welcome back to the lead . the national lead, violence and assault and fire is in the streets. all to silence a voice, a rude and offensive voice, but one protected by the same right to free speech that i am currently enjoying. it all took place at a place, a campus that sparked the free speech movement on college campuses in the 160s. cnn s ken is live for us in berkeley. things got out of control. they certainly did. it looked like a war zone here instead of an ordinary campus, which it has returned to largely today, jake. we saw fires set. there were firecrackers and rocks thrown at police and riot gear. it was quite an engagement between law enforcement and about 1500 protesters who filled the square, and this went on for hours. all of this about the rude speaker you were talking about, breitbart editor milo yiannopoulos who has been visiting college campuses with his controversial speeches. he once worked for white house chief advisor steve bannon.
tucker: very much a liberal elite world. he went to harvard. he doesn t have peers who share his view. really, you are supporting your father-in-law? he s the opposite of everyone in our world and he s doing it anyway. he had all these critics saying your father-in-law s anti-somatic. and yet the son in law stood by him every step of the way. he s been a remarkable lieutenant for him. giving up all these assets, going into this blind trust to actually work in the white hou white house. he is actually going in and saying i m going to roll up my sleeves. were going to try to do this right. tucker: you think you are tough, buck the views of everyone in your social circle. and see how that works out. most people will not do that. up ahead, there were wild protests in washington, d.c., tonight. fires set.
i can t breathe. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. a grand jury deciding not to indict the officer whose chokehold killed garner during his arrest in july for suspicion of selling loose cigarettes. nypd. reporter: unlike what we saw in ferguson after the grand jury s decision was read new york protesters were disruptive but peaceful. no justice. no peace. no righteous. no peace. anger in the streets but no stores looted, no fires set, no bottles thrown. jason carroll xwibegins our coverage live in times square. good morning. reporter: and a equiet times square. much different than last night, hundreds of protesters marching
of those bodies and they want this to be a time and a moment for the families to reflect on the lives that their children actually gave. understood. all right, kelly wright live in the d.c. bureau. thanks. sure. now the rest of your headlines and we start with a fox news alert. british prime minister david cameron calling parliament back to london now for emergency meetings following the outbreaks of the violent riots there three days in a row. cameron speaking outside 10 downing street moments ago. this is pure and simple and it has to be confronted and defeated. prime minister cameron also said that 16,000 police will be on the streets tonight but so far, there are no plans to call in the military. this comes after the riots continued to spread throughout london neighborhoods and other british cities like birmingham and liverpool. windows were smashed, fires set. it all started after a father of four was gunned down by police in a racially charged north london suburb over the
there understands the chaos that occurs. you have bottles being thrown at you. fires set. so it s difficult for our officers and we don t want to put the students at risk as well or anybody out there celebrating. megyn: the student is threatening a lawsuit. are you feeling the pain? it s tax day. folks are holding protests all across america. the tea party express descending on washington, d.c. and local tea parties raising their voices in cities and towns from coast to coast. georgia, colorado, wisconsin, iowa, minnesota, alabama, oak, oregon. oak homa. every one is getting in on the action today. neil, what are you seeing so far in terms of who turned up and what the tone is? reporter: we are 3 1/2 hours away from the start of this. but i would say a pretty big crowd here already. i think it has more to do the