on. we want to show what law enforcement can do with a proper training tactics and experience to go in a dress a threat real time and then neutralize that threat to preserve life. thanks to cnn law enforcement analyst jonathan wackrow for his perspective. mexican officials have revised the death toll from a fire at a migrant detention center down from 40 lives lost to 38. more than two dozen others were injured. the incident happened in ciudad juarez, just across the border from el paso, texas. now there s new video showing the moment the flames and smoke spread through the facility. cnn s rafael roma has the latest and warning his report. contains graphic content. one by one mexican soldiers pull people out of the building, it quickly becomes tragically clear. there s nothing they can do for some of
response in this particular incident? well i think it s really important for the chief of police in nashville to release this video. why because he wants to show the contrast between what was right in what the proper police response should be for an active shooter situation as opposed to what we saw in your validate texas, where we saw lawn force mint sitting back and doing nothing will active killing was going on. we want to show what law enforcement can do with a proper training tactics and experience to go in a dress a threat real time and then neutralize that threat to preserve life, and police say that the suspect was under care for an emotional disorder. but law enforcement was not aware of the specifics there. what what needs to be done, though, to prevent unstable individuals from legally buying guns? and what can be done at the point of
and collected, not raising anxiety but making the entry as necessary to go your search for the suspect. now think about this operating environment. there are alarms now they heard the sound of shooting. they apply their training tactics and experience to go to the sound of gunfire in neutralize that threat. we know that the speed of officers responding to a shooter is essential for the preservation of life. um in these officers did a remarkable job as we start to analyze this video and break it down more. you re going to hear that they were very strategic in the tactics that they applied upon entry. three upon confirmation that there was a shooter. the split tactics that they used to search the first floor in the second floor, the constant communication between those officers again they were going through a very dynamic environment. they saw individuals that would have been injured, you know, potentially, um killed by this suspect, so
a beautiful preschool and drawings and little backpacks. you see these armed men going in doing what they were trained to do. what is your reaction to what you saw in the video released. listen first, let s let s set the stage. i mean, as they were going in, we all watched the video. everyone s you know, anxiety starts to rise , right, but not for those law enforcement officers. why because they re training tactics and experience took over. they went in. they knew that the call for service was that there was an active shooter, the rapidly mobilized and entered into the building to go after the assailant. um you know, hastily searching each and every room along the way until they heard the sound of gunfire, which allowed them to figure out what part of the building the assailant was in. they went to that, and then they neutralize the threat. this was a textbook operation by law enforcement that was executed flawlessly.
charges including second degree murder, kidnapping, and official misconduct. the charges came just 16 days after tyre nichols s death. a kind of rapid action happen mostly, probably, because of the newly elected shelby district a county who ran on a platform different address racial profiling and de-escalation training tactics. and the memphis chief of police has also spoken out about reforms, including on a national scale. the kind of timeline we have seen in the tyre nichols case is not the norm when it comes to police violence against black americans, especially when it comes to these killings that have been caught on video. in the 2014 you re killing of 17-year-old laquan mcdonald in chicago captured on dash cam video, it took nearly 14 months for the police officer who killed him to be charged. in 2019 it again took four months for a texas police officer to be charged in the killing of 44-year-old pamela