to upgrade your phone, douglas. for all the confidence you need. td ameritrade. you got this. welcome back. 43 minutes past the hour. new fall dunn out in the revelation that bill cosby gave drugs to women he intended to have sex with. two tv networks bounce and centric announced they are pulling reruns the cosby show. and the bronze bust of cosby came down in orlando disney park on tuesday night. while his confidence is eroding he still has high profile defenders. i don t like snap judgments because i ve had snap judgments made on me. so i m very, very careful, and, you know, save your texts, save your nasty comments because i don t care!
i don t believe you can accidentally take the life of a person and remain a police officer. how much faith do you have in the training announced by the mayor today? this was great training. when you look at what they re because training doesn t can training change the things we re talking about here, which is the snap judgments, preconceived bias, a set of cultural assumptions about people you re dealing with? do you think that can be trained out of people? i think your question is a great question. i can t modify your heart, but i can modify your behavior. and if you can t modify your behavior, i must remove you from the agency. what we are doing differently now is that when officers leave the academy, within six days they forgot about all that good training when they go to communities of color or impoverished areas. they keep that good training when they go to great communities that they perceive as great communities. when you what is that dynamic about? why does that
apprehension and incarceration. should this officer in question be fired, officer pantaleo? yes, i believe. i believe anytime an officer takes the life of an innocent person they should no longer wear a blue uniform. they can t just merely be placed on a desk. i don t believe you can accidentally take the life of a person and remain a police officer. how much faith do you have in the training announced by the mayor today? this was great training. when you look at what they re because training doesn t can training change the things we re talking about here, which is the snap judgments, preconceived bias, a set of cultural assumptions about people you re dealing with? do you think that can be trained out of people? i think your question is a great question. i can t modify your heart, but i can modify your behavior. and if you can t modify your behavior, i must remove you from the agency. what we are doing differently now is that when officers leave the academy, within six
mayor today? this was great training. when you look at what they re because training doesn t can training change the things we re talking about here, which is the snap judgments, preconceived bias, a set of cultural assumptions about people you re dealing with? do you think that can be trained out of people? i think your question is a great question. i can t modify your heart, but i can modify your behavior. and if you can t modify your behavior, i must remove you from the agency. what we are doing differently now is that when officers leave the academy, within six days they forgot about all that good training when they go to communities of color or impoverished areas. they keep that good training when they go to great communities that they perceive as great communities. when you what is that dynamic about? why does that happen? because many people believe the indoctrination once you get into a police precinct and have real conversation and an old-timer tells you forget
we re following some new developments out of the u.s. skour supreme court today. the first has to do with this high-speed chase that ended with a police shooting and killing both the driver and the passenger of the car they were chasing. the family of the driver wanted to sue the police over the death. with us now is our senior white house correspondent joe johns who s heard the argument. what did the court say about the use of deadly force in this speed chase? this was a case that is essentially closely watched. because it was expected to clarify the rights of police officers making snap judgments involving force when there s a high-speed chase and a passenger in the car. there s video of the tragic circumstances that put this case in the courts. west memphis, arkansas, 2004.