with lawrence o donnell. good evening, lawrence. good evening, rachel. and i will see you tomorrow night, also on the panel discussion, and leitao will do the last word to 10 pm. i think tomorrow, rachel, the case about what happened in georgia it s gonna be clearer than ever to this country. and i long felt that that is where the clearest case of criminal conduct is to be found. i think that, i think that isim for the crime to happen on tape, and be released as soon as it happens, that should just be a new rule, that you have to crime on tape, and the tape has to be on tv that night. that helps, i think, in terms of this like, simple-ing it down so that we can all get it. you know, i ve listened to many hours of wired taps by the fbi investigations that they brought to court. and you know, you listen to the, what did he say, what did he mean, what was that. and he kind of mumbled that thing. there s a lot of interpretation that goes into it. they wire tap, and that s r
gunman, long before they finally did. nine minutes! the police had protective equipment. they had a ballistic shield in the school. nine minutes, after the mass murder entered the school, and no one used that ballistic shield for over an hour. david goodman at the new york times reports that the hour that chief peter dabo says he spent, looking for a key, to open the classroom door, was a wasted our in more ways than one. because there is no evidence that the classroom doors were locked. the times reports, it was not apparent from the documents or video reviewed by the times, that anyone had checked the doors to see if they were locked.