the 911 call. my ex-husband came in and he raped me. he raped you? uh-huh. i shot him. rape? but that s all she said on the topic until about two hours later, when she told the deputy she needed medical attention. i need to see a doctor. i ve been hurt. it was detective syers job to sort through it all and he began by showing cara a bit of kindness. i went over and took the handcuffs off of her. she must have been relieved to have that happen. um i mean, her demeanor at that time was just questioning, i guess. i didn t take her as being under duress or relieved or anything like that. she must have seemed pretty upset. she just shot her ex-husband? not unduly. really? no. mind you, according to cara, as she sat here in the car, she didn t know how badly hurt j.j. was. so, you thought he was alive still? absolutely. in fact, j.j. died rather quickly. a fate that had a certain irony. it was he who gave cara the gun, taught her how to shoot to kill in case
our primary investigator is in his mid-30s. our chief investigator is in his late 40s. they were both able in about 12 to 15 seconds to stand up, slip it below their feet, get in front of them, take a handcuff key that s been placed right in front of them and get out of the handcuffs. wait, wait, wait, that st you think madison did? you think his took his handcuffs off and shot his parents and then put the handcuffs back on? yes, i think that s what happened. did you slip out of the handcuffs and commit murder and then put the handcuffs back on? no. would you know how to do that? no, that was the first time i had ever been put in handcuffs. the state was moving ahead, the date for madison s double murder trial was set. they seemed pretty determined. yeah, they seemed pretty determined but i was pretty determined myself. coming up this is the start of war,
small world. detective syers knew j.j. had run into him at crime scenes. jj was a medical examiners investigator. but why would cara shoot him? her answer was right there in the 911 call. my ex-husband came in and he raped me. he raped you? uh-huh. i shot him. rape? but that s all she said on the topic until about two hours later, when she told the deputy she needed medical attention. i need to see a doctor. i ve been hurt. it was detective syers job to sort through it all and he began by showing cara a bit of kindness. i went over and took the handcuffs off of her. she must have been relieved to have that happen. um i mean, her demeanor at that time was just questioning, i guess. i didn t take her as being under duress or relieved or anything like that. she must have seemed pretty upset. she just shot her ex-husband? not unduly. really? no. mind you, according to cara, as she sat here in the car, she didn t know how badly hurt j.j. was. so, you thought he
culture of the very military that protects us right now which is a little bit of a difficult thing to swallow. could the president argue, hey, i m the commander-in-chief? he could. the idea that institutions themselves are disreputable and dis credible, it s nihilistic. it s saying all the traditions we built up are garbage and we need to start from scratch and we need to somehow the problem with our military is we re not taking the handcuffs off which is a juvenile playground approach to how we handle our affairs. kori, he ends with this, americans need to know that 99.9% of our uniformed members always have, always are and always will make the right decision. our allies need to know we remain a force for good and to bear with us as we go through this moment in time. how should both our allies and enemies make sense of this episode between the president and the military? what impact, if any at all, does
there were command staff behind him who have since advanced in rank and with the president coming here, our officers wants to attend because it s night and day when you compare presidents. president obama was a very anti-law enforcement president and president trump turned things around immediately. he took the handcuffs off of cops and the lot on criminals but many of our members wanted to attend the show that the port support. shannon: not everybody is going to be on the same page. minneapolis public radio says this, other members of law enforcement say they are disturbed about the overt political sentiment and the message it sends to the committee as well as by high-profile law enforcement for donald trump. have you heard from officers worried about the political perception, the public perception on this? there was one officer who had question it, there was the only one i heard from.