from the secret service and the trump campaign, but that s where it stands right now. you know, john, what i think is interesting here at the moment it happened nobody knew, and we still don t know who it was and what their motive what, and what sort of weapon, if any this person may have had. but obviously at that moment, they thought it could have been something. they thought it could have been a gun or something like that, and even if it turns out there was nothing like that even there. that s what donald trump and the secret service agents on the stage could have thought. at that moment when the secret service took donald trump off stage, that s a moment where their training kicks in, and they thought a threat was credible enough when they took action to remove him from danger. this is breaking news and we do not have details or what sort of threat if any, if there was a gun, and we are getting those initial reports, but we know whatever was occurring in the
kelly: a wisconsin state trooper is nearly crushed during a routine traffic stop, and it s all caught on dashcam rid video. take a rook at this. you can see trooper jim reese, wow, watching walking, rather, back to his patrol car when a semi truck sideswipes the vehicle. reese says it took some time to realize just how close he came to being hit. it was kind of surreal. it almost happened in slow motion. i guess your training kicks in, and you do what you re train to do. it wasn t until later that night, actually watching the video back and seeing my family, that it was kind of impactful at that point in time. kelly: indeed. reese says he always approaches stopped vehicles from the passenger side, and it s this decision that likely saved his life. the truck driver, by the way, returned to the scene and was ticketed.
do officers do the same thing? are they sometimes forgetful that their actions are being recorded as well? i think what happens is when they re in their normal day-to-day activities they are aware of it and cognizant of it but when it comes to a critical incident happens and all their training kicks in, tunnel visioning and focusing on whatever issue is at hand and that s when they forget the camera is there. hopefully they re following the training and doing what they re supposed to do and the cameras will highlight that good work and if they get accused of wrong doing. that s always the hope. good of you to join us today. thank you. thank you. caught on camera, on patrol, premiers tonight at 9:00 eastern on msnbc. you have a little caught on camera mini marathon at 7:00 p.m. eastern time, 4:00 p.m. if you live on the west coast. this is coney island. you know, it became famous for the nathans hot dog eating contest. this time it s hot chicken
development, along with everything that we ve reported to date, plus, more images of the spill you will not see on television. log on to foxnews.com. bill: unless a moment here, we re going to get back to our top story, uma, a man hunt for the person responsible for planning a car bomb in the heart of manhattan. we will talk to the hero cop who led the times square evacuation efforts on saturday night. literally, taking hundreds if not thousands of people out of harm s way. wayne ratigan is with us in three minutes. everything happened so fast. there s not time to be squared. trying to get the people out of here, time to start a perimeter, everybody back and things start going from there, and you don t training kicks in, everything we ve been taught over years of, you know, all these training sessions we go to, you know, it just kicks in and it s second nature.