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Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20200603 00:30:00


novartis thanks the heroic healthcare workers fighting covid-19. tonight, as we come on the air in the west, the tens of thousands in the streets. from new york city to washington, d.c., to los angeles, and in so many communities across this nation. here in new york city, thousands on the march. many believed to be headed to gracie mansion, the mayor s residence. it comes after the city imposed that new 8:00 p.m. curfew starting tonight, for the rest of the week. from chicago, to los angeles, where at this hour tens of thousands are in the streets there, part of multiple marches. ndrcr e ite house. no is believed, they are and again today, most of the protests have been peaceful. but authorities are prepared for what could come after nightfall. growing concern now on the eighth day of protests after widespread destruction in new york city overnight.
stores destroyed. the famed macy s, damage at rockefeller center. tonight, curfews in place across many major cities. hundreds of arrests. and this evening, authorities now investigating video in new york city showing a car slamming into a police officer. in the last 24 hours, at least five officers shot across the country, including one in las vegas in critical condition. also tonight, president trump and the backlash. protesters of all backgrounds lining the streets in washington as his motorcade passed by today. tonight, the outrage 24 hours after peaceful demonstrators were hit with flashbangs to clear the way for th president s walk from the white house to the historic st. john s church, holding a bible in a photo op. asked if the bible was his, he said it s a bible. tonight, church leaders expressing outrage. leaders in both parties outraged too. and what former president george w. bush said late today. the massive crowds gathering in houston tonight, george floyd s hometown. thousands gathering to honor him.
the mother of his 6-year-old daughter speaking out. and there is news tonight on the murder investigation. will other officers be charged? if so, when? what authorities are now saying. a tale of two images. the president, and the former vice president who wants to replace him. tonight, joe biden and his speech today. and his promise to americans amid so much pain. and the developing headline from atlanta as we come on. six officers now facing charges accused of excessive force on two students pulled from their car. good evening. it s great to have you with us on a tuesday night. as we come on the air tonight, another extraordinary scene unfolding in cities across the country. protests under way. this is the eighth night of protests. demonstrators demanding justice and change in the country after the death of george floyd. the protests peaceful today, but there is concern with nightfall apprch thousands in the streets in new
york city. several marches, one massive group, it s believed, headed to the mayor s residence. and the 8:00 p.m. curfew in place. it s quickly approaching after last night s 11:00 p.m. curfew was hardly effective. it s believed tens of thousands are on the march in los angeles. several different locations. in washington, d.c., it s believed thousands are headed towards the lincoln memorial. and a massive rally in houston, george floyd s hometown. and all of this comes as authorities brace for the night ahead. in new york city last night, the storefronts and landmarks destroyed. the famed macy s department store. the curfew, as i mentioned, moved up. six police officers shot last night. and tensions high in washington, d.c., after park police cleared the peaceful protesters with flashbangs. one striking a cameraman from
australian tv, the image fed live back to australia. broadcasters there stunned. minutes after that scene, the president walking through the park to st. john s church to hold up a bible. asked if it was his, he said it s a bible. tonight, the fallout from that moment. and the competing images. the peaceful protests across the country, and the concerns about what was seen after the sun went down. here s stephanie ramos. reporter: today, the images of protest from across the country just hours before new curfews go into effect. from san francisco, to orlando, to new york city, thousands marching in protest with a message of peace. we are not looking to agitate, or to loot, or destroy anything. we are trying to make the community unified and by doing that, it s not unifying the community, it s breaking it apart. reporter: the city now moving up its curfew to 8:00 p.m. tonight after a fourth night of looting. peaceful demonstration by day
replaced with a vicious cycle of violence overnight. windows smashed, stores ransacked, from the macy s flagship store to rockefeller center. the sun has gone down here in new york clearly different groups that are out here facing off with police, shattering windows on fifth avenue. the governor today blasting the mayor and police department. and the police in new york city were not effective at doing their job last night. period. reporter: hundreds of arrests, most after curfew. police investigating this video showing a car slamming into an officer in a hit and run in the bronx. that officer in serious condition. it appears to be quite purposeful. that is unacceptable. reporter: overnight, officers shot during violent protests. in las vegas, one in grave condition. another four officers were shot in st. louis. thank god they re alive, they re alive.
can we make some sense out of this? reporter: across the country police tactics under scrutiny. l.a. s police chief sparking outrage after suggesting looters were as responsible for george floyd s death as those fired police officers. we didn t have people mourning the death of this man, george floyd. we had people capitalizing. his death is on their hands as much as it is those officers. reporter: the chief later apologizing, calling his own words terribly offensive. today l.a. officers kneeling with protesters at a faith-based march. in new york, the police chief also taking a knee. let new york show the country how this is done. reporter: at times police torn between patrol and protest. this officer in d.c. seen trying to kneel only to be repeedly pulled to his feet by his fellow officers.
in detroit, 16-year-old organizer stefan perez has been he safe.s fellow demonstrators. they don t got rubber bullets. they don t got tear gas. they re not dead. reporter: the mayor calling to thank him. i saw your leadership. i have tears in my eyes. you are everything that is special about the city of detroit. we re going to fight this injustice because of people like you. that young protester telling others to go home. stephanie, we see the large crowd behind you. we also know the curfew goes into effect a short time from now, 8:00 p.m. but a lot of protesters said they re not concerned about that. reporter: that s absolutely right. thousands are marching across the streets of new york city. you can see them here. it will be very difficult to enforce the new curfew. this group, we ve been following them for several blocks. they just got started a little while ago. stephanie, thank you.
now to the fallout from the president s visit to st. john s episcopal church just after we were on the air last night. the police firing flashbangs, smoke canisters, pepper balls at peaceful demonstrators, apparently to clear the way for the president. we ve learned it was attorney general william barr who gave the order. tonight, church leaders are expressing outrage, as well as leaders in both parties. here s jonathan karl. reporter: as president trump rode through washington today, citizens, including families with homemade signs, jeered the presidential limousine. [ booing ] we were in the motorcade watching the people. their signs, withering. are you a moral monster? i can t breathe. today, outrage is growing over the forceful removal of peaceful protesters to clear the way for the president to hold a photo op at st. john s church. it all began shortly after 6:00 p.m., the hour before washington s curfew took effect. the protesters had gathered just
a block from the white house gate. as the president prepared to speak in the rose garden, our camera spotted attorney general bill barr surveying the scene. abc news has learned the attorney general then gave the order to remove the protesters using force. and so it began, continuing even as the president was saying these words. i am your president of law and order and an ally of all peaceful protesters. reporter: you could hear the explosions from the rose garden. the police using flashbang, smoke canisters, and pepper balls to force the protesters away. among those roughed up, an australian tv crew. the photographer hit in the face. his colleague hit with a baton as she tried to flee. after he was done speaking, the president, accompanied by top advisers, walked to st. john church, crossing the street where the protesters had gathered less than an hour earlier.
in front of the church, the president held up a bible. is that your bible? it s a bible. reporter: he summoned his advisers to pose for a photo before heading back to the white house. among the first to express outrage, the bishop of washington. the spiritual leader of episcopalians in the nation s capital, including the parishioners at st. john s. he is not entitled to use the spiritual symbolism of our sacred spaces and our sacred texts to promote or to justify a completely entire an entirely different message. reporter: the condemnation stretched across the political spectrum, including prominent republicans. if your question is, should you use tear gas to clear a path so the president can go have a photo op, the answer is no. reporter: republican senator ben sasse said, quote, i m against clearing out a peaceful protest for a photo op that treats the word of god as a political prop. reporter: even pat robertson, prominent televangelist and an
ardent supporter of president trump, had harsh words for the president. it seems like now is the time to say, i understand your pain. i want to comfort you, i think it s time we love each other. but the president took a different course. reporter: robertson lambasted the president for threatening to move military troops into american cities unless the nation s governors control the violence. as a matter of fact he spoke of them as being jerks. you just don t do that, mr. president. it isn t cool. jon, i know you were in the motorcade witnessing the protesters and their signs. the president, though, unwavering on this tonight. and a former president now weighing in? reporter: former president george w. bush with a powerful statement that condemns the brutal suffocation of it says many doubt the justice of our country, and with good reason. he does not mention president trump by name, but he does
express support for the protesters. saying, those who set out to silence those voices do not understand the meaning of america, or how it becomes a better place. that s president george w. bush tonight. david? jon, thanks. there are massive gatherings tonight in houston as well. tens of thousands there. george floyd died in his adopted city of minneapolis, but he grew up in houston. among those gathering today, the mayor and chief of police. marcus moore is there tonight. reporter: in houston, a sea of humanity. a wave of emotion. i can t breathe! reporter: hope that the healing can begin. we want justice for floyd. and i m a black mother and i heard his cry and it hurt me to my heart. reporter: tens of thousands marching across the city in memory of george floyd. i just feel like there s something powerful going on right now.
something that should have been done a long time ago. the crowd has doubled in size at least, since i last talked to you. reporter: the march, supported by city officials and organized with help from local rappers bun b and trae tha truth. truth, a longtime friend of floyd. it s a beautiful moment. we re making george proud. this is george s family here, we re making them proud to show how many people love george. reporter: this scene coming a day after floyd s brother terrence visited the minneapolis intersection where george floyd took his last breath. i need you and pops to watch over me. reporter: floyd died may 25th. he d worked in minnesota as a security guard. but he was a child of houston s third ward, where a new mural now bears his image and reads, forever breathing in our hearts. he was a star tight end on the yates high school football team. and he was a father to 6-year-old gianna. i want justice for him because he was good. and this is the proof that he was a good man. reporter: there are services this week in minneapolis and north carolina.
floyd s funeral is set for tuesday here in houston. the family s attorney says vice president joe biden is expected to attend. david? marcus, thank you. joe biden, they re saying, expected to attend. no formal confirmation of that yet. but the former vice president speaking out today about president trump, the scene in front of st. john s church. and biden s own promise to americans in this time. here s mary bruce. reporter: tonight, the tale of two leaders. the president and the man who wants to replace him. president trump holding that bible. joe biden visiting a church. tonight, biden taking on the president. the country is crying out for leadership. leadership that can recognize pain and deep grief of communities that have had a knee on their neck for a long time. reporter: biden calling on leaders to confront systemic racism. and blasting trump for that bible photo op. i just wish he opened it once in a while instead of brandishing it. if he opened it, he could have learned something.
reporter: biden speaking of his own loss, a parent losing a son. i know what it means to have that black hole in your chest where your grief is being sucked into it. reporter: tonight, biden is calling on congress to ban choke holds and vowing to establish a national police oversight commission. donald trump has turned this country into a battlefield driven by old resentments and fresh fears. he thinks division helps him. his narcissism has become more important than the nation s well-being that he leads. reporter: and biden s promise, less than six months from the election. i promise you this, i won t traffic in fear and division. i won t fan the flames of hate. i ll seek to heal the racial wounds that have long plagued our country, not use them for political gain. reporter: this was biden s first public address in months. but as the country opens up, we can expect to see more of biden
out on the trail. especially as he looks to draw the sharp contrast with president trump. his campaign is defending the decision to lay low the past few weeks. they say just look at the poll numbers, showing biden on the rise. mary, thank you. we re also following a developing headline out of atlanta tonight. six atlanta police officers have been charged for using excessive force against two college students. you will remember the video showing officers dragging them from their car and using tasers on them. the mayor in atlanta, outraged. here s steve osunsami. reporter: the six officers accused of using excessive force have until friday to turn themselves in. in the middle of the chaos that was tearing through downtown atlanta saturday night. okay, okay, okay! reporter: and in pictures now viewed across the world, the officers are seen shooting a stun gun at two coll and dragging them out of a car.
messiah young and taniah pilgrim were out after the new curfew, explaining that they were just getting something to eat when they got stuck in traffic during a protest. i actually thought both me and messiah were going to die, like, the way everything happened so fast, there was no telling what could happen in the next moment. this just needs to cease. reporter: young was initially charged with trying to elude police officers, charges that were dropped by the mayor. two officers have already been fired. david? steve, thank you. and as we continue to report on a country in pain, we re going to take a pause later tonight on abc to try to begin a conversation hopefully with your help at home. i hope you ll join robin roberts, byron pitts, and me for an abc news special, america in pain: what comes next? that s 9:00 p.m. eastern on abc. we re counting on your thoughts and ideas on how we move forward. when we come back, the
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without asking your doctor about xeljanz xr. finally tonight here, the power of listening in this time. they are the moments that provide some hope amid the pain. and tonight, the story behind two of them. in bellevue, washington, police chief steve mylett and a demonstrator embracing. tonight, the police chief explaining the power of that moment. the power of listening. i heard them, i felt them. i think they heard me, and i think they heard my voice and my heart. and the heart of everybody that stands behind me. it s dialogue like this that we learn from each other. reporter: and we showed you that line of law enforcement in
miami and the moment it all changed. highway patrol captain roger reyes, walking up to this woman, renita holmes, hugging her. she was grateful. i love you, man. i love you man. reporter: tonight, both the captain and renita know that that image has been seen by so many, and they re grateful for that too. it was a moment of her pain. we embraced and that was a connection there and it was special. and i saw that it wasn t just one-sided. that she was caring for us as well as the protesters out there. we had a wonderful opportunity to show that love wins. because if you look people in their eyes, you can see the hurt. reporter: seeing the hurt. and the hope that can come from a hug. powerful. i hope to see you just a short time from now, 9:00 p.m. eastern, with robin and byron and the team. where do w
from the sea to around the bay, thousands of people made their voices heard on this di of peaceful protests. also, they had no idea it would get this big. you ll hear from two young men who organized this huge protest in oakland. and demonstrations come to some of the smallst towns in the bay area. now from abc7, live breaking news. and good evening. thank you for joining us. i m dan ashley. and i m ama daetz. that breaking news is in fairfield where a helicopter with three people on board crashed and three cal fire firefighters were injured while responding. abc7 news reporter jr stone is getting the latest live near the scene tonight. jr, what are you hearing? well, dan and ama, we are still awaiting, trying to find out their condition this evening. i do want to zoom out a bit so you can see this is the command center. we are on lion road. this is technically unincorporated fairfield. it is close to the vacaville border. then you go off into the distance. you re looking on that hillside.

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Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20200611 00:30:00


tonight, new reporting on tonight, breaking news as we come on the air in the west. we have images as a man opens fire on a california police station. a deputy shot in the face. and new reporting at this hour on the former police officer, derek chauvin, charged in the murder of george floyd. prosecutors confirming chauvin was negotiating a guilty plea to local and federal charges, so, what changed? as george floyd s brother appears before congress today, his emotional plea, saying his brother did not deserve to die over $20. and what he said when asked if he believed his brother s killing was premeditated. also tonight, as we come on the air, the urgent manhunt for a gunman who open fird on a police station. a deputy wounded, shot in the face. a second person found shot to death nearby. investigators do believe the shootings are connected. residents ordered to shelter in place. and what authorities have just
revealed tonight. after military leaders said the time has come to discuss changing names of u.s. military bases named after confederate leaders, tonight, president trump saying this will not happen, saying they are part of a great american heritage. and nascar late today revealing they are now banning the confederate flag. the coronavirus here in the u.s. alarming news tonight involving the spike in cases right now across more than 20 states. some hospitals told to enact emergency plans. and some authorities now talking about a potential for a stay at home order again. and the race for a vaccine tonight. tens of thousands of americans now volunteering to be injected with experimental vaccines. so, what could this mean about timing for a vaccine here in the u.s.? the voting chaos in georgia overnight. voters in lines well after sundown. some in line for six hours or more. what caused this and what does it mean with the presidential election just five months away? and there is breaking news
tonight in the case of those two missing siblings. the discovery on that property and what their heartbroken grandparents are now saying. and we pay tribute tonight to a renowned debate coach, eight decades at texas southern university. tonight, right here, his students on what he would expect from them in this moment. good evening and it s great to have you with us here on a wednesday night. we are back from houston tonight, where thousands came from all over to pay their respects to george floyd, his family. remembering him as a gentle man, a loving father, an imperfect man, but saying his name will now stand for the push for change, for justice. and tonight, what we did not know about the officer with his knee to floyd s neck, charged with murder now. how close was he to a plea deal, and why did it fall apart? and on capitol hill today, one of george floyd s brothers telling lawmakers, enough is enough. pleading with them to stop the pain of police brutality.
breaking down, asking, what was his brother s life worth? we have learned prosecutors and that former officer, derek chauvin, were closing in on a deal on state murder and federal civil rights charges until the day before his arrest. chauvin now faces up to 40 years behind bars if convicted on all charges. and tonight, as we come on the air, an urgent hunt now for a man who opened fire on a police station. a deputy wounded, shot in the face. another person found shot dead nearby. and we have it all covered for you. we re going to begin with abc s alex perez in minneapolis again tonight. reporter: tonight, the stunning revelation. as prosecutors mulled charges against fired minneapolis police officer derek chauvin, he was angling for a deal to plead guilty on federal civil rights charges and to murdering george floyd. as prosecutors were walking up to the podium on may 28th, the deal had just fallen apart. we thought we would have another development that i could tell you about. unfortunately, we don t at this point. reporter: chauvin charged with third degree murder the next day, upgraded to second
degree the following week. mr. floyd, what do you hope to tell the committee today? justice for george. reporter: word of those negotiations coming as george floyd s brother emotionally testified before lawmakers on capitol hill. you don t do that to a human being. you don t even do that to an animal. his life mattered. all our lives matter. black lives matter. i just wish wish i could get him back. those officers, they get to live. for him to do something like that, it had to be premeditated and he wanted to do that. and intentional? yes, sir. reporter: and tonight, those chants on the streets turning
into demands for reform. minneapolis police chief medaria arradondo, faced with the possibility his department could be disbanded, unveiling his own plans for change today, revealing the department will no longer negotiate their current contract with the police union and new, real-time technology to track cops accused of misconduct and intervene. chauvin had 18 complaints against him, but was only disciplined twice. under these new rules, what would have happened to someone like chauvin, who had all these complaints? we could have intervened much earlier. if there were problematic behaviors brought to our attention right away, we could have made those appropriate measures. reporter: back on capitol hill, george floyd s brother demanding more accountability for officers before anyone else is killed. george wasn t hurting anyone that day. he didn t deserve to die over $20. i m asking you, is that what a black man is worth?
$20? this is 2020. enough is enough. powerful testimony. we hear the demonstrators behind you there in minneapolis tonight, alex. and we also know there s late word that one of the other officers who was charged in this case, thomas lane, we remember, he was on his fourth shift as an officer that night, a rookie, there s news on him this evening? reporter: well, david, according to jail records, former officer thomas lane was released from jail just a short time ago, late this afternoon. he posted $750,000 bail and has been released. you ll remember that s the officer who in court shifted blame towards the veteran officer on the scene that night, derek chauvin. now, as for the changes here at the minneapolis police department, the chief tells me, today was just the beginning. he expects to make several announcements in the weeks ahead. david? all right, alex perez leading us off again tonight. alex, thank you. and as i mentioned at the top tonight, there is an urgent hunt at this hour for a gunman who fired on a police station in
paso robles, california, shooting a deputy in the face. and then, a body found a mile away, someone shot dead. authorities do believe it s related. that community put on lockdown. and abc s will carr is in california. reporter: tonight, police are on the hunt for an active shooter wanted for attacking a police station in california. shots northeast of the building. reporter: authorities say this is the shooter, with that long, curly hair and dark beard. we feel that this was an ambush, that he planned it. reporter: the gunfire erupted early this morning, around 3:15, in downtown paso robles. the pd is advising they can hear gunfire coming from the east side of their station. reporter: the gunman shot and wounded a sheriff s deputy in front of the station. taking gunfire. at the dmv! copy. taking gunfire on ninth street at the dmv. keeps shooting at us! gunfire is coming from a southerly direction north of the dmv. reporter: that deputy is in serious but stable condition. later, around 7:00 a.m., police
discovered the body of a man near an amtrak station less than a mile away from the police department. the victim was shot in the head from close range and investigators believe this homicide is connected to the shooting this morning. within the past couple of minutes, authorities released a picture of the gunman. they say, without a doubt, he set out to kill police officers and this is the third time that members of law enforcement have been ambushed here in california in just the past couple of weeks. david? the scene playing out in paso robles, california, tonight. will, thank you. we have been reporting here on the growing pressure across this country from demonstrators and supporters to take down confederate symbols, and tonight, late word nascar is taking action, banning the confederate flag at all nascar events. driver bubba wallace wearing a t-shirt, saying, i can t breathe, black lives matter in recent days. u.s. military leaders have expressed a willingness to discuss renaming bases named after confederate generals. but tonight, president trump says that won t happen, saying
they are part of a great american heritage. here s our chief white house correspondent jonathan karl. reporter: president trump today firmly shot down the idea of changing the names of military bases named after confederate generals, tweeting, quote, my administration will not even consider the renaming of these magnificent and fabled military installations. in case anybody missed his tweets, he dispatched his press secretary to read his words aloud. these monumental and very powerful bases have become part of a great american heritage and a history of winning, victory and freedom. reporter: it comes just after the army announced, the secretary of defense and the secretary of the army are open to a bipartisan discussion on the topic. around the country, signs of the confederacy are coming down. now nascar is announcing a ban on confederate flags at all events. tonight, racing star bubba wallace s car will bear the words black lives matter. there are ten u.s. army bases named after confederate soldiers.
among those calling for that to change is retired general david petraeus, who wrote in the atlantic of the, quote, irony of training at bases named for those who took up arms against the united states and for the right to enslave others. he added, we do not live in a country to which braxton bragg, henry l. benning or robert e. lee can serve as an inspiration. acknowledging this fact is imperative. today, the president wouldn t answer questions on his decision. while the white house makes an impassioned defense of bases named for pro-slavery confederate soldiers, the president has yet to propose any specific reforms of police practices in the wake of george floyd s death. on capitol hill, republicans have tasked the only african-american republican senator to take the lead in coming up with a plan. we should all want to follow the lead as it relates, to, a, making sure we get something accomplished, and not just having pieces of legislation
they are for show. reporter: the white house press secretary said today the president is working, quote, quietly and diligently, to come up with a plan to address the concerns of the protesters, but we have heard nothing specific. so far, all we have heard is what he opposes. we are told the president opposes the idea of limiting the immunity now enjoyed by most police officers. that s an idea that democrats and some republicans say would make it easier to hold the police accountable for their actions. david? jon karl live at the white house. jon, thank you. i want to get right to abc s martha raddatz tonight, because martha, the army had said the defense secretary was, in fact, open to discussing renaming military bases named after confederate generals, but you heard what the president said today, essentially saying this won t happen. so, where does it stand tonight? reporter: well, david, the decision is technically up to an assistant secretary of the army, but given what trump has said, that would likely be professional suicide. but as you know, it was just last week that secretary of defense mark esper spoke out publicly against the president s
threat to use active duty military to quell protests and there has also been a growing chorus of retired military officers blasting trump s decision-making, so, you can t rule out the base names changing, but for now, that seems unlikely, david. all right, martha, our thanks to you, as well. now, the news this evening on the coronavirus. the number of cases spiking in several states across this country. and there s news tonight on a potential vaccine. tens of thousands of americans volunteering to get injected with potential vaccines on the horizon. so, what could this mean for any timeline for the rest of the country? here s matt gutman on that. reporter: tonight, the u.s. government saying tens of thousands of volunteers will soon receive injections with one of three of experimental vaccines. those injections are part of third phase of vaccine trials, the stage before possible approval. and dr. anthony fauci now saying there are no guarantees, but he s cautiously optimistic about at least one of them working.
we could have a vaccine either by the end of this calendar year or in the first few months of 2021. reporter: moderna beginning phase three trials in july, followed by the university of oxford and astra-zeneca s vaccine in august and johnson & johnson in september. the goal, to test their vaccine s safety and effectiveness. that, as at least 20 states plus puerto rico seeing increases in new cases and eight states reporting rising hospitalizations. in texas, hospitalizations jumped 40% since memorial day. officials there say it s too early to tell if that s because of the reopening, the protests or both. and in arizona, some experts say it might be time for another stay at home order. one doctor telling us they re maxing out of icu beds. reporter: david, the goal of a phase three trial is to determine how well a vaccine works. that s why they re casting an enormously wide net, up to
90,000 volunteers from all walks of life. half of them will be given a placebo, the other half, the actual vaccine. and it will later be determined who came down with coronavirus and how many of them show the presence of antibodies. david? and we know you ll stay on this. matt gutman, our thanks to you again tonight, as well. we re also following that developing headline in the case of two missing siblings from idaho. their step-father was in court today facing charges now after human remains were found on his property. and what the children s heartbroken grandparents said late today. here s marcus moore. reporter: tonight, the grandparents of two idaho children, missing since september, say their bodies have been found. but police not confirming they are the remains of 17-year-old tylee ryan and her brother, 7-year-old j.j. vallow, discovered during a search at chad daybell s home, their mother s new husband. we are aware that those remains are the remains of children. reporter: daybell appearing today before a judge today via zoom, facing two felony counts of destruction, alteration or concealment of evidence. mr. daybell, do you understand the allegations on both counts that have been brought against you? i do. reporter: mom lori vallow already behind bars after
refusing to tell police where the kids were. lori? can you tell me where your kids are? reporter: the couple under a cloud of suspicion for months after a string of deaths in the family. marrying in hawaii weeks after daybell s first wife died. vallow s husband killed last summer by her brother, who later died himself. friends and family insisting lori changed after meeting daybell, a religious author. after lori s arrest, daybell telling us the kids were safe. is there anything that you would like to say to people at all who are, number one, concerned about the kids or concerned about you and your wife, anything at all you want to say to them? just grateful for any support. reporter: tonight, j.j. and tylee s family saying, we are filled with unfathomable sadness that these two bright stars were stolen from us, and only hope that they died without pain or suffering. lori vallow has pleaded not guilty to child abandonment. meantime, she and her husband are both being held on $1 million bail and, david, daybell is due back in court in july. marcus, thank you.
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if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. ask your doctor about eliquis. and if your ability to afford. .your medication has changed, we want to help. finally, the legendary debate coach. eight decades at texas southern university, teaching until the end. and tonight, his students determined to make him proud. dr. thomas freeman was born on june 27th, 1919, in richmond, virginia. 1949 is when i came. the 60s, the 70s. reporter: he was tsu s debate coach and he was a legend. his students winning thousands of competitions over the years. dr. freeman remembering the
moment dr. martin luther king jr. approached him at a dinner. he stuck out his hand and said, dr. freeman, you don t remember me, but i remember you. you taught me. reporter: dr. freeman was just days from turning 101. he was still shaping minds. we spent time with the debate team. started at texas southern with doc. just a positive, beautiful experience that i ll never forget. reporter: the debate team president, prince, and dominique. and you talk about a man that came to work every day, at even 100. he didn t miss a day. even when we weren t there, he was still at work. reporter: and every student remembers their first interaction with dr. freeman. he would point to the piles of prose, of poetry in his office, telling the students to select something. and then, to read it. it was about more than debating, it was presentation, how to carry yourself, how to be heard. this was your first time interacting with dr. freeman.
yes. he does that with every single one of us. reporter: angelica. you re really nervous, because you ve never done this before. i went in there, like, i want to debate, because i want to be a lawyer, and he ll say, louder! make sure to correct you, and say, it s often. make sure you don t say it wrong. so, yeah. reporter: you ll never say it that way again. yeah. reporter: and they all told me they now know what he would expect in this time. al zsazan alexandria. it s a heavy time in america. and what would dr. freeman want from each of you in this moment? i think that dr. freeman, because he has always encouraged us to not only be articulate, but vocalize our plight in a way in which we can have the best outcome for ourselves. meaning that he s always pushed us to do our best. it s in our motto, we all know what we do, we do well, what we don t do well, we don t do it at
all. reporter: the faces that you see, black, white, latino, from every race, every background, every story, part of these protests. do you sense it s a turning point? absolutely do. reporter: what s your message to the country right now? that there s always hope. that you can always be better. that you don t have to settle. i think the message would be, there s power in your voice. you should definitely use it. definitely. reporter: well, i would say to your debate team, keep winning. we ll try. thank you. keep winning. vowing to carry the torch. it s about more than winning, he would say, and they have already made dr. freeman proud. thank you for watching here tonight. i m david muir. from all of us here at abc news, have a good evening. good night.
a silicon valley lab owner is under arrest. i ll explain. no one can say it won t happen again. it s just not possible. the man in charge of the alameda police department speaks only with abc7 news and our i-team. hear his take on the officers who arrested a black man for dancing in the streets. reporter: restaurants are reimagining opening. it s very upsetting and angering to see people like this individual taking advantage of what is happening in our community. new at 6:00, the first case by the u.s. department of justice related to securities fraud involves a silicon valley lab owner.

Man , Reporting , Breaking-news , Air , West , Police-station , George-floyd , Fire , Face , Prosecutors , Police-officer , Murder

Transcripts For KGO ABC World News Tonight With David Muir 20200609 00:30:00


tonight, thousands pay tribute as george floyd comes home to houston. joe biden among them. also tonight, the new video just released from new mexico. a knee to the neck and tonight, charges of manslaughter. here in houston, many walking in the stifling heat to line up for hours, then filing past george floyd s casket. mourners wearing masks. george floyd was killed two weeks ago today, an officer with his knee on floyd s neck for 8 minutes, 46 seconds. former vice president joe biden came to houston today. the image of him with george floyd s little girl. paying his respects to the floyd family. and the family speaking just moments ago. also tonight, the former officer now charged with second degree murder, derek chauvin, wearing an orange jumpsuit for his first court appearance today. prosecutors saying he kept his
knee on floyd s neck while he went limp and eventually lifeless. and the breaking headline as we come on the air tonight. the new video from new mexico now. the officer with his knee on the neck of a man detained after a traffic stop. that officer tonight now charged with manslaughter. what we ve just learned. the minneapolis city council voting to dismantle the police department. the mayor there shouted down for refusing to support calls to defund the police. growing calls from demonstrators across the country to do the same. joe biden tonight saying he does not support that idea, nor does president trump, who called members of law enforcement to the white house today. the disturbing case in virginia tonight. the charges. the alleged member of the kkk who drove right into a protest. and in seattle, the man who drove into demonstrators there and then allegedly shot someone as he got out of the car. on capitol hill tonight, democratic members of congress taking a knee for 8 minutes and 46 seconds. tonight, what they have now unveiled to try to reform policing.
there are also major developments tonight in the coronavirus pandemic. new york city beginning to reopen. but at least 20 states tonight are now seeing increases in cases. and this evening, what researchers have discovered about china and the virus. tonight, right here, you will see the satellite images. do they suggest the virus was spreading far earlier than first thought? and the symptoms people in china were searching for online that matched the virus. those searches as early as october. and good evening tonight from houston, as we begin another week together. and as a community says good-bye to a native son. george floyd, who has become the face of a movement for justice and change in this country. tonight here, we talk with so many parents who brought children, to nurses who are also working in the middle of this pandemic. and still, they thought it was important they come here today.
and tonight, as we come on, the new case, the new video released just a short time ago, a knee to the neck and now an officer charged with manslaughter. george floyd s casket escorted y mourrs file, socially distancing. among them, texas governor greg abbott, houston s mayor sylvester turner, the police chief and members of the force and many, many families, parents with small children. diverse ages, diverse backgrounds, waiting outside in the searing heat, well into the 90s here. and former vice president joe biden here in houston to pay his respects, too. the image of him with george floyd s little girl. all of this amid new developments as we come on the air. in minneapolis, former police officer derek chauvin appearing before a judge to face murder charges. and now that new case i mentioned from new mexico, an officer with his knee to a man s neck. tonight, that officer has now been charged in his death. abc s alex perez leads us off from minneapolis. reporter: tonight, fired minneapolis police officer
derek chauvin facing murder charges, making his first appearance in court, via video, in an orange jumpsuit and blue face mask. the prosecutor laying out the second degree murder case against chauvin, saying he placed his knee on floyd s neck for nearly nine minutes as he went limp. the judge setting bail at $1.25 million. the three other officers, tou thao, j. alexander keung and thomas lane, all charged with aiding and abetting chauvin. tonight, lane s lawyer placing the blame on chauvin, the veteran officer, saying lane had only been on the job four days. was he afraid of chauvin? your client? he relied on his 20-year he thought that this man knew what he was doing. my client had did exactly what he was supposed to do, follow the experienced officer s advice. get on the ground! reporter: across the country, more officers accused of
excessive force facing charges. in new mexico today, a white police officer charged with involuntary manslaughter, after putting his knee on the neck of a hispanic man back in february. prosecutors say it led to his death. in fairfax, virginia no! reporter: a white officer arrested for assault after body camera video showed him using a stun gun on an unarmed black man, putting his knees on the man s back. the man yelling, i can t breathe. all the officers involved placed on administrative leave. now, growing calls to defund or outright abolish police departments. defunding meaning diverting some funds from police to other social programs. the controversial issue coming to a boiling point in minneapolis. the city s mayor confronted by protesters at the site of floyd s killing. i know there needs to be deep-seeded structural reform in terms of how the department operates. the systemic and racist system needs to be revamped.
reporter: but the crowd pressing him for more answers. we don t want no more police. is that clear? we don t want people with guns toting around in our community, shooting us down. it is a yes or a no. will you defund the minneapolis police department? i do not support the full abolition of police. reporter: the minneapolis city council announcing it intends to dismantle the police department, calling it beyond reform. just moments ago, the mayor announcing a new coalition to provide more economic inclusion for people of color to help the city move forward. george floyd moved to minneapolis for a fresh start. in honoring his memory and generations of black people who have been victimized before him, we will rebuild as a stronger, more equitable and more inclusive city. reporter: other cities also
announcing plans to partially defund the police. new york city shifting nypd funds to youth programs. l.a. cutting $150 million from its police budget. and alex perez joins us again tonight from min yap lus. and alex, we know all four officers charged in floyd s death remain behind bars tonight? reporter: yeah, david, they re all in custody. chauvin faces up to 75 years behind bars. and those three other officers could face up to 50 years in prison. david? alex perez leading us off on a monday night. alex, thank you. meantime, here in houston, the stirring images of so many people coming here to honor george floyd. one mother driving seven hours from oklahoma city with her children. people seen walking in the heat toward the church and arriving by the bus load. among those paying their respects, as we mentioned earlier, former vice president joe biden, who met for more than an hour with floyd s family. abc s marcus moore with us right here at the church tonight.
reporter: two weeks after his death at the hands of police, an emotional farewell for george floyd in his hometown of houston. mourners lining up early this morning to pay their respects, braving extreme texas heat. but so many telling us they needed to be here. this man whose death has changed the world he s changed the world. you have to come. you know, you have to. i can t explain it. reporter: inside the church, social distancing, just 15 people at a time in masks and gloves. for hours, thousands of people of all ages and backgrounds streaming past floyd s open casket. many here were strangers to floyd and those next to them in this line, but today, people like quinn richardson and don murray are connected in their grief and hope for progress. but when we see people like mr. don here who said he had to be here, too, it makes me proud to say something we re doing, making a lot of noise, we re showing up and people like him are coming out. reporter: murray remembers arguing with his father about racism back in the 1950s.
all of these decades later, an image of barriers broken.weti rd than what you saw when you were younger? oh, yeah. i mean, this you never would have seen when i was younger. never. reporter: the governor of texas vowing to work for change with the floyd family. this is the most horrific tragedy i ve ever personally observed. but george floyd is going to change the arc of the future of the united states. george floyd has not died in vain. reporter: vice president joe biden today meeting privately for more than an hour with floyd s family, seen here with his daughter gianna. a family attorney tweeting, he listened, heard their pain and shared in their woe. that compassion meant the world to this grieving family. george floyd s family grateful for the outpouring of support tonight and proud of the man he was. we all hurting as a family
and you know, the george we know, he s a family man, great man. he stands for the definition of a man, because we didn t have no father figure growing up. reporter: in his old hbho, stimby the strokes of an artist s brush, symbolizing floyd s impact on the world and one of houston s sons, who is finally home. david, today, we saw relatives of eric garner, ahmaud arbery and michael brown, among others. a real show of solidarity, as floyd s family gets ready for another emotional day. tomorrow, they will have a private funeral and floyd will be buried next to his mother. david? marcus moore with us here in houston tonight. marcus, thank you. and as you heard from marcus there, we will be carrying the funeral live tomorrow right here on abc. i ll be anchoring with our team here around noon eastern, as george floyd s hometown honors him and this movement for change. but we continue with the news this monday night, and in washington tonight, lawmakers know the pressure to act is growing.
democratic members of congress taking a knee for 8 minutes and 46 seconds today before unveiling legislation to reform policing. and the fence put up outside the white house after peaceful protesters were moved out of the way last week for that photo-op, that wall has instead now become a tribute to george floyd and calls for racial justice in the u.s. inside the white house, president trump opposing efforts to defund, dismantle or disband the police. joe biden today opposing defunding the police, as well. here s our chief white house correspondent jonathan karl. reporter: sensing a political opportunity in the growing protests around the country, the prced onctist efund the police. there won t be there won t be dismantling of our police. there s not going to be any disbanding of our police. our police have been letting us live in peace. reporter: the president also said he s considering ideas for police reform, but he didn t mention specifics. we re going to work and we re
going to talk about ideas, how we can do it better and how we can do it, if possible, in a much more gentle fashion. reporter: his attorney general today acknowledged african-american distrust of the criminal justice system, but 24 hours ago, bill barr said he does not think there is systemic racism. i think there s racism in the united states still, but i don t think that the law enforcement system is systemically racist. reporter: joe biden has expressed solidarity with the protesters, but today, his campaign made it clear he does not support calls for defunding, either. vice president biden does not believe that police should be defunded, the campaign said in a written statement. house democrats unveiled their own reform plan today, calling for, among other things, a ban on chokeholds, a national registry of police misconduct and limiting immunity protections for police officers. one thing not in the democratic proposal? anything to do with defunding the police. funding of police is a local
matter, as you know. from the standpoint of our legislation, we re not going to that place. reporter: republican leaders have said they, too, support reforms, but they have not signed onto this bill. senator mitt romney made a show of support for the protests over the weekend. we need to stand up and say that black lives matter. so, let s get to jon at the white house. and jon, of course, this all comes as a series of new polls show joe biden with a growing lead over president trump. you have sources there at the white house, obviously, they re well aware of these numbers. reporter: oh, they sure are. the president himself says the polls are skewed, designed to dampen the enthusiasm of his supporters. and the campaign, the trump a cof weeks, and they are wi run predicting large crowds despite the continued covid-19 threat, david. jon karl starting another week at the white house for us. jon, thank you. there are also major developments in the coronavirus pandemic tonight. a triumphant moment in new york city today, 100 days after the first case of the coronavirus.
as many as 400,000 people returning to work in new york, to construction, manufacturing and limited retail jobs, getting free face masks sanitizer at the subway entrances. governor cuomo seen taking the train to his office, to grand central. but cases are rising in nearly half of the country tonight, even before possible cases among protesters. and tonight, an investigation now revealing that the virus may have struck china months before they let on. tonight, right here, you will see the satellite images and you will also see what the people of china were searching for online as early as october. here s tom llamas. reporter: tonight, signs the threat from the coronavirus is not over. cases on the rise in 20 states. 1,500 new cases, a record, reported in arizona on friday, two weeks after reopening. texas open for more than a month, seeing a steep increase in new patient admissions. now, nearly 2,000 hospitalized. deaths in this country
surpassing 110,000. kaiser health news and the guardian reporting nearly 600 of the victims were u.s. health care workers. and now, new evidence the virus may have been sweeping through wuhan nearly three months before chinese health officials told the world. these satellite photos show various wuhan hospitals from october. those red dots, cars packing the parking lots. this is hubei women and children hospital in october 2018. 393 cars. a year later? 714. satellite photos, mirror images. october 2018, october 2019 and you see the number of cars skyrocket. so, much greater and greater than any other sort of time period that we had looked at. reporter: at tongji medical center, 112 cars in 2018, compared to 214 a year later. a 90% increase. more cars to a hospital, the hospital s busier. likely because maybe something s
happening in the community, an infection is growing and people have to see a doctor. reporter: researchers say they can t prove this increased activity is due to covid-19, but they also found internet searches in wuhan for the terms diarrhea and cough spiking in october. two symptoms of the coronavirus. abc spoke with multiple infectious disease experts who told us there is almost always a delay in identifying and then reporting an outbreak. china has adamantly maintained they reported the outbreak in a timely fashion. and tonight, new, important guidance from the w.h.o. they re now saying it is rare for asymptomatic patients carrying covid-19 to spread the deadly disease. they say the focus should be on people showing symptoms, to quarantine them and isolate their contacts. david? tom llamas with us live in new york tonight. tom, thank you. and when we come back on a monday night, a hate crime investigation now under way involving the virginia kkk tonight and a pickup right into a crowd. and another vehicle right into a
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we re going to turn next tonight to that hate crime investigation now under way after the self-proclaimed president of the virginia kkk allegedly drove his pickup truck into a crowd of protesters in richmond. 36-year-old harry rogers is now facing several felony charges. he s accused of revving his engine before ramming his car into the group. fortunately, no one was seriously hurt. and in seattle, a driver now in custody tonight. police reviewing this video now, showing the suspect plowing into peaceful demonstrators. the driver then allegedly shooting a protester who tried to stop him. that protester is recovering tonight. the motive is under investigation. when we come back on this monday night, that tropical system slamming into the u.s. coast, now being felt across several states tonight and the rescues. the images and you ll see them in a moment. in a moment. thousands of women with metastatic breast cancer,
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tell your doctor if you ve been somewhere fungal infections are common, or if you ve had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. don t let another morning go by without asking your doctor about xeljanz xr. finally, we walked that route here under the blazing sun today and what we heard moved us. here in houston today, flags line the route. thousands coming to this church, many walking in blistering heat to wait in line for hours. a nurse in this pandemic coming here, too.e enea wh concnsr demic. but you ve taken a break from
your work today to come here. yes, sir. why was that so important to you? it is important to me, because in my career, i m all for life. and his death is a senseless death. she is here as a mother, too. for somebody to know when somebody is telling you, i can t breathe, for you to give that person a chance to breathe. when i heard a grown man calling his mom, i have children, too. i cried. so bad. a student, jonathan vazquez. you felt it was important to come here. yes, sir. very important. he made a stop on the way. i see that you have brought flowers with you. yes, sir, nine. nine roses. to dedicate, i guess, the amount of minutes that he couldn t breathe. yeah, just really tough time that we re going through and i m glad i m able to pay my respects.
we saw so many mothers here. aisha and her two boys. i love my kids, i want the world to love my kids, i want them to have opportunities. and so, i just want things to change. i think that what s happened is really words can t fathom what has happened to george. as a mother, when he called out, my heart broke. and it has to stop. it can t go no further. no justice, no peace. and how do you protect your sons? i am i keep telling them about the great legacy that they come from, i encourage them to work hard, i encourage them to do all the right things and most importantly, i pray over my children. so many paying tribute, hoping for change. build a better bay area for a safe and secure future. this is abc7 news.
people on the street in protest. this image is just one of many we re seeing in places around the bay area across the nation, and around the world. calling for change. good evening, and thank you for joining us. i m ama daetz. and i m larry beil. tomorrow, george floyd will be laid to rest, but his death has sparked a movement that s really taken on a life of its own. at his public viewing in houston today, the line of mourners stretched out the door, including the governor of texas who stopped by. bail for former police officer derek chauvin, the officer who had his knee on floyd s neck was set today at $1.25 million. he faces second degree murder and second degree aggravated assault charges. the majority of the minneapolis city council supports a plan to disband the police department. the mayor says he does not support that idea. in the bay area, the mayor of hour biggest city has rejected the idea of defunding san jose s police department.

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Transcripts For CNN Anderson Cooper 360 20240608-180

Remarkable nor freighted with the kind of meaning it carries. now, the difference is context today that perfectly unremarkable tribute to self-sacrifice landed hard on the heels of the former president, again, suggesting in a clip that was released last night that the entire federal justice system be deployed to avenge one individual himself well, revenge this. take time. i will say that it does. and sometimes revenge can be justified. so i have to be honest sometimes they can t that was the answer to fill newgrounds attempt to do what sean hannity also failed to du the night before, namely get donald trump to stop talking so openly about seeking revenge it hasn t worked. and just yesterday, the foreign president also called for members of the house january 6 committee to be indicted reaction. it appears to his former strategist, steve bannon being ordered to prison for defying a lawful subpoena from that committee. the same steve bannon, who received a presidential pardon while being accused of bilking money from trump s supporters, claiming it would go to build a wall on the board during the final days of the trump administration,

President , Justice , Kind , Context , System , Tribute , Heels , Difference , Self-sacrifice , Freighted , Clip , Revenge

Transcripts For MSNBC Alex Wagner Tonight 20240608-1620

Combat. did you feel it was effective? yeah, well, i would be careful with saying hand to hand combat. figuratively speaking. you know what they say. that s their play book. but yes i do think everybody needs to forcefully push back against these lies. i mean, you know, nobody said a word when mike johnson and the house delegation, the republican delegation was going outside the courthouse in defense of donald trump for that familiar case. you know we just went up there, my story was about january 6th. i didn t talk about the trial. you know to be honest i wasn t really following it. i just wanted to let everybody know how i feel that donald trump is one of the biggest threats to our democracy. and you know, it s kind of rich people say that democrats need to move on from january 6th. i would argue that you tell that to donald trump. he s still campaigning off of january 6th. offering pardons to people who attacked police officers, attacked and stormed the capitol. he s offering pardons to them so that s part of his campaign

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