maybe stop the bleeding. was he say anything? he was trying to mumble things, but i couldn t make out what he was saying. then i saw the driver get out and wave at another civilian car. then, you know, they we were trying to get the driver was trying to get brent out. i got out of the car, and then they just shoved me into this car and drove me out. but i kept saying, you know, bring brent, bring brent. and i think at that point is when maybe brent was just he was dead already. and i remember just being in that car. i put my hand on the wound, and i was starting to faint. i was like, this can t be. i can t go. we all imagine how would we react in a situation where shots are being fired in our direction, and you think intellectually, oh this is the way it would happen, or this is the way i would do. was it different than you had ever thought of it? i certainly never experienced an ambush like that. but there was a point that i thought, this is it.
minute minneapolis that she said this. they will not fulfill their oath of office and provide the public safety that they owe to the citizens. the minneapolis police department is the most dysfunctional police department in our state and in the country. sandra: in case our audience couldn t make out the final words from the congresswoman there, she said the minneapolis department is the most dysfunctional police department in our state and probably in the country. blaming those in blue for the problems that minneapolis is having. yeah, this is actually really quite rich. especially coming from her. she was happy to reduce the capacity of police to do the things that we know reduce crime
demeanor. what were they saying to you? i couldn t make out everything but it was a series of interruptions, staccato sentences designed to throw me off course, every time i would begin to formulate a sentence or think through a response to a question, something was yelled at me by the left or right, i couldn t see who was saying it precisely. but that is where the individuals were seated, at some point in time as you showed in the video, i turned around and asked somebody to please be quiet and let me finish. there was also a really un-nerve-ing and disgusting amount of racial animosity that was thrown toward you. have you experienced that before in this position ever and what was that like? not in the 25 years that
berating you, trying to distract you. one of them was mark mcclaus key who was the guy that brandished the gun at the black lives matter protesters, pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor. what were they saying to you? you know, i couldn t make out everything but it was a series of interruptions and sentences designed to throw me off course. every time i would begin to formulate a sentence or think through a response to a question, something was yelled at me from the right or the left. i obviously couldn t see who was saying it behind me precisely, but that s where they were seated. at one point in time as you showed in the video, i actually turned around and asked somebody to please be quiet and let me finish. there was also a really unnerving and disgusting amount of racial animus that was hurled towards you. have you experienced that before
10:05 pm. quiet at that our, safe for the odd passing car a neighborhood carrying on the cool ocean breeze. there was a moon, almost fall. carol was in bed, all alone in a small darkened room. then, searing as a heart attack, the dogs. they were growling. that s one of the things that made me feel so scared. someone was coming into her house. the door crashed open. she said the lights were? off they were. was it so dark you actually couldn t make out who this person was? it happened so fast, i was so frayed. bonjour which to the bedside table, opened the door, to get the gun, no one her ex husband had given her, changed trained her to use. aim for the mass, he d always told her. aim for the chest. she heard the approaching footsteps from the front door