person i have ever known. he was the giver, not a taker. he cared more about others than he did about himself. he told me, he set a personal goal to help at least one person every day of his life. then he said i m not sure i ve been able to meet my goal. i said, dad, you ve got to be kidding. some days you help one person and other days you help 40,000 people. i think you ve met and exceeded your goal. mike greenwell, you may be right, he said. there is no one who helped there is no one he helped more than me. he s always been there for me, through thick and through thin.
oh, my god! dokoupil: allow me to explain. the rock handed over the keys to his personal customized truck to a navy vet named oscar rodriguez. rodriguez had attended a special screening of the rock s new movie called red notice, by the way, and after the actor heard rodriguez s story, he decided to give him the truck. rodriguez is a trainer and a giver supporting victims of domestic violence. he was overcome with gratitude at what the rock was cooking. we ll be right back. stay with us.
man. he had a heart of gold, a smile that lit up a room. he was a giver. he was a little hard worker, especially when he worked with his dad. he was just an all around great kid. so the world should know that ahmaud s death was not in vain and we will continue to scream his name until we leave this ea earth. ahmaud arbery s aunt. they describe the verdict as accountability. justice he said would be having ahmaud arbery at thanksgiving dinner with his family. here s the reaction. the 11 white jurors in south georgia saw the facts as presented by an outstanding prosecutor, a very fair and able judge. i mean, i ve been on this network and criticized the judge in kenosha, so i have to feed people out the same spoon. look, the judge in this case, in the ahmaud arbery case, was fabulous.
man. he had a heart of gold. a smile that lit up a room. he was a giver. he was a little hard worker, especially when he worked with his dad. he was just an all-around, a great kid. and so, the world should know that ahmaud s death was not in vain and that we will continue to scream his name until we leave this earth. i appreciate your time. thank you for being with us tonight. best to you and the family. have a happy thanksgiving. thank you, sir. you, too. perspective now from bakari sellers, an attorney and cnn political commentator and author of the memoir my vanishing country. and from criminal defense attorney sara azari. bakari, i was watching cnn s conk of the verdict and immediately after, you said something that stuck with me. you said, this isn t justice, this is accountability. i want you to explain, again, what you meant by that. well, thanks, john.
man. he had a heart of gold, a smile that lit up a room. he was a giver. the world should know that ahmaud s death was not in vain, and that we will continue to scream his name until we leave this earth. reporter: and, john, when we think about thanksgiving, we think about family and spending time with our loved ones and you think about that family having to sit there and look at that empty chair, what and al sharpton referred to for ahmaud and just the fact he will not be brought back. one thing that stood out to me as i was watching kevin gough walk back to his car, he riled things up, talking about black pastors, a black pastor from this community who he s known for quite some time, walked over, reached out his hand, and said i love you, kevin, they ended up hugging, it was one of those thins you can tell the power of what happened here and the relief in terms of having this all be over at this point. we know federal charges are coming for those three men. so this is in terms of t