restaurant, the moment somebody gets in your bathroom either in there for an hour doing drugs, and then here is they are going to announce that they are closing stores. they cannot come out and say that this policy backfired on them. is it terrible that when they announced it, the first thing i did was looked at whether would be affected in the first place? towards the d.c. insider. [laughter] it is apparently my starbucks that s closing. they are closing hours, one of the regular ones. evil, perhaps? people want to know. what were you doing in there?
making courts make decisions on individuals in a clean up city. you have to do it. it was a situation where what it is not being heard. they build a house will stay in the house and the no leave. greg: will trash it on the leave. get in the hotels in new york with a given everyone hotel rooms and vouchers and stuff, and then once the drug dealers found the hotels in the hotels can handle it anymore. at some point you have to make tough extreme decisions. to fix a problem or at least alleviate some of the problems. greg: ornament tough decisions are trying to help people i think half the arson in oakland is homeless people setting fire to places the sleeping in or what not because of doing drugs. this is a societal concern. but like all situations that were in, this represents what we thought was a solution in the early 70s member one flew over the cuckoo s nest and statement
clearly trying to paint johnny depp is a liar. now that you are doing drugs will we have the u.k. testimony where he said you were. the fact that is already testified in this trial. i mean amber heard s lawyers are going to exploit that to the max baer that could really i don t think you may think dell might disagree with me come i don t think this is about the money. i think what he wants to do is tell a story in the most public way possible and take amber heard down with him. nobody comes away looking good. dagen, there were really sad images we watch and it speaks to two very lost people.
a patrol man pulled over a white pontiac convertible with a built out taillight. as the cops approached the car, the driver ran, there was a wild chase. they caught him. his name was robert corona. he had a story. said detectives jeffrey bliss and roger kennedy of the sheriff s office. his original story was that i was doing crack cocaine with the owner of the car and it wasn t reported stolen. did he say he knew who the owner was? yes, and he had permission to drive the car. when they check the registration, they learned the convertible belonged to subpoena. and corona had a record. he was a known street criminal. had a lengthy arrest history. they learned from sabina friends. i there was something wrong with the story of her doing drugs and drinking with a fellow in a smoky partof town. she would never be buying drugs.
from us new york. so, what s in this new plan? reporter: yeah, wolf. this is a comprehensive plan involving multiple city agencies address the crime, mental illness episodes, people who are without a home. all of these being seen on new york city subways right now, and after this recent rash of violence that new yorkers saw over the weekend, a lot of people are asking is this plan going to work. tonight a zero-tolerance policy in new york city s transit system in effect. no more smoking, no more doing drugs no. more sleeping. no more doing barecues on the subway system. no more just doing whatever you want. no, those days are over. reporter: this as the city roared an alarming six stabbings or slashings over the weekend in the subway system and two alleged assaults where nypd officers recovered this, a hatchet. they say it was used in one attack. ever since the pandemic there s been more mental health issues, and we see it a lot on the trains. the string of underground