see certain ads. maureen? reporter: at the heart of this issue is the valuable active user base on both facebook and instagram. hunt says that facebook violated the federal act by using information to see who sees housing ads in here does not. reporter: visitors outside facebook mental park headquarters were giving a thumbs up thursday, the same day that tech giant got reaction from the federal government for advertising practices. tuesday, the department of housing and urban development who sued facebook for high-tech housing discrimination, saying the social media company allows advertisers to limit who sees ads based on race, religion, and nationality. the housing sector in a statement saying facebook is discriminating against people based on who they are and where they live using a computer to limit a person s housing choices can be just as discriminatory as slamming a door in someone s face. facebook responded with a statement that read in part, we are surprised by h
unanimous conclusion that they need to in eu law in answer to theresa may s request for an extension. what they are arguing about is a long or a short extension, and 17 out of 27 countries are open to a longer extension, but that leaves ten countries that are not, france, as predicted, right up there in front of the toughest, with emanuel macron saying he doesn t want to countenance a brexit extension beyond june the 30th, which is what the prime minister is asking for. everyone else in that room says, during the 30th, then we will have another summit and another, and we needed breathing space to get on with other eu business, but emanuel macron wants to concentrate minds in the uk, he wants to keep pressure up on mps to focus and come to a brexit conclusion but, you know what, it s going to be a long night. raqqa we will wait for it! that s all from the emergency brexit summit for tonight. there s more on newsnight on bbc two and on the bbc news channel, but now on bbc one i
and i m gonna address theunited states of america. gary: there s no doubt that night. it was a textbook procedure. i had no choice. i was forced to take a life. i was a white cop whoshot a black 16-year-old. (protestors chanting) natacha: i would like toaddress all law enforcement across the country and around the world. honor the oath. (dramatic music) gary: the other officerskept repeating: he did the right thing.he had no choice. it was a good shoot. reporter: the death ofphillip pannell brought rage the streets of normallypeaceful teaneck, new jersey. m2: this was middle-classmodel city, american. alison: we live in teaneck.this doesn t happen in teaneck. w2: it wasn t the utopia ithought it was for many people. (dramatic music) thelma: we enduredthis pain for 30 years, now we re back here again. crowd: yeah, (music) natacha: on my honor,i will never betray my integrity forthe public trust. m3: the fact of the matter isphillip pannell was executed. m4: i don t care how
the interstate transport of marijuana. in october, 2016 two men were killed and one woman shot in the face in sebastopol after a crew from philadelphia allegedly killed them over pot. the suspects in that case, robert randolph and maria lebron from philly, still have murder warrants out for their arrest. it s cases like these leaving sonoma county in a legal lurch. we are investing any marijuana robbery, any home invasion type stuff that occurs in sonoma county. we ll follow where it takes us, but we re not routinely worried about interstate commerce because that s more of a federal issue. reporter: at least until there s a standard federal law or similar state laws in place nationwide about marijuana. it s up for each state to decide, but you got to think that if marijuana was legal in every state, it would drive the prices down. the commodity would be up and it wouldn t be such a valuable commodity for the black market. reporter: in sonoma county, andria borba, k
announcer: from nbc news world headquarters in new york this is nbc nightly news with lester holt. good evening. the random killing of a young woman along san francisco s picturesque embarcadero last week has given new fuel to a particularly bitter debate going on in this country about illegal immigration. the man charged in her shooting is an undocumented immigrant from mexico. a fact quickly seized upon by republican presidential candidate donald trump. trump has faced a blistering backlash over some recent comments he made about mexican immigrants and crime. and now he says the san francisco shooting has proved he s right. but does it? tonight national correspondent peter alexander on the emotion and the facts. reporter: kate steinly s random death as she was walk with her father on san francisco s famed embarcadero last week first stunned a family. there was a pop, and kate went down. reporter: now it s ading fuel to a national debate. francisco sanchez, the c