dangerous situation where one might use a firearm instead because, you know that knife gets in you, you re going to potentially die so i see that officers are more reluctant to use real deadly force because they re afraid of the actual backlash which is that s the complete opposite because at the end of the day your goal is to go home to your family. exactly what the attorney general just said in reference to his retired law enforcement brother. anwar, let me get you to react generally. this department of justice report in the wake of ferguson the city and the police department essentially saying police were unfairly targeting african-americans in this community, you know writing tickets, you know were giving them fines just to raise money for the police department and obviously was part was financially motivated. part was just sheer discriminatory. as a police officer, how do the steps work to make sure this kind of discrimination doesn t happen? i don t know. i guess it would b
who do you think you are, a harvard professor for god s sakes? common sense points, david, thank you very very much. thank you. all right. that s the ticket. you want to buck the boss? how about stop writing tickets? that s the ticket. he u.s., real estate in hong kong and the optics industry in germany? at t. rowe price we understand the connections of a complex, global economy. it s just one reason over 70% of our mutual funds beat their 10-year lipper average. t. rowe price. invest with confidence. request a prospectus or summary prospectus with investment information, risks, fees and expenses to read and consider carefully before investing.
about how crime in new york city is down across the board. then now come out the numbers that they stopped writing tickets and homicides actually up at the end of last year. yeah. the union heads are not backing off. they have turned their backs not on officer liu, but on the mayor because he s viewed as anti-cop, anti-law enforcement extremely insulting. when he used the terms, we have to retrain law enforcement a lot of my retraining hasn t kicked in yet. it s all insulting. it s on him. it s not on officer liu. let us know what you think about that when you see the officers turning their back. really they re supporting the liu family. when the mayor got up to speak they turned their backs. let us know what you think. one of these guys was shot in the back. you just wonder if the whole tone of the assailants, the mindset of a criminal that s going to carjack or do anything like that. do they suddenly feel emboldened, like i ll take out
and the speed limit drops for a very short stretch. and waiting under the sign is a friendly police officer, writing tickets like there s no tomorrow. meet curt, a retire d michigan cop. he says cities and counties make big money from speed traps. and it s like shooting fish in a barrel. it s like dirty secrets. reporter: across the country, tourists and other drivers are fighting back. reporting more than 82,000 speed traps since 2000, to the national speed trap exchange, warning other families on the roads. houston ranks number one, with nearly 500 reported since 2000. but the police lights are flashing all across the country. along i-71, in lynndale, ohio, the speed drops to 60 for about 14 seconds on the highway. and before a court stepped in, the tiny town collected $800,000 a year. and along i-10, in the middle of cajun country, 80% of the budget for henderson, louisiana, was covered by speeding tickets
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