we know we did not have that here. you are asking why the information was told the way that it was. who, what, when. the failure to have an incident commander on the scene to receive information and communicate with the media, i believe, in part, led to some of the information reported inaccurately. representative from the committee. looking at maybe how information flows post the incident. there is a section in the report about information flow and how we believe it is incumbent upon law enforcement as they make reports to report what is verified, what is verifiable and what is not verifiable. when the chairman talked about multiple systemic failures, one of those is just the handling of infoinformation in this
commander on the scene to receive information and to communicate with the media, i believe in part, lead to some of the information that was reported inaccurately. representative the question is looking at how information flows and how it went post the incident. there is a section in the report about information flow and we believe it is incumbent upon law enforcement, as they make reports, to report what is verifiable, understand what is verifiable, and what is not verifiable. when the chairman talks about multiple systemic failures, one of those is the handling of information in this investigation. that is why it is in the report in that section. next question. yes, over here. can we give everyone else a
the failure to have an incident commander on the scene to receive information and to communicate with the media, i believe, in part, led to some of the information that was reported inaccurately. representative moody? just to dovetail on that because i think the question is maybe looking at how information flow went post the incident. and there is a section in the report about information flow and how we believe it is incumbent upon law enforcement as they make reports to report what is verifiable, understand what is verifiable and what is not verifiable. so when the chairman talks about multiple systemic failures, one of those is the handling of information in this investigation. and that s why it s in the report in that section. next question. could we just hold it to one follow-up and give everyone else a chance? rosa, go ahead.
hate crimes against the asian community rise during covid or post coven? can you talk about why? really starting in 2020, we saw a surge in these hate crimes, and there have been different ways to measure the number of those hate crimes. there are official federal reports, based on what the cities are reporting, back up to the federal level, and are academic studies as well. and so one of the most recent reports has shown that, last year, there was an increase of about 3a0% in hate crimes directed towards asian people. that is on top of the record we already saw in 2020, and part of the reason is because of the former president criticising china and talking about where the virus may or might have come from, inaccurately, of course, and so people were conflating the region, the country of china, may be people who look like me, from that region, two people in america with
adam says, mina, mina, we ve found a knife. mina, mina, i m going to need you to sit down. i ve found them. i ve found them. but they ve gone. mina smallman has always believed the police response may have been clouded by racial profiling, misogyny or classism. the independent office for police conduct concluded there was no evidence of stereotyping but information about the sisters disappearance was recorded inaccurately and a call handler was dismissive. the metropolitan police commissioner, dame cressida dick, has admitted that the level of service provided to the women s family fell short of what was expected and had officers acted differently, then they could have been saved immeasurable pain. she has now offered to meet the family in person at a time of their choosing to say sorry. but in a statement, the women s mother said: