a barrage of missiles raining down on ukrainian cities, and russian says they took out major munitions, but ukraine says they took out most of them. a drought fueled by climate change is drying up the colorado river. leaving game. umpires are walking off of the diamond not because of the players, but because of their parents. the shortage of umpires. all of this coming up on cnn news central. president biden has wrapped up the first day of his big trip to japan. this morning he met with japan s prime minister before the g7 summit kicks off tomorrow. the main focus is on the support to ukraine and uniting the allies against the china s influence, but he decided to cut the trip short to head back to washington to deal with domestic matters concerning the debt ceiling. we go to mark who is following president, and now, how are the other leaders viewing this issue of the debt crisis and the president at home? kate, this debt ceiling distraction is one that the president
have to be a law enforcement officer to be a member of the unit, and it is clear in the legislation that the border protection chief would have the discretion to decide who they want to be part of the unit to leave the door open for vigilantes to repel migrants if they enter texas unlawfully. they could not use lethal force, and they would be tasked with nondeadly force, and texas immigration units would be responsible for enforcement. but this is for those who cross private property, and it is up to the individual counties to decide if they want these units in the jurisdiction. it is not the final language of this legislation, but it is working its way through the texas legislature as you said this morning and at a senate committee meeting on border
found that the chicago police department engages in a pattern or practice of using excessive force including deadly force and nondeadly force. this pattern includes, for example, shooting at people who present no immediate threat and tasing people for not following verbal commands. this conduct doesn t only harm residents. it endangers officers. it results in an avoidable deaths, injuries, and trauma. it erodes community trust, trust that is the cornerstone of public safety. we found this pattern of unconstitutional force is largely attributable to systemic deficiencies within the cpd and city. we found that cpd does not adequately train its officers to use the appropriate amount of force. for example, we observed training on deadly force that used video made decades ago with guidelines inconsistent with law and personally policy. we found cpd officers do not fully report their uses of force and that supervises are not appropriately reviewing these uses of force. we found that chicago
culture of the facility. but also reflects on how we ve managed the facility. yet, there are inmates who push the boundaries of prison behavior. you are about to engage in the use of nondeadly force with prisoner antonio roberson. antonio roberson is serving a 60-year sentence for murder. he refused repeated direct orders from staff. all use of force incidents that can be preplanned are videotaped. that keeps the prisoner from suing us. and it keeps staff from using excessive force. because the staff all know they re being taped. first the medical record has been checked by medical staff. members are corrigan, to determine feasibility and that s been approved.