles, Orange and Riverside counties refuse to enforce order
Newsom put Southern California and San Joaquin Valley on full lockdown
But flip-flopped on whether going to the beach would be allowed
This week he encouraged it after banning beachgoing in the spring
Frustrated residents and officials are paying less heed to new restrictions
The state set a one-day record of 220 deaths on Thursday
night. listen. 911, what is the address of your emergency? you said 229? two to zero. what s your name? ryan mccann. what s going on today? we have a friend who s unconscious. he hasn t moved. we probably need an ambulance. howled as he? he is 19. 19 years old. is he breathing? he is breathing. is there any alcohol or anything involved? yes, there is. will get somebody over there. thank you very much. notice how calm the grand jury report said the fraternity showed indifference clear signs that tim piazza was in trouble and then vigorously tried to conceal evidence. for example after piazza had been taken to the hospital before he was pronounced dead, there were a series of text
mary might still be alive. ryan i can t look through, i get your example. i m cutting you off because it doesn t follow where you ve been on this issue all along or your organization. or the supporters of this law. when the picture of the governor was came out with the supporters of the bill behind him, one of the pictures had people have a long and pronounced and i would argue ugly experience with the lgbt community. there s nobody there from the other organizations you re thinking about, about minority religion causes this is pretty clear on the face half it is about, the outcry of supporters are coming from organizations like yours that are christian-based, with an animus toward the lgbt community. own who and what you are. there s nothing wrong with that you re allowed to believe it but you re not about native americans or people who want liver transplants, right? we re for the first amendment for everyone. first amendment and religious freedom for all, that includes all of the
of protesters. many believe the law does not need to be fixed. it s fine the way it is and that s why it was passed that way. one is ryan mccann, director of the indiana policy. are you surprised at this backfire of the law? i m taken a bit by surprise. thank you forring me on. we were able to get through the legislative session and committee hearings and give a lot of information about the bill how it passed in 1993 at the federal level, signed by bill clinton, supported by the aclu back then and co-authored by senator ted kennedy and chuck schumer among others. we were a bit surprised. 30 states have this kind of balancing test within the state law. and we ve seen that it really protects a lot of religious minorities. a great example of that comes from pennsylvania where in philadelphia a group of ministries were trying to minister to the poor and giving
a new nbc news-wall street journal poll shows mitt romney falling behind in the presidential race, and that was before news of his secretly recorded videotape dismissing nearly half of american voters. nbc s tracie potts joins us live from washington. she has more on all of this. tracie, good morning to you. reporter: our polls have the latest numbers, president obama five points ahead of mitt romney. this as romney tries to bounce back from what he said on tape last spring. here is what mitt romney was secretly recorded saying last may about the 40% of americans who don t believe in taxes. who believe they re entitled to health care, housing, food, you name it. my job is not to worry about those people. i ll never convince them. reporter: with cameras now in full view, here is what he said at a fund-raiser last night. i believe instead the role of government is to help those who need help. reporter: he admits in a fox interview that some of those not paying taxes a