the circumstances, and that s what s really important. when you re a prosecutor and you re looking at the evidence, you re going to look at direct evidence and circumstantial evidence, but you look at the totality of the circumstances. school officials are trying to say there was no history of discipline. there was no history of violence with this particular student at the school. however, joe, we do know there was within a very tight window of time 48 hours, not only the search for ammunition on the kid s cell phone but also the fact he was making these drawings. the other thing that troubles me when it comes to liability and possible exposure for the school district is the following. why did school officials, number one, not elevate this or escalate it to law enforcement levels? according to the school superintendent it stayed at the guidance counsellor level. why would they then order the parents to get counseling for their son within 48 hours or they would refer the child to child
hearing, former deputy assistant attorney explained the problem this way. weton have the slightest idea how many hate crimes there are in america and we have never known. the numbers currently kept by the fbi are largely useless. the fbi agrees that the data is not at all accurate because it says it continually fades the issue of underreporting at the victim and law enforcement levels and faces a problem of law enforcement training on classifying hate crime incidents. the latter is what a new bill is trying to help fix. it s called the jabbara-heyer no hate act aimed at fixing the problem by offering funding incentives to departments for reporting hate crimes. people don t understand how data can impact policy, how policy can impact people. right now america doesn t know how big its hate problem is. these families say that must change to save the next family from heartache.
attorney general roy austin explained the problem this way. we do not have the slightest idea how many hate crimes there are in america and we have never known. the numbers currently kept by the fbi are largely useless. the fbi agrees that the data is not at all accurate because it says it continually faces the issue of underreporting at the victim and law enforcement levels, and faces the problem of law enforcement training on classifying hate crime incidents. the latter is what a new bill is trying to help fix. it s called the jabara/heyer no hate act, offering incentives to departments for reporting hate crimes. people don t understand how data can impact policy, how policy can impact people. but right now america doesn t know how big its hate problem is. these families say that must change to save the next family from heart ache. sara si, thank you for that
the killer. this disturbing information coming to light, fred, as the broward county sheriff says they will be investigating these officers. sources say after these tapes are reviewed we can expect a report likely in the next week. all right, kaylee hartung, lots of questions. thank you so much. so there were countless warning signs and red flags leading up to the shooting. concerns from strangers, teachers, neighborhoods and acquaintances. but somehow the shooter still fell through the cracks of multiple law enforcement levels. here s a look back. the fbi failed to follow up on a hot line typical warning the shooter is going to explode. broward county sheriff s office said they received 23 calls over the last decade about the shooter and his family. police visited the shooter s home 39 times over 7 years. the shooter posted pictures of guns on instagram and made violent comments on the social media site. and florida social services
ankara, and wherever you are watching, we thank you for joining in. and moments a s ago the preside spoke with his national security team. this is what he said. we know of no significant or credible intelligence indicating a plot on the homeland, and that based based on the latest information i have received in the situation room. it is similar to the information and the briefing that i received on saturday before i left on my trip last week. so as americans travel to be with their loved ones, i want them to know that the law enforcement levels at every level are working overtime. they are continually monitoring threats at home and abroad. continually evaluating our security posture.