they re not going to know the answer so they may have to do a damage assessment that looks at the potential damage if it was disclosed. they may have to look at the security situation at mar-a-lago and the fact it had been targeted in the past by potentially by foreign intelligence agencies. so they may have to make some suppositions here. damage assessments in the past have resulted in the evacuation of cia sources or technical means of collection may have to be changed. so serious consequences here. one of the other issue that is the intelligence community is going to worry about is creating a paper record that could then be forced to be turned over to the defense in any potential trial of donald trump or any other person who may be charged in this case. so that s also looming behind this whole process. it sounds like multiagency, multilevel, multi you know, different groups looking into this. how long does this assessment
interrogating the issues of racism so people meet the propaganda online as they will because it circulates widely, but don t end up being persuaded by it. don t go down that rabbit hole. i think until we can see it as a society problem, the way our allies do, multiagency, department of education, health and human services, youth agencies and not just a department of homeland security for all the good they re trying to do with a prevention work, it s not enough. phil, we have had this conversation too many times. we go through a long list of hate inspired. we go through this too many times and have the same conversations. this shooter here, the suspect, at one point visited by the new york state police after he turned in a high school project about murder/suicide. how? how? especially we re in the united states of america. in one rural community the thoughts about guns are one versus an urban community they might be something else. how can you have a uniform system of at least just a
him and pick him out somewhere and call the authorities. you think, tom, that it was quick? look, the new yorkers i know, the conversation that everybody i had from, you know, just everyone was they haven t caught at a guy yet, when the alert went off this morning where i live, everyone in the building was like, the alarm is going off, what is they haven t gotten that was a question on every new yorker s mind. they haven t gotten that guy yet? but you think it was quick? yeah. i mean, look, you know, crimes are not solved in 43 minutes that we watch on law & order on tv. even with the massive manhunt, multiagency manhunt we had under way, again, you re talking about a city of 8 to 12 million people on any given day. that s assuming that he didn t flee somewhere else. so i think, again, having been in the business over 20 years,
throwing some kind of device. that s according to law enforcement. that s right, willie. not a random act of violence, you would think, talking about uniforms, any sort of explosive device there s premeditation. in terms of the location and timing, when there s a random attack or part of another criminal activity, this is an intermittent pattern, not really specific. this is the busiest time in the busiest city in america on the busiest subway line out to brooklyn. i think there will be key things they try to figure out. it seems we re hearing so far about one attacker. in any case where you have this sort of situation play out, where you have a sudden incident like this happen and anything involving an explosive device, especially nypd, they re very good about trying to expand out, make sure it s not part of a larger plot, essentially. that s where there are multiagency you can see the vehicles down there descending