election, she came forward with a bunch of unusual and unconventional comments that have been tricky bits of information. like the fact that the special grand jury empaneled by the fulton county da, fani willis, the recommended over a dozen indictments. the person named emily corps made a splash, and she sparked a debate within the legal community about her potential impropriety. but today, we heard from the georgia judge who oversaw that special grand jury, judge robert bernie. here s what he had to say on the. matter those grand jurors, including the fort woman, can share some details about their experience. and interview today with the atlanta constitution, judge mike bernie says they cannot discuss their deliberations, but if then assistant da or witness in the grand jury room, they can talk about what happened. that s not deliberations, that s presentation, and they re not prohibited from talking about that nor are they prohibited from talking about the fruit their delib
resolute to see this to the end. our friend, ali velshi, takes us off the air tonight. and on that note, i wish you all a very good night. from all of our colleagues across the networks of nbc news, thanks for staying up late with me. i ll see you at the end of tomorrow. tomorrow good evening, thank you for joining us tonight. on tuesday, the 4% of the fulton county special jury investigating donald trump and his efforts to subvert the 2020 election, she came forward with a bunch of unusual and unconventional comments that have been tricky bits of information. like the fact that the special grand jury empaneled by the fulton county da, fani willis, the recommended over a dozen indictments. the person named emily corps made a splash, and she sparked a debate within the legal community about her potential impropriety. but today, we heard from the georgia judge who oversaw that special grand jury, judge robert bernie. here s what he had to say on the. matter those grand jurors
if you re tracking domestic extremist mass killings in the u.s. by decade, there is 2011 to 2020, and a skyrockets. we are, of course, not done with the decade, but we are already on track with five, and it is the month i had to think about it for a second, february of 2023, far from the end of the decade. how are you processing that? what do you glean from this chart other than we are getting worse as a society, quite obviously. as a society, not only do we have a gun violence problem, we have a mass killing problem. we very specifically have a extremist muscling problem. when you look at the last 12 years, there have been 26 mass killings like buffalo, el paso, pittsburgh and so on. that is more than we saw in the previous 40 years. a, extremism is being normalized. the narratives that animated are in the public, on social media, the access to weapons by extremists is as easy as it has ever been.
this? let s start first with what happened and what is happening in colorado springs, hate crimes. talk to me about how you define a hate crime. it seems confusing to people, at least the tucker carlson orbit that somebody part of the community can also be guilty of a hate crime because that committee. it is not could meet what community he was part of other than what appears to be an extremist community, so somebody that is targeting someone because of who they, love their religion, what they look like, these are characteristics that they can t change. somebody is targeted because of the, that is often a hate crime, so what we saw in colorado springs was just the latest in a series of mass violent attacks by those who oppose their perceived enemies for reasons that a lot of people will never understand, but then we see that the consequences. you guys have a new report out on murder and extremism in the u.s.. the results are terrifying. if you look at the chart, you can bring it up