emily: current and former students on capitol hill testifying before lawmakers about the growing wave of antisemitism sweeping across american colleges. in recent weeks we ve seen alarming rise in anti-israel c sentiment and antisemitic threats against jewish students. had is outnumbered, i m emily compagno here with co-hosts kayleigh mcenany and harris faulkner, joining us is dr. nicole saphier and former texas land commissioner and partner at michael best llp, george p. bush. antisemitic incidents have drastically jumped since the war between hamas and israel. schools are left struggling to balance first amendment rights and campus safety and students revealing hateful rhetoric and mistreatment they have had to endure. watch. on campus, i now confronted daily with shouts to free palestinian from the river to the sea, it is seeking to deny jewish right to self-determination in israel, call to exterminate all jews with hamas open goal. support for hamas is support for t
being apologetic and angry. this is a sampling of what some of those synagogue members were listening to. you know, you can make out some of that how some of it is incoherent. that reference to his sister is not his biological sister, but
of their synagogue members are now alive and well. our thanks to ed lavandera. we re also hearing what may have been happening behind the scenes before that hostage rescue team moved to end the standoff. earlier we spoke with cnn security analyst juliette kayyam who served as assistant secretary for homeland security. shouldn t one big factor for investigators was time. for a hostage negotiator, in most instances, it s not an active shooter or situation. those are two different situations. in a hostage situation, you re really trying to buy time. so we call it you re trying to extend the runway, give more time. that s essentially what happened. so why are you buying time? the hostage may give up, the
of their synagogue members are now alive and well. back to you. i want to turn now to cnn s national security analyst, juliette kayyem, she served as an assistant secretary at the u.s. department of homeland security. juliette, let s talk about in your experience we heard from the news conference that negotiators seem to have been the heroes of the day according to the fbi spokesman there and talked about how it ebbed and flowed and got incense at some times. what sorts of things in your experience would predicate a decision to go in? so just going back from the beginning of the day there was this sort of caricature from how law enforcement works or at least professional law enforcement. they re just going to run in and everything has to be fast and resolved, and the truth is that for a hostage negotiator in most
they heard what was described as the ranting, raving, harrowing screaming coming from the suspect inside the synagogue. tonight all of them celebrating the fact that four of their synagogue members are now alive and well. back to you. our ed lavandera there. now that the hostages are safe, they re moving to try to find out as much as they can about the suspect themselves. a cnn security analyst said earlier it appears the suspect was likely acting alone. it sounds so far to me from the news reports he was a loan wo lone wolf, didn t try to resist in any way we know about the hostage rescue. one person there probably was no other people involved and he didn t set up any traps for the hostage rescue team.