uvalde school massacre. it shows a quote overall lackadaisical approach by multiple law enforcement agencies on the scene. 19 children and two teachers were killed there that day, and it took 77 minutes to neutralize the gunman. nearly 400 officers responded. a new body cam footage is giving a closer look at how they responded at robb elementary school that day. sometimes frantic, sometimes just disturbingly slow. unlike the earlier pictures from the school, the new video includes closeups from just outside classrooms 111 and 112, and reveals conversations between officers in the moment, even desperate pleas with the shooter. we also see the moments some officers learned, and they did learn, they knew that children were among the victims on the other side of the door, and that one of them was calling 911 from inside a classroom. a child just called. they have victims in there. a child on the line. a child who was alive calling 911, and those officers heard that from the
interview twice. not unlike two pints, that s how good it was. because you were very patient when breaking news intervened. now you re back on the beat, and i still have my ben and jerries with me. how are you guys jerry s ice c. how ya doing? doing good. working hard. this is game time. negotiations are going on as we speak in the senate, and now s the time to make your voice heard. i mean, like, speak now or forever hold it. you know? let s get into that. ben, as i mentioned, there were many companies that had dabbled. i think viewers know that you really have been involved for a long time, and here you re not just saying a slogan. you re getting into a very particular policy piece. why are you focused on this police immunity doctrine, ben, and how do you change it? cops are not held accountability when they break the law and violate people s constitutional rights, and