violence associated with the supreme court s eventual decision on abortion rights. this warning comes as the senate is holding a hearing on the threat of domestic terrorism, and lawmakers are still talking, trying to find common ground on something to combat the gun violence epidemic in the country. this morning, a teacher who survived the elementary school massacre in uvalde is speaking publicly for the first time. every single one of his students in his class were killed. i lost 11 that day. and i tell the parents i m sorry, i tried my best. it s what i was told to do. please don t be angry with me. just gut wrenching. we ll have much more of his story in that interview in a moment. let s begin with this new threat bull fin. what more are you learning? reporter: this is the sixth time that dhs has issued this terrorism bulletin that makes clear that terrorism risk comes from within the united states, before january 6th, these advisories focused on terrorism from eithe
to put this out. we have a number of high profile events coming up that could force extremists to justify acts of violence. some of those include the decision, the upcoming decision on the roe v. wade case, changes on border policy that could result in increased immigration, and the election at the end of the year. the second thing they re saying here is that the range of targets is enormous. they re concerned about schools, government facilities, religious institutions, large gatherings of people, government employees. so it s really putting everybody on alert. and finally, their concern that foreign actors, and you can insert the word russia here would be looking to take advantage of this strife and acts of violence to further sow discord and chaos. so it s a multilevel warning we re getting. you mentioned they do lean towards foreign adversaries. but this bulletin is the sixth issued sixth, and it keeps the
violence associated with the supreme court s eventual decision on abortion rights. this warning comes as the senate is holding a hearing on the threat of domestic terrorism, and lawmakers are still talking, trying to find common ground on something to combat the gun violence epidemic in the country. this morning, a teacher who survived the elementary school massacre in uvalde is speaking publicly for the first time. every single one of his students in his class were killed. i lost 11 that day. and i tell the parents i m sorry, i tried my best. it s what i was told to do. please don t be angry with me. just gut wrenching. we ll have much more of his story in that interview in a