so the isat process initially looked at the 19 posts. that s great they come back with a report. it s kind of like the seven reports for this and now we have another committee. we keep having committees look into benghazi but we never act on them. it doesn t help our men and women on the ground. that s what i m focused on. so, what i want to know with these isats, they came back with their recommendations to you. have they been resourced? are they institutionalized? what has been done with this process so it s not a snapshot in time in reaction to the benghazi attack and i want to make sure that, you know, at the very least we re continuing the cooperation or at least there s some institutionalization of the review process to make sure that if it s not those 19 posts, if the shift now is there s 20 posts or some other posts, what has been done to make sure it s institutionalized? well, that was one of the changes i instituted before i left. and i m confident that secretary kerry and
that goes out initially looked at the 19 posts, that s great that they come back with a report. it s kind of like, you know, the seven reports, and now we have another committee. we keep having committees to look into benghazi, but we never act on them. it doesn t help our men and women on the ground, and that s what i m focused on. so what i want to know is when they came back with their recommendations to them, have they been resourced? are they institutionalized? what has been done with this process so that it s not a snapshot in time in reaction to benghazi attack, and i want to make sure that at the very least we re continuing the cooperation or at the very least there s some sort of institutionalization of the review process to make sure the shift now there s 20 posts or some other posts. what has been done to make sure it s institutionalized? well, that was one of the changes that i instituted before i left, and i m confident that secretary kerry and his
were doing and others we are prohibited. so again, it goes back to that balancing of risk and reward that we re always doing. going back to the arb conducted by admiral mullens and ambassador pickering, how many of the recommendations did u.s. secretary of state accept? i accepted all of them. they made 29 recommendations, congresswoman. i accepted all 29 of them. and began to implement them before i left the state department. and i know that secretary kerry has continued that work. do you recommend for future secretaries and for this committee and other members of congress some sort of a formal review process as we go onwards? i don t want there to be a review process that the triggered by death of americans. this goes back to my earlier question about institutionalization of this process so that we make sure that our men and women in embassies right now are safe and that they re safe tomorrow and a year from now and ten years from
themselves in jails unable to address all their needs. how you doing? you all right? i m doing all right. everything good with you? good man. thanks, man. al cannon has been the sheriff of charleston county for more than a quarter of a century. he s witnessed the problem from its early days. you go back to the late 60s, early 70s, the psychiatric community was of moving away from institutionalization. and so what was supposed to follow along with that was community-based funding for community-based programs. and those programs did not follow. and so you ve got some real challenges there. and a lot of it has to do with, okay, you re not putting people in psychiatric facilities like you used to. so more often than not, law enforcement ends up having to deal with society s failure to really fully address that issue. mayberry says he s been suffering from mental health disorders including
community was moving away from institutionalization. and so what was supposed to follow along with that was community-based funding for community-based programs. and those programs did not follow. and so you ve got some real challenges there. and a lot of it has to do with, okay, you re not putting people in psychiatric facilities like you used to. so more often than not, law enforcement ends up having to deal with society s failure to really fully address that issue. mayberry says he s been suffering from mental health disorders including schizophrenia since age 12. as an adult, he s had a number of minor convictions for crimes such as larceny, public intoxication, and disorderly conduct. but 15 years earlier, he was convicted of his most serious crime aggravated sexual battery and attempted rape. he served five years in prison