montero s testimony is how h says detectives tried to cover a false commission from the very same thing tha says happened to him and they slapped me every time i tell them something tha they didn t want to hear they hit me. so that s when the nightmare started, you know? but montero never correct and maintained his innocence law kuby argued to the judge that what montero and hincapie say happened to them was eas to believe they were just two of many innocent people swept up b police at a time in new york history when crime was out o control. simply, the wrong place as and the wrong era. we have done some terrible, terrible things to innocen people in the course o fighting crime case in point, kuby argued, the central park case
is going to look like a little marco episode in retrospec making him seem small and pett and rather silly, frankly. so the question is, is there a alternative? and, i think that it must come around to the position tha they do is which is, i m not sure there is that is what the republican is that the republican party an its allies at fox news and the right-wing media have done suc a bang up job of radicalizing, lying to their base, that that is what these people now believe. and that is what they want and now the monster, lik frankenstein, is out o control. what, we are going to tell these people, we need someone little less crazy in order t win? they are not interested. are you going to tell thes people, we actually have t have a plan for governing? they have been told for ho many years, you don t. this is all about performance. so, this is a problem of their own making and, i am increasingly skeptical that they will fin someone who, first of, all hands i don t want to say th
and yet, after police rained bullets down upon this young man s body, they handcuffe him. what sense does that make? this sounds like narrative building by the police, it obviously worked of course it does it also highlights the transparency which is why th community in akron continues t push this is not to the situation about jayland walker, ther have been problems with th community and akron policing for years. this is just an example of how this has gotten so out o control. we re talking about a complete lack of transparency, thes officers identities have bee kept hidden, they are still on the force. we don t know what investigation was held, we don t know what the results of the investigation were, and in front of the grand jury, w don t know what evidence was and was not presented. i can tell you, as a forme prosecutor, there are very few cases that i ve wanted to ge an indictment on, that i presented to a grand jury, and i did not get it to do with that what you will what i m
listen, you don t have nothing on that really. anytwell, you can pass out meanu got to hit man. and when i do listen, it comes out like a sprain. boomrful boom. the tail goes pow boom. hit you. what you dove in the smell. the smell is that how long did you have big cats inyour your house? ouse?for two years. thirteen years. too i bet when people came in i took them to the key to the cage where they run around stuff. didker: did y you ever worryl going to get bitten? i should have beed n, bute ts my ego told me i got the big mothers under control. i didn t talk to me to try to jump on me. u haveme the idea. but you have to show themed respect. you shouldn t them your show th respect these animals youfinish finished. got to kiss them, love theedm astrocom. them. all that s got to show love.e. fear is like fire .s like it you know how to control it, it keeps us all warm.s if feeds off itself and everything. but if y you l let it get out o