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The City Cast team is here to round up the news of the week. Bianca Martin and Molly Stentz recap the latest in the ongoing quest to build a grocery store on South Park street to replace the Pick ‘n Save. Should the city spend another million? Plus, more Madison Police officers will now wear body cameras. And Marshfield Clinic wants your ticks. Seriously. Mentioned on the show:
Police body camera technology is the latest enhancement to the Brookline Police Department. WBZ's James Rojas reports.
This episode contains strong language and audio excerpts of violence.About a decade ago, police departments across the United States began equipping their officers with body cameras. The technology was meant to serve as a window into potential police misconduct, but that transparency has often remained elusive.Eric Umansky, an editor at large at ProPublica, explains why body cameras haven't been the fix that many hoped they would be.Guest: Eric Umansky, an editor at large at ProPublica.Background reading: The Failed Promise of Police Body CamerasFrom ProPublica: 21 Bodycam Videos Caught the NYPD Wrongly Arresting Black Kids on Halloween. Why Can't the Public See the Footage?For more information on today's episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
You'll be seeing more police wearing body cameras in BC this year. CKNW producer Layla Khdir officially became a Canadian citizen today! Multiple Mickey Mouse horror movies have been announced as Steamboat Willie enters the public domain!
AP correspondent Lisa Dwyer reports on Police Body Cameras.
The use of police body cameras has become much more widespread in recent years with the hope that they will curb police violence and improve accountability. But a new investigation by ProPublica and The New York Times Magazine found it can often take months or years before the video is released, if at all. William Brangham discussed more with Eric Umansky of ProPublica. PBS NewsHour is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders
Eric Umansky, ProPublica editor-at-large, discusses a six-month investigation into the way police departments around the country "undermined the promise of transparency and accountability that accompanied the body-camera movement."→ How Police Have Undermined the Promise of Body Cameras (ProPublica and The New York Times Magazine)
AI for Police Worn Body Cameras (Starts 3:45) Body Cam AI uses artificial intelligence analysis for body cam transcripts. Can this new tech reduce excessive use of force and help restore public trust in policing? To learn more, we talk with Anthony Tassone, CEO of Truleo. Truleo is an AI system for analyzing body cam … Continue reading "Artificial Intelligence for Police Body Cameras"
In this latest City Council recap, Development Services Director Jeremy Pagan is back to give us the final decision on Short Term Rentals! Here are some other items that were discussed:Proposed parcel line adjustment in the Riverfront area by Turtle Bay. Spoiler alert, neither Advance Redding or the Redding Rodeo Association leases are affected in this 2017 Redding Riffle grant project.Redding Police select a body-worn camera systemThe Placer restriping plan is pulled from consent and gets an explanation by Public Works Director Chuck Auklandand a few routine Personnel itemsFor more information on these topics and more, please find additional resources below.Council Meeting Agenda>>Check out the video here>>Read the transcript here>>Contact the City of Redding Podcast Team Email us at podcast@cityofredding.org Connect with us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram Love the podcast? The best way to spread the word is to rate and review!
The heroism of Nashville police officers Rex Engelbert and Michael Collazo is on full display as we listen to the chaotic audio of their well-orchestrated takedown of the Covenant School shooter from the officers' body cameras. Also, Lori Gimelshteyn joins Dan to discuss her application for a waiver and permit to host a 'Rally for Parent Rights' on the west steps of the Colorado capitol building. The waiver is required because their request is under the 30-day period required for such a permit to be granted.
Delta Mayor calls for Province to review its snow removal systems George Harvie, Mayor of Delta and Chair of the Metro Vancouver Board of Directors discusses why the province needs to review how it deals with snowfall within Metro Vancouver Vancouver council to debate equipping police with body-worn cameras Tuesday Lenny Zhou, Vancouver City Councillor, discusses the notion of VPD officers wearing body cameras in the future. Provincial Government working for pay increases for child-care workers as family subsidies kick in Karin Kirkpatrick, BC Liberals Critic for Child and Family Development, & Childcare discusses child care affordability in British Columbia BC Assessment - 2023 Property Assessments Will Reflect July 1st Values Bryan Murao, BC Assessment Authority Assessor takes a look at the 2023 property assessments. A look at the 1972 Summit Series between Canada and the USSR Gary J. Smith, The Author of “Ice War Diplomat” and was a diplomat at the Canadian embassy in Moscow in 1972 takes a look back at the 1972 Summit Series between Canada and the USSR More ‘police stations' run by China found in Canada, report says Jeremy Nuttall, Vancouver-based investigative reporter for the Toronto Star, and someone who has lived and worked in China discusses the possibility of chinese run police stations operating in Canada Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ian Mass joins us with his City Beat report, looking ahead to the 2023 budget discussion as council tries to square a 4% increase in the cost of policing with just a 5% increase in property taxes. He also talks about the Vancouver School Board vote on bringing back cops in schools, a motion to fast-track non-market housing and a plan to make Vancouver a more age-friendly city.
The New Hampshire Legislature is done voting on new bills in 2022, but some committees will meet in June to discuss whether certain bills should come back next year. One of these bills, HB 253, would require all police officers to wear body cameras. Listen as hosts Anna Brown and Mike Dunbar, of Citizens Count break it down in $100 Plus Mileage. This podcast is produced in partnership with Citizens Count, Granite State News Collaborative and The Marlin Fitzwater Center for Communications at Franklin Pierce University.
On this episode of the WTF California Podcast, we touch on how Antioch Police Department is now free to interact with the community without fear of retaliation under false narratives--body cameras have now changed the game from what we have observed in just a few days. We talk about a group in Placerville attempting to recall nearly its entire city council. CDC compares COVID-19 to chickenpox and mask mandates likely coming. We also get into the City of Oakley and its firework fines plus some other things on this Finally Friday episode. Articles From the Show Facebook is about to release Ray Ban ‘smart glasses' – and could have built-in camera to record EVERYTHING you see ‘Putting Their Feet To The Fire': Placerville Group Looks To Recall Nearly Entire City Council Fines for breaching Sydney's lockdown are doubled and police are given extra powers to shut down businesses and worksites that don't follow the rules CDC warns Delta variant is as infectious as chickenpox; vaccinated people can transmit Several Bay Area counties are considering mask mandates as delta variant threat grows Capitol Police asked to arrest the maskless Walnut Creek extends outdoor dining program LAUSD to require testing of students, staff regardless of vaccination status 3 recall candidates reach GOP endorsement threshold San Diego County's eviction ban faces legal challenge Movement To Recall San Francisco DA Chesa Boudin Sees Support, Donation Spikes Amid Worsening Crime Wave LA Board of Supes Approves Guaranteed Income Pilot Program for Targeted Group Richmond Police K-9 Helps Detain, Disarm Machete-Wielding Suspect Threatening Family
Rhode Island Attorney General Peter Neronha joined Gene to speak about RI's new police body camera program, and also commented on school resource officers and a hate crime trial. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Included in this episode: 1. The U.S. Can and Should Vaccinate Every Health Care Worker in the World 2.‘Gearhead From Birth' Marco Greywe, Who Keeps Iconic VW Camper Vans Running, Says His Industry ‘Is Booming Again' 4. A Viral TikTok Accusing Converse of Stealing a Sneaker Shows the Difficulty of Design Protection 5. Documentary All Light, Everywhere Examines the Limits of Police Body Cameras—and Our Own Perceptions 6. Review: Stephen King Adaptation Lisey's Story Is Mawkish, Dull and Too Long by Half .
A lot of jobs require the wearing of body cams; parking wardens, SPCA inspectors, conservation rangers, a whole host of them. And yet our police don't. Race Relations Commissioner Meng Foon has called for body cameras to be used by our police, not to protect them or keep them safe necessarily, but as a tool to prevent unconscious bias from entering into police decision making. Body cameras, says Foon, could offer context to any problematic interaction and, as he says, in this day of social media and cell phone footage, context is everything. Police Association president Chris Cahill, says bring it on.Police have trialled body cameras previously. A police research project into the use of the cameras started in March 2018, and was due to report back in December 2019, but was shelved with little hoopla by police bosses a few months earlier. At the time, police cited the cost of the project. Cameras are more than one thousand dollars each, but that's only the beginning. Footage has to be stored, analysed, made available under OIAs and prepared for trial. The cost involved in that was better used in other areas, police said at the time. So do they work? Depends who is asking. When it comes to reducing violent interactions, no. When it comes to protecting police officers from false complaints, yes. When it comes to helping police recognise that they targeting certain groups over others, when it comes to stopping on suspicion, yes. But then that's more a diagnostic tool, rather than a tool for the front line. If I was a police officer, I think I'd rather wear one than have highly selective social media snippets being the official record of what went on. But if the money and resources spent on body cameras could be better allocated elsewhere, I'll trust in the police judgement.
Race Relations Commissioner Meng Foon has called for body cameras to be worn by police to help address issues of unconscious and racial bias.In an opinion piece published in the Herald today, Foon said police had conceded that systemic racism existed in the force and body cameras "could be an integral tool" in dealing with the risk areas associated with bias and racial profiling.Māori legal expert Moana Jackson says body cameras could be a "partial technological block on overt racism" but wouldn't address the underlying causes.The Police Association has offered tacit support, saying it's probably a matter of "when" not "if" cameras would be introduced.Foon referenced three risk areas in policing when it comes to bias: who is stopped or spoken to; how force is used; and how prosecutions are sought."Body cameras could be an integral tool in dealing with these risk areas," he wrote.Cameras could offer context to problematic interactions and be used as evidence in legal cases involving officers.Race Relations Commissioner Meng Foon. (Photo / NZME)"Whatever point Aotearoa would sit on the spectrum of body camera use is up to the respective authorities, including the Human Rights Commission, but it does seem to me that a record of interaction could either expose misconduct or quash false allegations."Police Association president Chris Cahill said if police body cameras shed more light on how police operate, then "I don't think there is anything to fear about that"."We don't think there is anything to be feared from officers wearing them and recording what they do on a daily basis. It will generally show the public a truer picture than videos recorded on phones that don't necessarily cover the whole event."Any introduction of cameras would have to be balanced with legal and privacy considerations, including how the footage could be used and whether it depicted children.Police Association president Chris Cahill says generally the association was in favour of body cameras. (Photo / Mark Mitchell)Police Commissioner Andrew Coster previously agreed unconscious bias still existed within the police."All humans have unconscious bias and we're no exception to that," he told The Hui.Jackson authored a 1987 report on Māori and the criminal justice system and a sequel to that report would be released in the coming months.He said it would be wrong to assume that body cameras are the solution."The police officers who were involved in the killing of George Floyd in America all had body cameras so it doesn't necessarily guarantee a shift in those substantive attitudes."Lawyer, author and director of Ngā Kaiwhakamarama i Ngā Ture, Moana Jackson. (Photo / Warren Buckland)Police Minister Poto Williams said cameras were an operational matter for police and their implementation would require consideration around data use and storage."Police have taken a number of steps to identify and reflect what modern-day policing in New Zealand should be."That included investigating whether bias existed in police, reviewing their policy on photographing individuals, ensuring leadership teams undertook unconscious bias training and accepting all 30 recommendations from their Francis Review into Police culture.
Reformers had high hopes that equipping police with body cameras would make officers more accountable. How's that going? Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands
Without key video evidence recorded during the arrest of George Floyd, former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin may not have been convicted on Tuesday for his murder. Body cameras are widely used by police in the United States, but relatively few Canadian cities have adopted them. Our question this week: Is it time to make police body cameras mandatory? Does more video mean more justice?
A viewer asked KGW's VERIFY team what Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty's position was on police issued body cameras.
Well, crap. RBG passed away, and now the United States will feel the full force of hypocrisy from Republicans. Sure, they blocked Merrick Garland, but they're gonna shove Brett Kavanaugh 2.0 down everyone's throats. Also: there were protests in Lancaster, PA, after a police shooting, but is EVERY police shooting unjustified? Tune in to find out.
Political commentator Lisa Kirbie and Senator Linda Frum join Alan to discuss whether Sir John A. MacDonald's statue should have been toppled over the weekend in Montreal. Lawyer Caryma Sa'd joins Alan to speak on police body cameras and infectious disease specialist Sumon Chakrabarty discusses whether we need at-home covid tests, contrary to Health Canada's non-approval. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Busco talks to Chief Inspector Bob Fitzgerald from Blacktown PAC about police use of body worn video.
Facebook fails its first civil rights audit, hackers are snooping around on decommissioned police body cameras, and a trending gaming hashtag we just had to include.
City Manager Ed Augustus joins us for our weekly Tuesday m bring interview (7:35am), ad we talk about Police Body Cameras, Mail-in Voting, and the Worcester Bravehearts. This interview originally aired on Tuesday, July 7th, 2020.
A squad of researchers analysed a month's worth of police body camera footage from routine traffic stops in Oakland, California. Their findings highlight a racial bias that contributes towards the dysfunction relationship between Black Americans and the police. Dan and Akin squeeze the findings. - Research Paper: 'Language from Police Body Camera Footage Shows Racial Disparities in Officer Respect' by Rob Voigt, Nicholas P. Camp, Vinodkumar Prabhakaran, William L. Hamilton, Rebecca C. Hetey, Camilla M. Griffiths, David Jurgens, Dan Jurafsky, and Jennifer L. Eberhardt
Body cameras are supposed to increase transparency and accountability of officers, but they may be used a surveillance tool against people exercising their rights to free speech. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Police body cam manufacturer Wolfcom has already sold body cameras to at least 1,500 police departments, universities, and federal organizations. It’s now prodding them to upgrade to realtime facial recognition. Path to Liberty: March 9, 2020 PODCAST VERSION Subscribe: iTunes | Google Play | Stitcher | Spotify | RSS SHOW LINKS: JOIN TAC Show Archives […]
A Vermont Supreme Court case and a wave of recent police investigations revolve around the use of body camera footage. All together, they reveal that bodycam use can raise more questions than it answers.
Erick Laming, a University of Toronto doctoral student in criminology, joins Rob Breakenridge to explore how effective body cameras are when used by police forces like the Calgary Police Service.
From public records requests to emergency communications we talk with two local government attorneys about all the legal questions that come with Police body cameras. Dan Bolin and Ellen Emery, two Partners at the Ancel Glink law firm in Chicago, Illinois share their expertise and experience on the issue. They share common concerns from working with Police Departments, the hidden costs of body worn cameras and how the videos can help with getting information to the public.
Police body camera footage this week in Canton, Ohio shows a long and drawn out encounter with a man pulled over in a traffic stop. For those who watched the cut clip that ran across social media, one would only see a mans car window being smashed out a police canine latching on to his arm during a take down, and the shared claim that it was all over the driver not having a front license plate. However, the police department in Ohio released the full body camera footage and a completely different image appeared and few, with open minds would disagree with the fact that the officers on the scene acted appropriately and did their jobs. Is it a benefit to have this footage? Alicia talks with reporters from Ohio and Florida on this topic. Guests: Randy Ludlow - The Columbus Dispatch - Ohio Gary White - The Ledger - Florida
It's been a long march for the Boston Police Camera Action Team, but nearly four years after the community-based group set out to push Boston police to have officers deployed with body-worn cameras it looks like victory is in sight. In recent days, Mayor Marty Walsh and Police Commissioner Bill Evans have both signaled that body cameras are coming to Boston. “We are happy that the mayor is listening the majority of Bostonians now,” says Segun Idowu, a cofounder of the group, on this week's Codcast.
Cops wearing cameras is a new thing. So new that we aren't entirely sure of all the ramifications that go along with them just yet. In theory they should protect both police and citizens, but as we learned, they are no magic pill against police brutality or the death of cops on patrol. Join us as we dive into this complicated issue today. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Cops wearing cameras is a new thing. So new that we aren't entirely sure of all the ramifications that go along with them just yet. In theory they should protect both police and citizens, but as we learned, they are no magic pill against police brutality or the death of cops on patrol. Join us as we dive into this complicated issue today. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
With University of Toronto Criminology Doctoral student Erick Laming.
Closing Argument with Walter Hudson - KTLK Twin Cities News Talk AM 1130 - 103.5 FM
Closing Argument with Walter Hudson - KTLK Twin Cities News Talk AM 1130 - 103.5 FM
In the second part of the Privacy and Police Body Camera series, I review the actual text of California Assembly Bill 748 (AB 748). With sublime ice cream analogies, we manage to break a complicated piece of legislation into manageable bites. During the last segment I review Baby Driver, a new action movie starting Ansel Elgort, Jamie Foxx, and Kevin Spacey. … More Ep. 11: Privacy and Police Body Cameras Part Two
In the second part of the Privacy and Police Body Camera series, I review the actual text of California Assembly Bill 748 (AB 748). With sublime ice cream analogies, we manage to break a complicated piece of legislation into manageable bites. During the last segment I review Baby Driver, a new action movie starting Ansel Elgort, Jamie Foxx, and Kevin Spacey. … More Ep. 11: Privacy and Police Body Cameras Part Two The post Ep. 11: Privacy and Police Body Cameras Part Two appeared first on The Edge of Ideas.
In the first part of the Police Body Camera Episode, we analyze the impacts of instituting body cameras in local police forces. Body worn cameras increase accountability and decrease costs for departments. However, they bring about serious concerns about privacy. The discussion stems from the proposal of California Assembly Bill 748, introduced by Phil Ting (D-San Francisco). AB 748 would require all police agencies to create policies regarding the release of body cam footage to the public. Of course, I wouldn't forget the ice cream analogies. … More Ep. 10: Privacy and Police Body Cameras Part One The post Ep. 10: Privacy and Police Body Cameras Part One appeared first on The Edge of Ideas.
In this week's East London News Review podcast Ilford Recorder and Romford Recorder reporters talked to Time 107.5FM's Steve Allen about local reporting on the Westminster attack, the Metropolitan Police's new body-worn cameras and graffiti murals in Romford. #Ilford #Romford #Havering #Redbridge
A study of seven jurisdictions found that when cops wear body cameras, complaints against them by civilians fall precipitously.
A study of seven jurisdictions found that when cops wear body cameras, complaints against them by civilians fall precipitously.
While this show has often staked its interest in the kinds of audiovisual materials we come to praise as art, there are many different types of moving image materials out there. None feels more pertinent to our moment today than the discussions around the introduction of police body-worn cameras alongside the amateur videos that display evidence of police brutality toward members of the African American community. To address these topics is often to approach them from one of politics, but a surrounding series of questions deals with many of the same questions that cinema-minded people might find familiar: what can we learn from analyzing how they were made? What elements are manipulation are present? How will these videos be stored? What access should the public have? What is the emotional affect of viewing them? Today's guest, Snowden Becker, has worked as a program manager for UCLA's Moving Image Archive program and the co-founder of Home Movie Day. She's also spent over a decade researching the judicial system's management of audiovisual material, and is the co-manager of this week's National Forum, "On The Record, All The Time: Setting An Agenda for Audiovisual Management," which will bring together legal scholars, social justice activists, camera manufacturers, and the LAPD among others to workshop these issues. In this episode of the podcast, Snowden discusses many of the issues that come out of a cinephile interest when it comes to thinking about these types of videos, as well as what it means to be a public citizen engaging in this emerging genre. 0:00-4:10 Opening 5:13-11:16 Establishing Shots — O.J.: Made in America 12:00-1:06:48 Deep Focus — Snowden Becker 1:07:21-1:11:32 Sponsorship Section 1:10:59-1:32:14 Double Exposure — Police Body Cameras and Evidentiary Videos 1:32:18-1:33:56 Close
What is a Stingray? How does it work? Is it a good idea to make police wear body cameras? Should officers be able to turn these cameras off? What about the privacy of the civilians being recorded? Should law enforcement agencies have access to drone technology? Where do we have a reasonable expectation of privacy?Matthew Feeney and Adam Bates join us this week to discuss new technologies available to law enforcement agencies in America, and the legal implications of these technologies.Where does a right to privacy apply in these new eras of government data collection? How should we balance police effectiveness and respect for Fourth Amendment privacy rights?Show Notes and Further ReadingFeeney recently authored a policy analysis on police body cameras, “Watching the Watchmen: Best Practices for Police Body Cameras.”Feeney also mentions a project our Cato colleague Patrick Eddington is working on: a timeline chronicling the American government’s surveillance activities over the past century. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Technology is rapidly changing the way law enforcement operates, and as we've learned from previous guests, such as Adam Bates on StingRay Surveillance, the change is not always for the better. On the other hand, the recent adoption of body cameras by a growing number of police departments would seem to increase accountability and civility in officer-civilian interactions without much of a downside. Matthew Feeney, policy analyst at the Cato Institute, says the technology – while promising – is not a panacea. The public widely supports the adoption of body cameras, but could there be a risk that new technology is getting ahead of sound policy, and putting our privacy at risk? What appears like a simple criminal justice reform turns out to have multiple complex considerations, including whether or not police can view the footage before submitting a statement. It takes a Cato analyst to explain the nuances of best practices for body cameras. Bob and Matthew discuss how we can get the best of both worlds: keeping police accountable while keeping our privacy too.
This week on Indiana Lawmakers, Jon Schwantes hosts a panel who's members represent key sides of the issues surrounding police body cameras.
This week on Indiana Lawmakers, Jon Schwantes hosts a panel who's members represent key sides of the issues surrounding police body cameras.
Tristan Hallman and Naomi Martin chat about the recent string of Oak Lawn attacks and if they can be considered as hate crimes. The hosts also chat with Austin bureau chief Brandi Grisson about prison suicides. Reporter Conor Shine is in the studio to discuss illegal dumping in the city of Dallas. Finally, Dr. Melinda Schlager of the Caruth Police Institute joins the conversation in studio about police body cameras.
Police body cameras will not end police abuse, but they have the potential to give critical context to high-stakes police interactions. Matthew Feeney discusses the findings of his new report. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This week’s African Tech Round-up is chock-full of important digital, tech and innovation news from across the African continent— not least, the unfortunate rumoured in-fighting and financial distress at Jason Njoku’s media startup, iROKO Partners. Also, we’re happy to have our content producer, Peter “The Enigma” Peele back from a a hectic trip to Dubai where he attended GITEX Technology Week 2015. We managed to convince him to jump on the mic with us this week and share some highlights from his trip. Meanwhile, Tefo Mohapi not only delivered a talk and facilitated a discussion at the the Thabo Mbeki Leadership Institute’s Leadership Conference this past week (the dude got to even have dinner with former South African President Thabo Mbeki himself), but also attended the Brand Africa 100 Awards. Be sure to catch him giving us the low-low on all that in this week’s episode. And finally, Andile Masuku's back from a week-long leave of absence due to eye surgery he had done on his left eye. All said, it's been a super-busy week for the team at the African Tech Round-up. Additional Music Credits: Music by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Music licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0
Monday we started out talking about the Ravens loss to the Raiders with WBAL Sports' Keith Mills. We then talked about Ben Carson said on Meet The Press Sunday a Muslim person should not be President. We took calls and Zainab Chaudry- CAIR Maryland Outreach Manager weighed in on Ben Carson. We ended the show with Kevin Kamenetz- Baltimore County Executive in Studio to talk Police Body Cameras and AC in Public Schools.
Friday in the first hour C4 talked about why it is a good idea that the Police in Baltimore County will be getting body cameras. Then State Senator Bobby Zirkin joined C4 to talk Marijuana laws and then it was The Week in Review with With C4 and Tyrone Keyes
This week on Noon Edition we'll speak with leaders from around the state about the pros and cons of placing body cameras on law enforcement.
The truth about the death of Samuel DuBose at the hands of Ray Tensing in Cincinnati might never have come to light if not for Tensing's own body camera. Matthew Feeney comments. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 10: Newsworthy: Woman Wins $188 Mil from Lotto, The 2 oldest people in the U.S. are black women, Texas Judge HALTS executive order by Obama, Obama vs Judges, POLICE BODY CAMERAS are BS..., Cop caught on tape telling other cops to wait till she turns the camera off, Haitian Parade float accident Sports: **NBA All-Star Weekend** Relationship: **CIRCLE OF PRAISE** Call to Action: Spread the word and… "Talk to our children" For Topics, Comments or concerns, please email:REALNEWSNETWORK5@gmail.com
This week we talk about: The 47-Ronin, Eric Holder Resigns, FBI Switching to 9mm, Pro-Gun Celebs, Shaneen Allen Update, AB1014, Cali Officers Straw Purchases, Police Body Cameras