regular situations. but in uvalde and nashville are moved to the front of the line. last night we were told why the release of hale s manifesto is important and the toxicology report. we asked authorities if they would commit to a public release. we have not heard back. we will continue to search for answers. to talk more about this is a doctor from john s hopkins. why does this matter? people are upset. there is never one cause. there are multiple factors. parents have a right to know whether or not the tox screen shows the person was under the influence of a substance like cocaine or seven different psyche medicine. people have a right to know
important. we get the toxicology report on uvalde shooter, such a highe. profile case. we can t speed this up.out al what are you thinking about? all these horrific acts of evil that have been perpetrated on the american public? we still weeksil. later don t he a toxicology report fromooter. the uvalde mass shooter. now, some ten months after that and shooting, we asked again tonight and still nothing. now, we ve seen online thatd tae sometimes these could take months. a so we asked famed forensic pathologist dr. michael baden what s really going on here. he told the angle that in situations like this, let s call the tox screen could take da two to three days. now, ifif a an autopsy is dot the next day, then we should have a full report in just a week. the months long estimate, he mas says, is due to a massivsie bacg backlog. but that s in situations wheresn there s regular situations. but you ve all day in nashville, those reports are usually moved to the front of
actually looking for a solution and trying to get a goal. and the goal essentially is to a get gun control. that s really all they care about. so it s theses almost as if thet for these types of tragedies g to happen so that they can talki solutions, wto get their goal. because if we were talking solution, we wouldn tes be talking about a gun that uses a fraction of the time in these types of shootings we d be talking about, okay, how do d we take what are soft targets s and make them hard like this?ths not evenay mentioned when it s brought up. why say things like, well, we don t want our schools to look like prisons.when we ar why are we talking estheticse ta when we re talking aboutlking the safetysafety of our childre can i ask a question like,e what if you really cared about the murder of innocents? and i think most people i do people who disagree with everything. i think people do care. but if you were rational about it, you would want to know alleb the factors that led to it
rooms are only required to check for what s known as the federal five, marijuana, cocaine, amphetamines, opioids and pcp. fentanyl will not show up. many doctors and labs are unaware. do you think it s irresponsible that hospitals across the country don t automatically test for fentanyl in a drug screen? extremely. i think because parents, you trust doctors. you trust hospitals. and if they re telling you that your kid s tox screen came out clean, most parents aren t going to think to even question the doctor. reporter: julie found purpose advocating for legislation in california to require a sixth test be added specifically for fentanyl. called tyler s law, it took effect this year. california is the first and only state that requires fentanyl testing be added in the er, something advocates hope expands nationally at the low cost of just 75 cents per test. dr. roneet lev partnered with julie on pushing the legislation through. it is simple. every hospital in ameriica coululd do
who knows what he got ahold. he s in my [ bleep ] head again. officers cover jordan s face with a spit mask while medical staff prepares a sedative. he s right there. he s right there. you ll feel better soon. this medication is going to take effect, you ll be all right. take some deep breaths. go ahead and breathe. after receiving the sedative, jordan is suddenly calm. while medical staff is still unsure what caused his outburst, they cannot rule out one possibility. we don t know if it s real or, you know, make believe. we don t have a tox screen to tell us that he has ingested a substance. we re sending him to a medical department, he ll be evaluated by our practitioner there. we re down for an ekg because his pulse was really high when they took his vitals upstairs. stand by. go. i want to say he s [ inaudible ] i have never seen medication