outside norfolk says they have been putting their officers through additional training since january because of this incident. david? all right, thank you, steve. steve osunsami. overseas tonight, and to the preparations now under way for the funeral for britian s prince philip. tonight, prince harry is back in the uk, and both princes, william and harry, with their own tributes. abc s james longman from london again this evening. reporter: tonight, a grandson s homecoming. harry back in the uk ahead of prince philip s funeral. joining the royal family at windsor for a scaled down service for just 30 people saturday, due to covid-19 restrictions. pregnant meghan still in l.a. with archie. physicians advised against travel. the duke of sussex honoring philip s life of public service, but in typical form, harry struck a more informal note, saying, he was my grandpa, master of the barbecue, legend of banter and cheeky right until the end. it finished with the phrase by sea, by la
behind the wheel. here s abc s steve osunsami tonight. what are you, specialist, corporal, what are you? i m a lieutenant. lieutenant. get out of the car. reporter: in this police body camera video that s at the heart of a federal civil rights lawsuit tonight get out of the car. get out of the car. reporter: you hear the man behind the wheel try to explain that he s an army lieutenant and that he did nothing wrong. i m honestly afraid to get out. can i yeah, you should be. get out. get out! what s going on? reporter: the lieutenant is black and latino and was dressed brand new black suv in december when police in windsor, virginia, say they pulled him over because he didn t have proper license plates. but notice right here are the temporary plates sitting in the back window. the lieutenant admits he didn t stop for about two minutes until he got to this gas station where it was well lit. and when he refuses to leave his suv, one of the officers pulls out the p
and tonight, that former police chief is now accused in at least a dozen fires and that he allegedly had a hit list. here s abc s steve osunsami tonight. reporter: it s surveillance video you can see and hear. maryland authorities tonight are saying this is a former police chief from the city of laurel and say this is the sound of him pouring fuel onto a home and then down a driveway. they say this is just one of at least a dozen fires he s accused of setting. 69-year-old david crawford is in jail tonight, charged with multiple counts of arson and attempted murder. while there were no reported injuries to either residents or fire department personnel as a result of these fires, the outcome could ve been very different. reporter: for close to ten years now, fire investigators here have been trying to find the arsonist who s been burning homes and vehicles in five counties. in charging documents, they say
crawford had a target list and went after people he had issues with, including two doctors and thepolice chief who replaced him. to go outside to find my house engulfed and have to come in and wake my family and get them out of the house, it knocked me to my knees. reporter: police believe that three of those fires were set at homes that belonged to the same person, his stepson. authorities say that when the stepson would move out of a burned home and into a new one, they say crawford would burn that home, too. he has not yet entered a plea. david? all right, steve osunsami. thank you, steve. now to the u.s. around iran tonight. abc news now confirming that president biden called off a second air strike against an iranian-backed militia in syria just an hour before, after learning women and children had been in the area. and there s also news tonight about the rocket attack this week on u.s. forces in iraq. and all of this as the pope visits iraq tomorrow and what s now being d
they re calling breonna s law, limiting these no-knock search warrants to cases involving an immediate threat of harm or death, which wasn t the case when this young woman was killed. david? all right, steve osunsami tonight. steve, thanks. we turn this evening to an abc news investigation with our abc stations. some eye-opening numbers when it comes to the arrests of african-americans across this country. what the numbers show. here s our chief justice correspondent pierre thomas now. reporter: akil carter was on his way home from church with his white grandmother when police pulled him over. the person in the car in the back seat, i need you to step out of the car with your hands up. reporter: he says the next thing he knew, guns were drawn and he was ordered out of the car. i was angry, i was nervous, i was terrified for my grandmother. stop. get down on your knees. on your knees. keep your hands up. don t move. you understand?