because of the poor weather conditions and the fact we know they train as afight is that the reason why this military operation was conducted in the first place because there were weather issues and this would be something that would help the military members train for different combat real missions. it s a very good question. i think that will come out in the investigation whether the weather conditions either contributed to it or something for the training scenario. i might ask you to talk to the marine public affairs folks where the soldiers marines were stationed. i appreciate the comment. i think that s probably a reasonable assumption. okay. we re going to let you get back to work and wait for more formal word. thank you. i want to take everybody into boston where it s another day of very dramatic and difficult testimony of the boston marathon bombing.
police and citizens alleging police misconduct. not just the lopd lapd is testing this. seattle and d.c. are too. las vegas police has 200 cameras after people demand more police accountability accountability. we need the support from our community and if that raises that, that s where we need to go. every uniformed officer is now required to record every citizen contact and police insist the camera catches things. in this training scenario only the officer can see the man has a gun. don t touch that gun. you ll be shotgun. cities and states are drafting new procedures to ensure police can t edit the video and most importantly to determine when should the camera be turned on. from an accountability stand point they would be on all the time. that would raise intense privacy
for his part, o neil seems no worse for all the excitement. it s just another day on the job. he almost thought maybe it was a training scenario, you know. where he was just like, wow, that was pretty weird. or incredible, what just happened. it seems that he took in stride. you ready? all right. good boy. what a good boy. coming up this guy didn t expect that. a complete adrenaline rush. and i was very, very angry. and later who could have expected this? i saw a a flash in front of the driver s side window. and next thing i know, something smashed into it. when caught on camera: didn t see that coming continues. there is no substitute for experience. for what reality teaches you. firsthand. in the face of danger, and under the most demanding circumstances. experience builds character.
it s just another day on the job. he almost thought maybe it was a training scenario, you know. where he was just like, wow, that was pretty weird. or incredible, what just happened. it seems that he took in stride. you ready? all right. good boy. what a good boy. coming up this guy didn t expect that. a complete adrenaline rush. and i was very, very angry. and later who could have expected this? i saw a a flash in front of the driver s side window. and next thing i know, something smashed into it. [ male announcer ] they say mr. clean was born to help people clean better, and that he travels the world inventing amazing new cleaners, like his newest invention, liquid muscle, that lifts and cleans tough grease with less scrubbing. it s a liquid gel, so it s less watery and cleans more.
they have to go in, confront. with mass shootings on the rise, the fbi is now helping local police teach quick response tactics to cops across the country. this is an emergency that could happen in not only in any town usa, but in your town usa. you think can you get rid of me? fire me? reporter: in this training scenario, a gunman is in a school. patrolmen are taught forget old school. don t just secure the perimeter, move quickly to the gunfire. seconds count. hunt for the shooter. be prepared beforehand. have high-capacity rifles in patrol cars. tend to victims, note, find, engage the shooter. i think the most difficult thing is you have to push yourself and your body to keep going forward to stop threats. before you waited on specialized units. but now, go in and stop that shooter. reporter: quick action. that s exactly what happened in elkhart, indiana. pierre thomas, abc news, washington. thank goodness for the quick