wasn t feeling well, got up and was pretty bad off, kind of got him to move over, sit down next to me. i got up and i rubbed his shoulders and whispered in his ear the exit is right over there. and then when we brought the pizza in. instead of putting it on the tables in the back, i motioned for rabbi charlie to come sit with us so that we could all be neatly in line with the exit. and that was critical, because five, six steps at most we were out the door. and having this training that was, in this case, was done by the secure community network, it absolutely saved our lives. you know, the other thing that i want to bring up is this guy was not the shooter that we hear about all the time that wants to just come in and shoot all the jews. this was not him. he came here, he came to us, he terrorized us because he
how much their accident case is worth.h barnes. t ouour juryry aorneneys hehelpou as several states are moving to relax mask mandates amid a decline in covid cases, some areas are now experiencing a surge in hospitalizations. 360 s gary tuchman traveled to rural western south dakota where covid hospitalizations are being fueled by low vaccination rates and other factors and the situation could become dire. reporter: inside this intensive care room at this south dakota hospital, this woman in her 60s is unresponsive. she has just been hooked up to a ventilator after spending two weeks in a regular hospital room. she kind of came in traditional of someone that got the virus at home, wasn t feeling well, decided they need to come to the emergency
it wasn t an incidental test. he had symptoms, wasn t feeling well, and that was of concern. the way i read it this time, it sounds like, and reported extensively at the time, they were doing pcr tests at the white house. those are the gold standard tests. they did have these types at the white house. they come back in typically a half hour or so. it tested positive. that, in conjunction with him having symptoms, would have been to trigger isolation, contact tracing. three days later, putting other people at risk, including the
independence just hanging on to the president. to me, not the smartest thing to do. i wouldn t. that s my point. not that impeachment is a big issue around people s dining tables at night. and that s what they vote on. do republicans on capitol hill suddenly feel like, huh, maybe this support for president trump isn t as rock solid as we had thought. oh, yeah. that s definitely true. and alisyn, i don t want to belittle impeachment. it s just that, to me, the democrats set this whole thing up the wrong way. it looks like a partisan a partisan attempt. secret hearings. vote on it up front. give the republicans massive, you know, rules that help them to be able to show fairness. that s what they should have done. they departmeidn t do it. now with the public hearings, could that change? yeah, i think it could change. i don t know that it will change. but we ll have to see. a lot of people that i talk to say, oh, well, yeah, all the presidents do it. this quid pro quo.
in less than one hour, jury selection will resume in the trial of roger stone. he s charged with lying to congress, obstruction and witness tampering. the trial began on tuesday with some drama in the courtroom. shimon prokupecz is live at the federal courthouse in washington. roger stone, you knew there was going to be drama. always is around him. this time it was his stomach. his stomach causing quite a stir here in the courtroom. twice the judge needing to take a break so that roger stone can go to the bathroom. she herself noticed at one point, roger stone wasn t feeling well, putting his hand over his head, closing his eyes. at one point she even offered him immodium and finally the judge said maybe it s best for him to go home for the day. she excused him for the day and they continued with jury selection. but that wasn t the only drama here at the courthouse.