facing tough questions over the railway company s safety practices in the wake of the train derailment in east palestine, ohio, and now he has explaining to do before congress. shaw has apologized more than once for derailment, and he has said that the company is making changes, and they will do right by the people of east palestine. and let s get to the testimony from washington. and sunlen, what have you heard so far? some frustration from the residents of east palestine, but we did hear from the ceo of norfolk southern, and the company and the person who has specifically had so much criticism in the aftermath of this train derailment, and we have heard from mr. shaw. he said that he is deeply sorry of what happened, and he promised to see this through, to get it right for the residents there, and he said point-blank, it is clear that the safety mechanisms that we had in place were not enough. this is more of what he had to say. i am determined to make this right. norfo
on january 7th. the city of memphis reacting today to the big announcement that the police scorpion unit the, one that is involved in the deadly beating, would be disbanded. here s what shelby county district attorney stephen mulroy told me in the last hour. i have heard that a number of citizens making complaints about the scorpion unit. i know that units of that kind sometimes can both in memphis and around the country sometimes breed a culture of over aggressiveness. i think it s probably a healthy thing of the units that disbanded. also new today. city officials cleaning up the discrepancy between the number of officers on the scene of the meeting. and the number body camera videos released. officials telling abc news some police body cameras were turned off during the beating and nichols. that when police first of nicholas, one of the three officers involved did not activate his camera. another turned it on but the camera fell off immediately. only two officers
with that argument? where is your concern level over a potential conflict with china? look, i have tremendous respect for my colleague representative smith. we agreed on most things. in this case, i have been out to the pacific. i ve seen how well we are preparing for a potential fight with china. i think they were behind. so, what the general is saying, is not that war will absolutely happen. but we need to pick up the pace to be prepared for war. by, that i think he is right. at the end of the day here, the name of the game is deterrence. we want to prevent a war with china. we prevent a war with china by being prepared to win it. i think we need to work harder and faster to get where we need to be. i m not saying we ll definitely go to war into. years i certainly hope we won t. we need to be prepared for that. and i think that s what the general is saying. thank you so much,
and fear and no answer for their children of what the next day may bring. i feel safe but i m very depressed because my family was divided by war into parts and i left my heart there in ukraine. i m pamela brown in washington. you are live in the cnn newsroom. welcome to our viewers in the united states and around the world. and we begin on this sunday with the brutal reality for civilians in ukraine. this video shows russian missiles screaming toward the vinnytsia airport.
significant developments along the black sea. they re preparing to bomb odessa, bombs against odessa. this will be a war crime. this will be a historical crime. we ve seen very credible re reports of attacks on civilians that would constitute a war crime. this village is about six miles, ten kilometers from the closest military base. there is no reason if they are trying to avoid civilians there would be a strike here. every person you talk to here as a story of loss and fear and no answer for their children after what the next day may bring. now i feel safe but i m very d depressed because my family was divided by war into parts and i left my heart there in ukraine.