definitely not someone i would give my energy to. if you have an issue with somebody you come up to him. he had his opportunity tonight. i saw him in the hallway and he walked right by me. what would you say to that and perhaps a missed opportunity maybe to talk to lebron face-to-face privately? he didn t walk by me and i didn t say a word. obviously when you are an athlete and sign with companies like nike and when china become your big boss you have to remain silent and it s just a shame. but someone has to do it. someone has to be outspoken about all the human rights violations happening around the world. especially in china because you see there are so many athletes, actors, so many celebrities are scared because they care too much about their money, their
colleague died a hero. he was willing to sacrifice his life to put to save others. he walked he ran into danger. he didn t walk. he ran into danger, hoping he might be able to save someone else s life. and he made the ultimate sacrifice. with me now, jacob zoborov. a procession will start to the medical examiner s office, sure to be emotional. chris jansingh is at the center. sergeant 25 years on the force, ron helus, survived by not only his wife but son, he undoubtedly saved lives. tactically speaking he did not wait for a perimeter to be set up before he went into that bar and grill in thousand oaks.
had you seen the shooter before? not me. he had, he saw him outside. but this was a couple of months ago, six months back that he saw him outside of the church. did you pretend that you were dead as he walked by you? yes, yeah. he didn t walk by me, he did not walk by me. he was like in the middle. right when you go inside the door, he was in the aisle, he was pointing his rifle like that. he was looking. look over here, look over there. he was just shooting, tat, tat, tat, tat, tat, everything that moved that he could see. when you got up you saw what he did? when he left, i got up. 15, at least i waited 15 minutes or 20 minutes before i went outside. i wasn t about to go out there knowing that it was still dangerous. what did you see when you got up? blood dead people. dead bodies. dead children all over the place. outside. people screaming. looking for each other. it was terrible, terrible. all dead little bodies, dead with a whole bunch of blood.
and body language, but what s with the sniffing? have we figured that out? the sniffling? no. again, if you just practice with the microphone, which he didn t do, i think he could have heard it and then fixed it. but last night it was unbearably strong. he was sniffing longer than any coke-phen i ve ever known. i thought this isn t going to go well. and it was for the whole 90 minutes. what was one big positive? let me end on a positive for trump, though. what did he do that you think really reached out? the town hall format softened him a little bit. i think that was good. he definitely interrupted clinton but much less than de in the previous debate. i thought he was while he didn t walk up to the audience, the town hall softened his approach in general, he didn t seem loud, didn t seem too aggressive in the debate. that was a positive he could definitely bring out of the debate. one to go in vegas next week. we ll be there. todd graham, thank you for now.
christie friend david willstein appeared before state lawmakers. he s the port authority figure who resigned in the wake of all this. when questioned about the affair, he took the fifth amendment. he didn t walk. willstein is the former port authority appointee who allegedly caused the traffic jams by closing lanes to the george washington bridge from the city of fort lee, new jersey. late today governor christie did cause a traffic jam of sorts in fort lee when he arrived at city hall to meet with the mayor, mark sokolicz you ll hear from shortly on this program. we want to you an extended look at governor christie facing the music. i come out here today to apologize to the people of new jersey. i apologize to the people of fort lee. and i apologize to the members of the state legislature. i am embarrassed and humiliated by the conduct of some of the people on my team.