discussed with stephon s grandmother, she said that means they were up to no good, they were trying to cover something up when they muted the body cameras. and, in fact, when the shooting occurred, they called 911. when they went to go look out the window in the backyard, the police told them not to look out the window and, you know, miss thompson saw the body on the ground. she had no idea that it was her grandson. i want to ask you if i can, miss thompson, just broadly, what do you say to those protesters, the young men and women in the streets of sacramento, frankly, in other parts of this country right now, protesting after the loss of your grandson? what do you say to those young people out there? i want to thank you, we re going to get justice. every mother that s going through what we re going thro h through, i m a grandmother, every grandmother that s going through this, and my daughter, she is so this is this is
here right now if it wasn t for her. from that point, no more skepticism. i knew she would make it thro h through. receiving the medal of honor. thank you for being here. i was interested in the army the these decision to put those two rangers out there alongside all the other men to let them tell the story about what happened. what do you think about the army s strategy about how they have made this decision and rolled this out? i think it s kind of interesting. the original assumption would be, if they wanted to test women out to see if they could be in combat units, they would stick them in combat units in the states. where they re in garrison. if they re out in the woods, they have rucksacks on and firing blanks and doing war games and small unit tactics the and so on. then maybe, much later on, they would decide whether or not they were going to send women to the
i just broke down and started crying because i knew what they had been through. next to marrying my wife, next to the birth of my children, that was probably the happiest day of my life. we live with the family and felt what they have been thro h through. it s a tremendous, tremendous load taken off of our shoulders. the jurors came out and hugged tim hennis. they were adamant they need to reinvestigate this case and quit picking on this guy. somebody said, why are they bothering this poor man? has he not suffered enough? man killed two children and a woman, how much, the rest of his life. whether you like it or not,
rational, calmer conversation. but when you re in the middle of a conflict with people who are beheading their hostages and dressing them up as if they re detainees of americans and want to use this against us. i m not sure i d want to play into their hands. so many americans are questioning authority coming out of ferguson and all these race issues. i m not sure this is a time to put another log on that fire. all right, guys. we re going to continue this discussion, full analysis. a lot more of the details. all of our reporters and producers, they re going thro h through. and i have it right here. these hundreds of pages with all sorts of amazing details in this senate intelligence committee report. the official title committee starting of the central intelligence agency s detention and interrogation program. thanks very much. that s it for me. i ll be back 5:00 p.m. eastern in the situation room. for our international viewers, amanpour is next. for our viewers in north
robinson who was in kuala lumpur. he s been listening to this news conference. it sounds like they re moving forward to try to appease those or with this country. the opposition here, i m worried, a policy the government deeply dislikes. he s been taking. we need to listen to the transport box and the defense minister said the country should reunite and put it back in the domestic political angle there. we also heard tuck about thro h