peacefully. justice for tyree. justice for tyree. todd: brooke singman live with the latest. brooke. brooke: good morning, guys. just hours from now memphis police are expected to release body cam footage from the night of tyre nichols s death. this started january 27 when the 29 year old was pulled over on suspicion of wreckless driving. what we re about to play is reporting of the police scanner. we got one male black running. eyes on the subject? set up perimeter. running on foot. see what the address. he is fighting at this time. brooke: the nichols family has seen the footage and they say it shows the officers beating tyre nichols for three minutes. he died in the hospital three days evera the incident. the tape could trigger civil unrest with the police chief giving this warning. this is not just a professional failing, this is a failing of basic humanity toward another individual. this individual was heinous, wreckless and inhumane and in the vei
cindric expressed their tremendous loss chanting do something to president biden as he left mass this morning. do something! do something! do something! emily: that was on sunday. kennedy, the timeline is heartbreaking. 77 minutes passed before the shooter was engaged and killed. yes, people are sickened to see what happened inside that school. desperate parents were pleading with the police officers trying to go inside, they were trying themselves to go inside. they were being handcuffed and restrained and we know one child bled out waiting for help in the critical, that hour between when police arrived and they killed the shooter. we know enough at this point that that cannot happen. there are no excuses, there is no rationale for any of this. what is disturbing for people trying to access the truth, the story has changed. we have been mislead and lied to and that also can t happen. there needs to be accountability from the moment something like this begins. a lot of
i think that s how you go after the cartels and dismantle them is by just quite frankly taking them out. cartels are operating in 1100 cities across america. they are here. they have infiltrated the u.s. how difficult is it going to be to get them out of the u.s. or is this going to be the new normal and we have to deal with it from here on out? well, you know, 1100 cities, i wouldn t be surprised if that number is low. i have been training law enforcement officers for many years about the mexican cartels that are already here. and there s more of them here and then with the border situation, the influx of all the migrants we have had coming in, not all of them but a lot of them are going to be embedded in the cartels that are throughout the united states right now secure the border and addressing the cartels in mexico.
thank you very much. great job you are doing, too. taken on the drug companies. launched education program and trained local law enforcement to investigate and prosecute those responsible for the opioid epidemic so, leslie, i want to thank you very much. brian: president trump addressing the national association of attorney generals at the white house yesterday calling out next guest and pointing her out for great work combating the opioid crisis from many different angles. arkansas attorney general leslie rutledge joins us now. thank you so much for joining us. what was it like for the president to call you out yesterday? well, it was fantastic to recognize the work that we have done in arkansas through our prescription for life educational programs directed at high school students to training law enforcement officers. it s always an honor to have the president recognize your good work and to work with you. i just appreciate this president for inviting the attorneys general to the w
reasons, it s saying rhinos, whether be poached for its horn or killed to be stuffed and mounted and put over an mantle, this is merely shifting the economic worth of the animal dead from the horn to the trophy. and so what do you say to people who believe that something like this needs to be done? what other aspects of fighting illegal poaching do you think african governments should be pursuing? this is 2015. we do not need to kill an animal to save it. it doesn t make sense saying it. it doesn t make sense doing it. there are conservation animal protection groups from around the world that are pouring efforts into working with governments, training law enforcement officers and trying to reduce demand for endangered species in illegal markets. this is not the answer. this is not going to save rhinos. or elephants or ryans or other species that are being killed