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chos chosen careeren that is a differecareer and that is a different tragedy. this must have a consequence of its own. therefore, i agree with the deputy commissioner of trials legal findings and recommendations. it is clear that daniel pantaleo can no longer effectively serve as a new york city police officer. so you heard him. there commissioner o neal agreed with the nypd administrative judge s decision that officer pantaleo be fired. we re about to show you the video that was captured during garner s arrest. in the video you can see pantaleo s choke hold grip him who says over and over, i can t breathe. don t touch me. don t touch me. whoa! damn, man. all right. i m sorry. put your hands behind your back. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. i can t breathe. you hear him over and over and over i can t breathe. kinlt breat i can t breathe. that became a rallying cry. we re following the developments. i was listening you to earlier, you were making this point. just seeing him answer question after question after question from members of the media, your point was, you know, he was thinking of himself as a police officer in having to make this decision. if i was still a cop, i would probably be mad at me. i mean clear think is not an easy decision for him. no. this was not. there is one line he says when he is speaking that manufacture you will disagree with my decision with, this decision. and many that he is talking about is the rank and file at the police department and perhaps police officers all across the country who make split second decisions and sometimes are punished for the split second decisions. and i that i is what o neal here had a very hard time. the commissioner had a very hard time with. he said he looked at this video over and over again. it is a matter of seconds here in the end what they found that officer did wrong in that choke hold. and it is that video. fit wasn t for the video, we may have a very different outcome. you can see in the 30 minute plus press conference how painful it was for the commissioner to stand there and go through this tick by tick. went through and gave us a tick tock of the entire events. he said he was confident. i can tell new talking to people, you know, over at the nypd and even the rank and file, they re not happy with this decision. they re not happy that officer was fired. they think that s unfair. the union clearly thinks this sun fair. the other big thing in all this is pantaleo doesn t get a pension in the end. i think that s going to be one of the sticking points for the union. they did not want him fired. there was some talk of possibly allowing the officer to resign and therefore keeping his pension. that didn t work out. and then in the end, the mayor, you know, the mayor did have a role in all of. this he promised the family justice. told the national law during our debate that s the family was going to get justice. so, you know, i wonder in the coming days we ll seat pressure that mayor put on the police department and on o neal to make sure he fired this officer. we re about to hear from the mayor. so i want to grab our reporter. we re waiting for the mayor to speak. we have a civil rights attorney. i want to get your reaction to the decision, firing pantaleo and not giving him his pension. yeah. i m not surprised by the commissioner s decision. the administrative law judge was pretty clear with respect to her findings. she sat through this trial process where both sides had an opportunity to present their evidence. and she came to this conclusion. and, look, what the commissioner did isn t easy. but let s face it, it s leadership. leadership is not about always doing what is popular. it s about doing what is right. and it s very clear to me that commissioner made the right choice. yes, the officer s life will be impacted by being fired without his pension. but we cannot underestimate the pain and the trauma that eric garner s family has felt and continues to feel. i watched his daughter give her press conference and talk about the pain that she continues to suffer. and when we watch that video, it s so painful even today. even though that happened five years ago. and this decision, i think, will go a long way in starting to mend some of the relationship that s exist between police officers and african-american communities not just in new york but around the country. because african-american communities feel as if justice has not been served. and so many of these cases were unarmed african-american men are killed by police officers. there is tip lick i no prosecution. when there is a prosecution, there is typically no conviction and officers in the eyes of many aren t held accountable. i think it was the right decision. i do want to go now to the police union speaking now. the decision that says guilty based on seven seconds, no, four seconds is just absolutely wrong. all we ever asked for for new york city police officers is fairness in the process. we did not and have not gotten that. this was a tragedy by all means. the garner family has been living with this death and we truly understand that. and there is no such thing as closure for this family. their family member is not coming home. but with that, what you do have to ask for force zblors th e there is so much fear over the last five years. the pain was because we all watched a human being die before our eyes on a video. watched a man who shoe be still alive today. and it was so difficult for all of us to reconcile what we saw with what we must believe about law enforcement. our officers are here to protect us, to keep us safe and, yet, we watched a man die, an unarmed man. and it cause the so many people to ask what if that was my brother right there in that situation, what did that what if that was my son? what if that was my father? what if that was me? the fear was because for a long time people wondered if we would be left without justice. the place that we had turned for generations to, place that was synonymous with making things right failed us. the united states department of justice abscent and unwilling to act even to come to any decision for five long years. but today behave finally seen justice done. today, we saw the nypd s own disciplinary process act fairly and impartially. for years people questioned whether a police department can provide justice for all and we watched a fair and impartial trial. we watched an objective decision by a deputy commissioner of the nypd affirmed by the first deputy commissioner and affirmed by the police commissioner. justice has been done. and that decision has resulted in the termination of officer pantaleo. for the garner family that has gone through so much agony for so long and has waited this long just to have one trial finally conclude with a decision i hope today brings some small measure of closure. it will not bring eric garner back but i hope it brings kl closure and peace to the garner family. now we have to look beyond this tragedy because our city is at a pivotal moment and i m reminded of what dr. king taught us, paraphrasing him, in moments of suffering or difficulty, there are two-ways we can respond we can react with bitterness and division and we can be trapped by the sins of our past or we can transform the suffering into progress. we can find redemption. we can use moment like this to turn it into something better, to move ourselves forward. and that is for all of us to do. we can t have the illusion that someone else creates a better society. that is for all of us to do. we have to do it. we have to all create something better. and i see this as a sacred mission we all must take on. we must devote ourselves to this simple goal that no person, no family, no community should ever go through the agony that we ve all experienced here over these last years. it should never happen again. n. th in this city or in this country. that is the only goal that is acceptable. let this be the last tragedy. to actually get there all right. that is the first time we heard from the mayor here talking about justice, citing dr. king here in what ultimately was the police commissioner s decision to fire daniel pantaleo and not o only fire him but make sure he doesn t receive his police pension. just to you again, i want to remind we re going to have members of eric garner s family next hour. where were you five years ago? you know? can you just talk to me about i know he promised justice to the garner family. how much pressure was he under? he was under an immense amount of pressure. he told the national audience during our debates, the cnn debate, where he stood there and said that justice the family is going to get justice after they felt they didn t get justice when the department of justice decided no the to prosecute. so the mayor said that the family soon enough would get justice. and there was an enormous amount of pressure by the mayor placed even on the police commissioner, on the nypd to make sure that this police officer was fired. i know there were meetings, discussions back and forth. the police commissioner does work for the mayor. ultimately, the decision the decision obviously rests with the police commissioner. but, you know, i think it s important to look diblasio, the mayor in all of. this because he is running for office and what kind of implications did that have, his promises of justice, those things are important. to politics. the politics of. this i also think that s what the members of the nypd are looking at. they re looking at the politics of this. was this done because of political reasons? and that i think is the thing that also even troubled the police commissioner in all of this. yeah. what do you think of that? what do you think of seeing diblasio? yeah. clearly whenever you run for president and you re trying to appeal to voters particularly african-american voters, you expect the mayor to do what he s doing which is to, you know, make good on the promise he made to the garner family. but, you know, he ll have to deal with that in terms of how voters perceive him as a candidate. i don t think that should overshadow the poerns of wh overshadow the importance of what has happened. we va v.have a commissioner tryo take steps to hold a officer that acted recklessly in the arrest of eric garner by an administrative law judge upholding that decision. i think that s a very significant development as we look at the relationships between african-americans and police. and, yes, the police officer loses his pension. but the reality is he can get another job. he can start another pension. eric garner s life will never he can t be, you know, he s not coming back. his family will never have their father, their grand father, their brother, son in their lives. so i don t think we should equate the loss of a job and the loss of a pension with the loss of life. so i just think we have to reflect on the significance of this and hope that this is the message going forward to other police officers, commissioners that officers are not above the law. they must be held accountable. right. commissioner o neal said there are no victors here. thank you so much for joining us. three young men, three different states, police say they expressed interest in and threatened to to carry out mass shootings. how police were able to stop them. plus, the republican who says he may challenge president trump in 2020 says he will still vote for president trump over any democrat. so we ll analyze that. and the oil stafrpgtanker i gulf is on the move. and iran is willing to talk. you re watching cnn. applebee s handcrafted burgers now starting at $7.99 now that s eatin good in the neighborhood. and with new features and richer stories,d you re from. now starting at $7.99 it can lead you on an unexpected 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communities have never been better, with amazing amenities like movie theaters, exercise rooms and swimming pools, public cafes, bars and bistros even pet care services. and there s never been an easier way to get great advice. a place for mom is a free service that pairs you with a local advisor to help you sort through your options and find a perfect place. a place for mom. you know your family we know senior living. together we ll make the right choice. with the tragedies in he will pass yel paso, a stunning announcement from fbi and local police, tips from the public likely helped prevent three more mass shootings. these three men are now in custody. officials say the men from connecticut, florida, and ohio allegedly expressed interest in or threatened to carry out mass shootings, one of them saying he was targeting a large crowd in the hopes he would and this is a quote, break a world record for the longest confirmed kill ever. obviously this is all just so chilling. how did this all unfold? chilling and disturbing. of course, remind viewers these are allegations right now. we don t know whether or not these men would have turned these words into actions. however, for a moment, we need to consider this case out of ohio. james reardon in court for a bond hearing. 20-year-old who police arrested recently and he had not only this white supremacist mentality but also the means of carrying out an attack. i ll tell you why. investigators in the small town of new middletown, ohio, discovered rifles, ammunition, gas mask from his mother s home as we see what is a bond hearing taking place at this hour. police believe that he is the same one seen on an instagram video that shows him firing a weapon, however, in the caption of that video, he happens to tag the jewish community secenter a investigators also say that he essentially says if he would have been the shooter in this potential attack, so he certainly not only makes no qualms about the way he feels, particularly when you go back and look at an interview he gave to national geographic and a documentary they performed on that nazi rally two years ago, i want you to hear from him why he considers himself a white supremacist. i want a homeland for white people. i think every race should have a homeland for their own race. the fbi is also investigating however they have not actually pressed any federal charges. i want to give you the other two dass. au cases. one of them in florida. body camera video shows the arrest that went down on friday as they took in tristan wix. investigators saying he was texting with his at the time girlfriend and claimed he planned to carry out a mass shooting. investigators moving in on that. after his girlfriend sent up the red flags and finally to connecticut where investigators also arrested another young man brandon wagshol charging him with weapons charges. investigators saying that he had a fascination about committing a mass shooting. so these cases are all separate. but they share one commonality. and somebody sounded the alarm. they called investigators. and that s why as we sit here today police are extremely confident that that is why we re not having this conversation right now in connecticut or florida or maybe you and i are not back in ohio again. so it really is a reminder that age-old advice, see something, say something. thank goodness for that someone and the investigators. thank you very much for laying that out. laurie post is a sociologist nor northwestern medicine. she studied mass shooting trends in the 80s and now here in the united states. lori, thank you so much for joining me. thank you for having me. your research shows that last year there were eight mass shootings in the u.s. which you defined as an event in which four or more people are killed in a single event in a public space. that is the most in a single recent year. they this the distinction of being the first time that multiple mass shootings occurred within 24 hours in this country. what have you learned about the gunman and what inspires this type of violence? those are great questions. so the first thing that i learned about the profile of mass shooters. i look at the definition which is four or more deaths in a public place. that is premeditated. and the planning took place over, you know, weeks, months, even years. why do think want to do this? sometimes we look too deep for meaningful answer about why somebody wants to kill a lot of people. i think bottom line is that they re interested in killing a lot of, you know, several people at one time. they want to beat records. they want the highest kill count possible. in the planning, they re looking at what is the best time to do it? what is the best place to do it? and that is a common denominator. it s great that people are picking up on that. we always can connect the dots after the mass shootings. these three we were able to connect before the shooting. with regard to what to do, president trump, you heard president trump seeming to soften the tone on the demand for more extensive background checks. how do you respond to that? well, i think that both on democrats and republicans are talking about background checks as though some kind of a magic bullet here. and what the reality is that background checks are only as good as the policy behind them it put a dent in death by guns. you would have to look at the full spectrum of violent deaths which would be homicide, accidental shootings and mass shootings. mass shootings make up about .5% of total shootings. but outside of guns, you know, we hear other things. you heard the president recently saying mental willness and hatred that pulls the trigger. what should we focus on? what people are preventing the last three shootings. people romanticizing killing, people who talk about it, p em who pose with photographs, other things are people that are spewing hatred, hate speech. it goes along it with. i think that a lot of people have are full of hatred or they aspouse whis nationalism or other types of hatred. however, it doesn t manifest always in a mass shooting. i think it s the planning. it s the forethought. one of the other problems is suicide or killing of persons close to the shooter. somebody that they know. andment and mental health is noenl .5% of the mass shootings. and further evidence i m sorry, what? there is a lot more to it in that. i hear you saying 5%. so, yeah. there are mentally ill people all over the world. and there are not mass shootings all over the world. this is very american. it s very rare for it to happen in other countries. and then the other thing that makes us special is the access to military style weapons. so in 80% of the mass shootings since 1982, they involved semiconductor automatic weapons, a mistoll or a semiautomatic riva ri rifle. and that just seems like of all the things that they would possibly do in washington, that just seems absolutely impossible. i could i have so many questions for you, lori post. we ll talk again. sure. i appreciate your expertise. thank you for coming on. thank you. coming up, we re live in iran as a tanker at the center of a standoff heads home despite attempts by the u.s. to stop it. c it s time for the biggest sale of the year on the sleep number 360 smart bed. you can adjust your comfort on both sides your sleep number setting. can it help us fall asleep faster? yes, by gently warming your feet. but can it help keep us asleep? absolutely, it intelligently senses your movements and automatically adjusts to keep you both effortlessly comfortable. so you can really promise better sleep. not promise. prove. and now, all beds are on sale! save 50% on the 360 sleep number limited edition smart bed. plus 0% interest for 24 months on all beds. only for a limited time. let s see, aleve is than tylenol extra strength. and last longer with fewer pills. so why am i still thinking about this? i ll take aleve. aleve. 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ship free and come with a 100-night free trial. no matter your budget. or your sleep style. we have quality options for everyone. so search and shop. save and snooze. and rest easy, knowing that we ve got your back. literally. that s what you get, when you ve got wayfair. so shop now. hmm. exactly. and doug. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. nice. but, uh. what s up with your. partner? oh. well, we just spend all day telling everyone how we customize car insurance, because no two people are alike, so. limu gets a little confused when he sees another bird that looks exactly like him. [ loud crash ] yeah. he ll figure it out. only pay for what you need. liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty to the wait did frowe just win-ners. prouders everyone uses their phone differently. that s why xfinity mobile let s you design your own data. now you can share it between lines. mix with unlimited, and switch it up at anytime so you only pay for what you need. it s a different kind of wireless network designed to save you money. save up to $400 a year on your wireless bill. plus get $250 back when you pre-order a new samsung note. click, call or visit a store today. . british marines seized a ship after suspecting they were transporting oil to syria. the u.s. tried but failed to release the tanker. despite the threats, president trump says iran wants to talk. iran would like to talk. they just don t know quite how to get there. look, they re very proud people. but their economy is crashing. it s crashing. inflation is through the roof. they re doing really badly. they re not selling oil. even, i mean, we put the sanctions on the oil is selling much less i mean much less than we thought. it s like a trickle. and they very much want to make a deal. they just don t know how to call. because they re proud people. i understand that. but i have a feeling that maybe things with iran could work out and maybe not. if you notice, they haven t taken any of our votes. they haven t taken our ships. they have taken ships. but they haven t taken our ships. they better not. let s go to clarissa ward with the latest. is there any indication that iran actually wants to talk to the u.s.? well, you know, brooke, i think the president is right about one thing. which is that iran s economy is in free fall. iran is ready to talk. the reality is that iran survived for decades under very painful sanctions up until now. and i think there is kind of a sort rev lukta sort of reluctance that it s back to status quo. we ve been talking to people on the different sides of the political divide. they seem strongly that iran is in the right here. iran is upholding their end of the nuclear deal. and there is no reason that iran should be punished. you talked about the tanker. you know, this gibralter had british navy took this iranian tanker. they were stopped two weeks later taking a tanker. it is still here in the port. the expectation is that iranians might release it. they made the does toigs release their tanker. one thing you won t find here, brook, is anyone criticizing the iranian s decision to seize that tanker. and no indication that s we have seen that they re ready to start negotiationing again. you mention some of the conversations you were having with every day iranians. what more are they saying? it s interesting. this is a big country. we ve had the good fortune in the last few days. we were in tehran and in a very could be ser conservative city. a lot of hard-liners there. no matter who you talk to on whatever side of the political divide they may be, and there are a lot of iranians by the way who are extremely critical of the iranian government, there seems to be a kind of united front at the moment in feeling imbittered and betrayed. take a listen to one man and what he had to say. this is injure culture that you say you toured our sheep, we capture your ship. do you think the p nem iran want to he is a war with the united states? you know, the people of iran believe in their leaders. our leader as he said that we don t like war. but we are ready for war. do you have a message for president trump? mr. trump, you know, you re an unpredictable person. you have a liar. you have lied more than 2,000 lies during your, you know, short time of presidency. so you are dangerous. of course, you re dangerous. and we don t believe we don t trust you. and, you know, we were talking also to people in the bizarres of tehran. it s a cosmopolitan city. a lot of opposition to the government there. we didn t hear any kind words for the u.s. or for the president or for this policy of punishing sanctions. they say they re relukt toont consider renegotiating a deal because dhoent truthey don t tr the u.s. would be able to break that deal again. glad you are there and be safe and get the extraordinary perspectives all over the country. thank you so much for sharing that. elizabeth warren starting off a speech today to native-americans with an apology. plus, he is apparently so fed up with president trump, a republican says he may challenge him in 2020. so why would he still vote for the president? 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yeah. i m a republican. so you realize those two things you said you don t think he deserves re-election. he s taking us in the wrong direction. but you re fill going to vote over joe bide snen. yeah, efrgs is relativerythi in politics. okay, so let me get this straight. mark sanford, you know, he is so opposed to the president that he considered going for all the time and money to challenge the guy. trump doesn t deserve to be re-elected but in the end he ll still vote for him. how do you make sense of that? right. well, it s really interesting. they are in conflict. but if you know mark sanford and talk to him like we do, the fact is this is him publicly wrestling with what does it mean to be a good republican these days? for him, that means the course correction. at the same time, he called for a concerns that he has about this cult of personality that he sees in the republican party and it s fuel to donald trump. however when push comes to shove, he wants to be a good republican and vote for his party s pick. so it s really interesting to see him like publicly wrestling with this decision even as he s wrestling with his own decision of whether or not to run against president trump. how about south carolinians wrestling? you have new reporting that folks in south carolina are not too receptive of a sanford run. what are people saying to you, kaitlyn? right. we actually just had a poll that was done out in the field earlier this month. and we served 568 likely republicans and the results came in and they said 95% of them said they would vote for president trump if he was on the ballot today with mark sanford only to 2% said they would vote for mark sanford, a former south carolina governor and a former south carolina congressman. on the one hand, again, we re getting back to that question that is really interesting. you would think that sanford would fair better here than maybe any other early presidential primary state given his high name id, given the fact that people know him and for some republicans, that they trust and like him. that name id comes as a double edge sword. he disappeared and hiking the appalachian trail. that s not what he was doing. he was actually with his argentinian mistress. on the one hand, republicans are saying here don t do it. don t waste your time. we see 62% of the same republicans want to see the south carolina republican party hold a presidential primary as opposed to 24 who say that s not needed. en that 62% question those are republicans who say they want that primary even if donald trump is the only name on the ballot. because here s the thing. south carolina republicans are very proud of their tradition and presidential politics. every year since 1980 with one exception, 2012, they picked the ument m ultimate not kne u ultimate nominee. so we watch south carolina very, very closely. a big job there. kaitlyn bird, thank you. staying on the president yshgs is president trump cutting off one of the closest friends? we ll talk to the reporter that got the scoop and a mother of three detained during ice raids in mississippi despite the fact she is breast-feeding a 4-month-old baby. her attorney joins me live. do your asthma symptoms ever hold you back? about 50% of people with severe asthma have too many cells called eosinophils in their lungs. eosinophils are a key cause of severe asthma. fasenra is designed to target and remove these cells. fasenra is an add-on injection for people 12 and up with asthma driven by eosinophils. fasenra is not a rescue medicine or for other eosinophilic conditions. fasenra is proven to help prevent severe asthma attacks, improve breathing, and can lower oral steroid use. fasenra may cause allergic reactions. get help right away if you have swelling of your face, mouth, and tongue, or trouble breathing. don t stop your asthma treatments unless your doctor tells you to. tell your doctor if you have a parasitic infection or your asthma worsens. headache and sore throat may occur. haven t you missed enough? ask an asthma specialist about fasenra. if you can t afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help. after more than three decades of friendship, president trump apparently had a falling out with one of his closest friends. according to the paper, he cut off his relationship with tom barrick and no longer speaks to him. the california investors was not only a close confidante but he served as charnl of the president s inauguration fund which is currently under investigation and that is apparently the key reason for the troubled friendship. the president was really upset when he read reports that his involvement in allegedly making it easier for foreigners to buy access to trump and his inner circle as well as allegations of misspent inaugust funds. a spokesman says he has fully cooperated with the investigation. but the white house reporter who wrote the inside story about the president s feud with his close friend. how exactly did his role with the inauguration create this rift with the president? trump was reading articles in top papers about all of the investigations into his role and how there were not many controls during this process which ch raised $107 million. and so there are allegations that middle eastern donors, they gave money through american straw donors to the inauguration and trump was not happy about that. but ironically, trump has a hotel right next to the white house which he promotes sometimes and foreign governments love to stay there. there are diplomatic delegations. you can be sure that sometimes they mention oh, i stayed in that great trump hotel when they re meeting with the president. it s a little rich for him to be complaining that he didn t stop people trying to access the president. mul their friendship goes back when trump bought the plaza hotel which he helped arrange. and what is funny is that he said during the convention in 2016 that trump played him like a steinway piano. i talked to sources and they know both men and he was one of the few people in trump s ear in the early days who is telling him when trump was going off the rails and he even said that trump was better than this with the muslim ban. he is lebanese american. he is a lonely wolf out there and fewer people that are actually telling him who is who are candid with him. yeah. we all need folks like that in our lives. not the yes men. thank you very much. thank you. good to you have in. let s continue on to this. breaking news in the case of eric garner. the nypd fired the officer involved in his death. hear what garner s children say about today s decision. to nowhere. endless, but perhaps this year, a more exhilarating endeavor awaits. defy the laws of human nature,at the summer of audi sales event. get exceptional offers now. who used expedia to book the vacation rental that led to the ride which took them to the place where they discovered that sometimes a little down time can lift you right up. flights, hotels, cars, activities, vacation rentals. expedia. everything you need to go. expedia. hmm. exactly. and doug. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. nice. but, uh. what s up with your. partner? oh. well, we just spend all day telling everyone how we customize car insurance, because no two people are alike, so. limu gets a little confused when he sees another bird that looks exactly like him. [ loud crash ] yeah. he ll figure it out. only pay for what you need. liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty you re watching cnn. thank you for being with me. more on our breaking news this afternoon. emotional reaction from all sides to the nypd firing the officer involved in eric garner s chokehold death from five years and a month ago. the new york city police commissioner today calling this a day of reckonning and acknow

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Apple Watch salva vida de idoso de 78 anos após queda e desmaio nos EUA


Apple Watch salva vida de idoso de 78 anos após queda e desmaio nos EUA
Aparelho detectou que homem estava inconsciente e enviou mensagem automática pedindo socorro aos bombeiros
(crédito: Foxs 8)
Um aparelho de pulso da marca Apple Watch salvou a vida de um idoso que passou mal, caiu e desmaiou em Summerfield, Carolina do Norte (EUA). Mike Yager, 78 anos, estava sozinho no momento do acidente, em 28 de junho. O relógio, ao detectar que o homem estava imóvel, enviou automaticamente uma mensagem de socorro aos bombeiros.
Em entrevista à
Fox 8, Mike relata: “A primeira coisa que eu perguntei foi ‘como vocês sabiam como chegar aqui?’. Os bombeiros responderam: ‘seu relógio nos mandou uma mensagem’, e eu disse ‘O quê?!”

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