make the decision to put him on probation. you ve heard the sheriff has been outraged since day one in this particular case. you know, it s bad enough that law enforcement deals, oh, the poor kid had such a tough childhood, he can t be responsible. now we have, the poor kid had such a great childhood, he s not responsible either? who is? and i think law enforcement is really not, you know, it s not their fault. now, maybe an individual probation officer who s part of the court system, not part of the police, you know, may have been lax, may have caused this, but certainly the sheriff s office, from day one has been outraged by the fact that this kid was put on probation and for the reason, that he just had it so good, he can t be responsible. and police are always, you know, talking about this, the fact that the courts are too lenient on criminal defenders. they let them out too soon, they don t enforce the sentences that prosecutors want. so it s sort of a revolving door that law en
screaming for justice, demanding change in how law enforcement deals with people of color. it s happening in every city, every town. it s happening here in pittsburgh. reporter: in new york, the brooklyn bridge shut down by protesters and they brought times square to a standstill. hours of peaceful protests there escalatin escalating, eventually reaching a tipping point, the nypd cracking down. 219 arrested overnight, including several after a massive scuffle. it was all pretty violent and they were laying people down on the ground against the cars. they were very much overly aggressive. what a surprise. when had nypd not been overly aggressive to us? or and a die-in was staged in brooklyn lying in the middle of atlantic avenue, an eerie silence descended as protesters with cardboard coffins stopped chanting.
standoffs but no serious violence in dallas, boston, chicago and new york. protesters screaming for justice, demanding change, and how law enforcement deals with people of color. it s happening in every city, every town, happening here in pittsburgh. reporter: in new york, the brooklyn bridge shut down by protesters. and they brought times square to a standstill. hours of peaceful protests there, escalating, reaching a tipping point. the nypd cracking down, 19 arrested overnight, including several after a massive scuffle. it was all pretty bad. they were laying people down. they were very much overly aggressive. what a surprise. when have they not been overaggressive to us? reporter: elsewhere, demonstrators staged a so-called die-in brooklyn, lying in the middle of madison avenue, as
for people listening to the likes of peter king, it s surprising that we would be dismantling this program. given generally where we are, in terms of muslim communities and suspicions that americans quote/unquote, harbor about them. right. in new york city, there s been only one mayor, one police commissioner and one chairman of the safety committee since 1992, when new york was forced to take a leading role in how local law enforcement deals with terrorism. after mayor bloomberg, ray kelly, you have a new administration that very early on said we re going to have a clean break from the bloomberg administration. and that was led by bill deblass
related. i say that with no trepidation and no hesitation. this is a separate matter. we have, from every source that we can find, what we do not know. is anything beyond this was some sort of soldier-on-soldier dispute. that does not explain to me or anyone else why it is that there are three people dead besides this shooter and 14 others in hospitals. some described to us very as in grave condition. we cannot put those things together just yet. this happened within the last two and a half hours. two and a half to three hours. the reporting is coming in now. i want to get to leah gabriel in the newsroom. on how law enforcement deals with active shooter situation. our regular viewers know you are a pilot for the united states navy and have been through this training. shep, i haven t been through this specific