as of right now the guys and i, we are in the mobile command unit, which is an ambulance. we have been going around on phone calls coming in from our commanding officers to rescue at some addresses, and we are coming upon pretty horrific situations. we rescued an elderly lady earlier, a roof ripped off and had to cut the trees to just get the vehicle down the road. there s no power anywhere. we get inside the home and the lady is in a pretzel position under a bunch of rubble, about 250-pound elderly lady, and where she was at there was no roof and all you could see was the stars and the trees mashed
and a consultant. mr. houk, first to you, i want to ask you about this new information that we re hearing from one of the witnesses who doesn t want to be identified but voiced over his own self-camera phone video and suggested that mr. gray was in a pretzel like condition, his legs bent terribly over his back. i wanted to ask about the possibility that that s the kind of position that police officers may try to take a suspect down in to stop him from whatever it is they think he s doing, if he s running, et cetera. does that sound like anything in protocol to you. it s hard for me to think that the man s body gets in some type of a pretzel position on a takedown. that doesn t make sense to me. you know, the takedown why not? with momentum. but it comes from the upper part of the body, the takedown. that s the only way you are taking somebody down or a little lower to the waist and you take