their protection and their families to . somew channtly, i notice somewhahat of a change and i expressed it. here on fox.i i warned thawat veselirned tn it was coming. this isn t anything new .n en what we ve been experiencing for almost like two years inye the countrary where the crimes have become more brazen. it. is very clear that criminals aren t afraid of law enforcement as this continues in the country that we re going to have vigilante justice and we can t have that in a civilized society. avsomeone is going to fill that void and there will bel that vigilante justice. and we don t want thataders areg to happen. but the leaders aren t doing anything about it. the mayors are steppin m g up th to the plate. the dea is aren t stepping us ap to the plate. the judges aren t stepping up plate to the plate. so who is going to d o it?o and that s why that vigilante justice comes in that look, i didn t say that to brag or be right. i genuinely want it to be wrong about this
russian aggression. every day yothere is no alternative to this decision. we are live in ukraine with why this aid is so critical for ukrainians. a stunning set of new arrests related to the january 6th attack on the u.s. capitol. three active duty marines under arrest for their part in the insurrection, one allegedly wanted to wage a second civil war. silence from actor alec baldwin as he is facing involuntary manslaughter charges connected to the rust set shooting. what we are learning about changes on the set as the crew vows to finish the movie. i feel, you know, sad, but also i have a sense new zealand s prime minister speaking out after her shocking resignation earlier this week and her decision to step down is resonating with women worldwide. and that parade of recent storms in the west prompts a big turnaround when it comes to the drought. newsroom starts right now. good morning. it is saturday, january 21st. i m amara worker. i m boris sanchez
them in a chokehold. hol to other passengers, helped the marine restrain nele. s this morning, there is growingoa outrage and questions surroundinan g the death of a mn on a new york city subway. this video obtained by nbc new york , shows three subway riders subduing the 30 year ol d man and one putting him in a chokehold. he later goes limp. the medical examiner ruleda homd the death a homicide and says the cause was, quote,neck compression of neck chokehold. the district y. attorney identified the man as jordan neely. a witness says that nearlyess s, on the subway and began, quote, a somewhat aggressive speech saying he was hungry, he was thirsty, that he didn t care about anything. he dt care about going to jail. he didn t care that he gets a big life sentence. neely quickly became neely unconscious. he was taken quick to a nearby, later, he was pronouncedr, he was pronounced dead.w york cit the new york city medicaliner p examiner proclaimerod his death as a homicide and almost
early fall. all five were indicted back in 2021 on charges of manslaughter and criminally negligent homicide. in august of 2019, mcclain, a young black man, was walking home from the convenience store. he was listening to music on his headphones, had ice tea with him. he was confronted by three aurora, colorado, police officers who were responding to a call about a suspicious individual. although mcclain wasn t doing anything wrong at the time, police attempted to apprehend him. one of the officers, nathan woodyard, attempted to retrain mcclain with a neck chokehold that has since been banned, causing him to briefly lose consciousness. the other two helped restrain mcclain, even though he repeatedly said he could not breathe. the paramedics were called in. they then gave him a large dose of the powerful sedative known as ketamine. too much for his body weight,