patrick brosnan. i am so sorry we are talk under these circumstances. this is a huge loss for the nypd. you wered there 14 years and you know the area well? two things, i worked in the south bronx where these officers worked in the fourth decision and i worked in a sister command. you mentioned errorously that it was a man involved. he is not a man. he was a coward and savage and absolutely no sense at all that he was anything manly. this was a barbaric act. they were having their lunch in a radio car and working as civil servants when they were slaughtered in a doubt slaughter.
though. i m asking in the south bronx. we re talking ferguson, not the best part of st. louis or downtown st. louis, so if are you if ferguson, a lot of people don t realize, it s a crime ridden neighborhood where this happened. who are you looking at? again, i don t want to get storm tracker 2000ed. i want to stick to data. you know, because mike bloomberg said something in the new yorker or the new york magazine that offended a lot of people. he said, look at the hard numbers, too es are the two areas where we have an overwhelming majority of crime in new york city and these are the people demographically based on data post-likely to exit crimes. that s where we focus our policeing on. there is a flaw. exactly. if the stop and frisk were located in the south bronx or those neighborhoods, i would believe that. they re not. you keep talking stop and frisk. i m talking policing in general. if you are talking about
i went to school in long island. i had to defend myself, it s taught me how to fight for myself. i think you have to be protective of kids face a different kind of bullying. these are real visible threats, saying they re going to slit her throat. in the south bronx, i had to fight, physically fight. what does this say about porterville and the mayor? you heard virginia, she said on the council how can a 10-year-old girl grow a pair? that guys delivery not many people give a worst delivery than him.
my good friend mark geragos said perhaps this kid wouldn t survive in prison. who cares if he s not going to survive in prison. bottom line, there has to be consequences to his action. people have been tweeting me. people are outraged by this notion that someone that s rich doesn t get the same justice that someone who suffers from poorenza, like i suffered from in the south bronx. you re quiet today, chris cuomo. i don t have time to get into it. this conversation is not over, because this isn t going to work. their strategy. there will be another round of conversation. you don t think it s going to work? i i don t. i think they re going to argue double jeopardy and i don t think they have a right to appeal to the sentence. that s all legal. are arguing a lot of policy, makes a lot of sense, deserves discussion, we ll go oat it.
technology. it s a double header for you, if you will. yes, absolutely. i m a technology teacher in the south bronx. i also help lead a nonprofit in the south bronx that expands the school day and creates community schools. because you want a longer school day and you want kids in summer school. yes, we want an expanded day. we need partnerships to make this happen. we lack the funding in our schools to be able to make this happen at our level. we need sponsors to come in to help us teach our children about technology to help bring the technology into the buildings and to help make the core standards a reality in summer, in after school, throughout the year. real quick, i want to get this teacher in. i think you re going to get a lot of reaction. you re from utah. you were telling me you re in a rural area. pretty much every kid in your school has access to technology. to her, it is unfathomable that any of you have to come out of your pocket to help children learn. i m just