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The video discusses the body cam footage from the Trump assassination attempt and raises questions about the actions of the police officers involved. The speaker analyzes the timeline of events and highlights inconsistencies and odd behavior. They question why it took a patrol officer less than two minutes to locate the suspect on the roof while other law enforcement officers seemed unaware. The speaker also wonders why the officer did not yell or communicate more effectively during the incident. The video concludes with a list of unresolved questions and a request for more information. (149 words)

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Speaker 0 states that they circled the agent and slowed down the video, and claims that the agent is run over when he fires the shot, adding that you can clearly see her hit him.

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Surveillance video from this morning shows two ICE agents conducting a vehicle stop. The agents surround the silver car. The driver reverses the vehicle. The officer on the passenger side can be seen pointing his weapon as the driver attempts to flee the scene. As the car drives away, the agent on the driver's side can no longer be seen in this video. In a different surveillance video, two gunshots can be heard as the vehicle drives away.

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According to the FBI, Tyler was positioned here and took the shot. The video they provided to us, and it's edited. It starts as Tyler's running off the roof, but this is that rooftop vent; had they given us the full video, we should have been able to see Tyler in this area with his back or with his backpack and his gear and assembling, disassembling the gun, whatever the FBI is saying. But instead, we get the video of him running off the roof. We don't get the full video. The camera was positioned somewhere right here. This is the field of view of the camera. So we've got an edited version, and I think we need to push to get the whole version.

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Armed officers and a crowd of people surround several vehicles. The vehicles may have slowed down, attracting attention. The scene is chaotic, with police trying to control the situation. Many people are running after one of the vehicles. These are not the typical scenes you would expect from someone who has just pleaded not guilty.

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A video shows a protester appearing to fire a gun at federal agents during a chaotic scene this afternoon. Smoke was being launched at the protesters. The protester appeared to fire the weapon at least twice. There have been no reports of injured agents.

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Speaker 0 describes a scene outside their front porch where a protester, a woman, blocked traffic with her car. She parked perpendicularly, and ICE had six or seven vehicles with multiple officers. The protester’s car blocked the road, preventing passage for the convoy. ICE officers yelled at her to move and then became aggressive, approaching her driver’s side door and attempting to open it. The woman then began to reverse as she appeared frightened. An officer leaned across in front of the vehicle and shot the woman point-blank in the face, with about three or four shots fired. The woman’s foot pressed the gas, she tried to escape, hit a telephone pole, and crashed into several cars. Speaker 0 notes there were perhaps only about 10 protesters, but many ICE agents and six to seven vehicles, each with multiple officers. The scene was dispersed yet extremely chaotic, and it seemed the ICE agents did not have a plan or were unprepared. The woman was slumped over in the car. A neighbor, who identified as a physician, offered to take vitals, ask for a heartbeat, and request CPR, but was told to back away and that medics were on the way, a process that took about fifteen minutes. In that interval, it’s implied she may have deceased, and no lifesaving measures were attempted. Speaker 1 asks about how the secretary of Homeland Security and the president characterized the incident, labeling it a domestic terrorist attack, a ramming attack, and an attempt to kill or run over ICE agents. Speaker 0 responds that this characterization is the only reason they are there, and they would prefer not to speak, but they believed the incident would be misconstrued as self-defense. They insist the event was totally preventable and absolutely unnecessary, distinguishing it from self-defense. Overall, the account presents a chaotic confrontation between a small group of protesters and a larger ICE presence, culminating in the shooting of a protester, followed by a delayed medical response, and a subsequent framing of the event by government officials as a domestic terrorist attack.

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A video shows a protester appearing to fire a gun at federal agents. The incident occurred this afternoon amidst a chaotic scene with a lot of smoke. The protester seems to have fired the weapon at least twice. There have been no reports of injuries to any agents.

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This transcript centers on footage and claims surrounding Alex Preti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse who was killed by border patrol. The video described was filmed on January 13 in Minneapolis and shows a man who appears to be Alex Preti interacting with federal immigration agents eleven days before he was shot and killed. The organizers note that the BBC analyzed the footage and confirmed his identity with 97% accuracy using facial recognition technology. The events described began with the team receiving a tip on the morning of January 13 that federal agents were blocking a street at the corner of East 36 and Park Avenue in Minneapolis. The news crew arrived around 10:15 a.m. They observed observers shouting at the agents as the agents walked back to their vehicles. As the agents started driving away, the man in the footage kicked the taillight of one of the vehicles. In response, an agent exited the vehicle, an altercation ensued, and the agents fired tear gas and pepper balls into the crowd. The sequence shows the agents continuing to hold the man down before they retreat and the man walks away. The man depicted in the footage is described as wearing a similar outfit to what Preti was wearing on the day he was killed. The video also shows what appears to be a gun above the man’s waistband. The sequence then shows the man continuing to stand at the scene. The transcript notes a discrepancy between different accounts of what happened on the day Preti was killed. Specifically, it states that on that day, the Department of Homeland Security claimed Preti approached officers while holding a handgun. That claim is said to have been contradicted by analyses of bystander videos from multiple news investigations, which concluded that Preti was holding a phone, not a gun, when he was pinned to the street. The narrative concludes by stating that shortly after the altercation captured on January 13, federal agents drove away, and the reporters or crew left the scene soon after. The account emphasizes that this footage was part of a broader set of observations and analyses surrounding the incident and Preti’s death, including the claim about the device in his hand being a phone rather than a gun.

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A person on a black Harley motorcycle with a yellow "don't tread on me" flag around their neck parked in a blocked-off parking lot with only police cars. The witness turned away briefly, and when they looked back, the person was gone. The witness noticed a side door of a building was now wide open, which had been closed a half hour prior. A police officer walked towards the door, and a state trooper ran towards it, drawing his weapon. More officers ran towards the building. The witness then heard five gunshots that did not sound like they were from a high-powered weapon.

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Francisco Longoria’s case unfolded in San Bernardino, Southern California. He was stopped in his car with his teenage son in the passenger seat and another man in the back seat by border patrol agents. The situation is depicted in two separate cell phone videos and a video from a surveillance camera across the street. In these videos, one border patrol agent is seen smashing the car’s glass. Then Longoria drives away. Importantly, the surveillance video across the street clearly shows there were no federal agents or federal vehicles in front of or in any way in the path of Longoria’s vehicle when he drove away, yet that moment is when a border patrol agent discharged his firearm at him multiple times. The Department of Justice charged Longoria with assault on an officer. However, prosecutors dropped the case within less than a month of filing it. This is not an isolated outcome; it is part of a broader pattern observed in several cases. The narrative notes that this dropping of charges is not unique to Longoria’s case, and that there are other instances where cases have been thrown out by judges. From the reviewed material, only four of the cases examined actually have ongoing criminal prosecutions. This total is described as a much smaller number than might be expected given the DHS’s public claims accusing individuals of assaulting federal officers. The speaker underscores that assault on a federal officer is a serious and prosecutable charge, yet the current landscape shows relatively few active prosecutions amid numerous accusations. In summary, Longoria’s episode involved border patrols, a glass-breaking incident, and Longoria’s subsequent drive-away during which a border patrol agent fired multiple shots. The DOJ dropped the assault-on-officer charge against Longoria in under a month, and among similar cases, only a minority remain under active prosecution, with four cases still ongoing. This pattern is highlighted as notable in the discussion of how these cases are proceeding relative to the public accusations by DHS.

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A neighbor, Billy Toma, saw a suspicious van parked near the scene of a shooting. The van had an Arizona license plate, and about 15 cops were surrounding it. Billy and his son watched from a distance, worried about their safety. The police did not talk to them. Billy shared his experience with the news team.

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Agents with the federal government are trying to make way for a bus that needs to get through protesters to access the ground camera location. The bus is going around the protesters, which could turn ugly. Someone is shooting out the window of one of the vehicles.

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The speaker references a person who was removing memory cards from cameras about four minutes after what is described as the Charlie Kirk assassination, noting that something about the situation didn’t sit right. They mention Candace released a video showing how this person reacted, and that diligent investigation followed, including a campus visit to UVU to examine the events with a play-by-play analysis. The speaker says they will leave a link to that video but first shows a clip. In the clip, Speaker 1 describes the sequence: “He doesn't try to grab Charlie. He doesn't duck. His first reaction standing right here is to turn this way and start booking.” The person “starts booking back here,” and Speaker 1 notes that he sees the shot and that Charlie hasn’t even hit the ground yet. Charlie is described as being in a position where “Charlie’s like this,” and the person pivots to lean back. Security personnel respond by coming over, grabbing him, and pulling him to the ground. Meanwhile, Terrell Farnsworth “has already turned and begun running back here to climb up on that wall.” The speaker asks the audience to imagine there had just been a shooting, with chaos and people running. Charlie Kirk “was just shot,” and the wall is described as “almost as tall as I am.” The speaker asks the audience if they can see, confirming visibility. The analysis then focuses on the person’s actions: measuring “how much of a pain in the ass he climbed up right here and then threw that loose rock and just so he could get to his vantage point.” The speaker calls it out as an attempt to explain the sequence from the vantage point up the wall. The clip continues with the person producing a selfie video: “Oh, they shot Charlie. They just shot Charlie. They just shot Charlie.” They refer to him as “Agent” and note his statements like “They shot Charlie. God help him.” The speaker says this behavior is a major red flag and cites it as the most troubling aspect. The running scene is described further: as the person runs out, he looks to his left and, in the footage, is seen climbing up, then reacting to the news that Charlie was shot. The voiceover emphasizes the emotional state (or lack thereof) as the footage shows the stampede of people and chaos. The speaker underscores that, to them, the absence of emotion on the person’s face during these events is “the biggest red flag of all.”

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The transcript describes an agent crossing toward the left of the vehicle and grabbing his gun, then opening fire on the motorist and continuing to shoot as she drives past. “Oh, shit.” The moment the agent fires, he is standing to the left of the SUV, with the wheels pointing to the right, away from the agent.

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Two speakers recount a violent incident at a protest. The first speaker notes that they did not see the assault themselves, but mentions that “somebody has no video,” implying there was a lack of footage of the assault. Protesters then insisted that the individual who assaulted someone could not leave, and they began calling law enforcement to report the assault. According to the account, the situation escalated when a vehicle drove through the crowd. A Jeep Gladiator sped into the protesters, knocking one man quite violently onto the hood of the car. The vehicle then accelerated away, and the man on the hood was hurled into a snowbank. The incident continued as the car subsequently hit another person after the initial impact. The first speaker confirms that the driver sped off and notes that the person on the hood of the car went flying into the snowbank, describing the sequence as the vehicle “went flying into the snowbank.” They add that, after the initial contact, the car hit somebody, compounding the harm. The second speaker, identified as Speaker 1, reacts with shock: “Woah. I’m not in shock right now, so I might feel it later. I might feel it later. I don’t know.” This statement conveys an immediate emotional response to witnessing the violence, with an acknowledgment that distress may intensify as time passes. Overall, the account highlights an assault that occurred off-camera, followed by a deliberate act of driving a vehicle into a crowd, which resulted in a person being knocked onto the hood of the car, the vehicle continuing to speed away, and subsequent impacts that caused injuries. The protesters reacted by attempting to report the assault to law enforcement, and the witnesses express immediate concern and potential delayed shock regarding the violence they observed.

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The transcript depicts a police or federal agent moving to the left of a vehicle, approaching as the motorist is present. The agent grabs his gun, opens fire on the motorist, and continues firing as she drives past. The moment the agent fires, he is described as standing to the left of the SUV, with the wheels pointing to the right, away from the agent. The sequence is punctuated with the word “Shake.” The narration notes that this depiction appears to conflict with allegations that the SUV was ramming or about to ram the officer. The speaker references statements attributed to President Trump and others, who said that the federal agent was hit by the SUV, pointing to another video filmed from a different angle. It is asserted that, in this moment of grainy, low-resolution footage, it does look like the agent is being struck by the SUV. However, when this clip is synchronized with the first clip, the conclusion drawn is that the agent is not being run over. The claim made is that the agent’s feet are positioned away from the s...

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Everyone is standing still, unsure of what's happening. Shots were fired, but details are unknown. Authorities are shutting down the area. It appears the shots came from above. One person decides to leave.

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Francisco Longoria’s case took place in San Bernardino, SoCal, where he was stopped in his car with his teenage son in the passenger seat and another man in the back seat by border patrol agents. In two separate cell phone videos, and also in a surveillance camera video across the street, it is clear that there were no federal agents or federal vehicles in front of or in any way obstructing Longoria’s vehicle when he drove away. Despite that, at the moment he drove away, a border patrol agent discharged his firearm at him multiple times. The DOJ charged Longoria with assault on an officer, but that case was dropped. Prosecutors voluntarily withdrew the case within less than a month of filing it. This is not the only instance where such withdrawals have occurred, or where cases have been thrown out by judges. Among the cases examined, only four of them have ongoing criminal prosecutions, which is a much smaller number than would be expected from all the instances in which DHS publicly accused people of assaulting federal officers. The discussion notes that assault on federal officers is a very serious and prosecutable charge. You know, the other

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The surveillance footage shows a dark colored SUV driven by Renee Nicole Goode on the right in the back as it passes by. Agents are seen milling about near the vehicle, then converging on it, and the SUV begins to move, at which point shots are fired. Prior to this, the video shows the SUV stationary and sideways across the road for about three minutes, though the reason for that is unclear. CNN has obtained new video, grainy and distant, that shows four full minutes leading up to the shooting. Renee Goods’ maroon Honda Pilot enters from the right, and twenty seconds later someone gets out on the passenger side; we do not know who or why this person leaves the car. We then see her turn and pull perpendicular across the street, seeming to block the way but leaving room for vehicles to pass by her on either side. There is also a new angle of the federal officer who shot her. He arrives as another federal SUV pulls up; the ICE officer briefly goes back to his car, then returns, and with another agent grabbing at her door she starts to move forward again. It is hard to see from this angle, followed by three gunshots in quick succession. The footage shows four minutes in all from start to finish, but for all the video that may reveal, it says nothing about why Renee Goode was where she was or what she was doing there. It’s not all we don’t know.

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A video shows a protester appearing to fire a gun at federal agents. The incident occurred this afternoon amidst a chaotic scene with a lot of smoke. The protester appears to have fired the weapon at least twice. There have been no reports of any agents being injured.

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Martin says this morning his father-in-law and 18-year-old son-in-law were in a vehicle surrounded by unmarked cars and masked men. 'They hopped out with their pistols already drawn. Then they proceeded to ask us to lower the window and open the doors.' The agents did not identify themselves; the car remained locked as they urged them out. Three gunshots were heard; bullets hit the door but did not penetrate. The family filed a report; FBI contact was denied, and it became an hours-long standoff with federal agencies. DHS said during a vehicle stop, the subject refused to exit and tried to run CBP officers down, saying he struck two officers with his vehicle and that one officer had to discharge a firearm in self defense. The video we reviewed does not show the driver trying to run down. Community groups call for accountability; it seems there's impunity.

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Video shows Eduardo Machado, a clerk, assassinating David, a police officer, inside a store after David and his father-in-law pull up to get a hot dog at 04:08. Machado walks out as David enters, retrieves a jacket from the white car behind the crime scene van, then returns inside. He walks up behind David and fires multiple shots into David's head. When David goes to the ground, the gun jams; he stands over him, clears it, and then fires another seven or eight shots. "There’s 10 or twelve, fifteen shots into David's head." He then walks out, puts the jacket and we believe the firearm back in the car, changes his shirt. The clerk in the store was in the bathroom; he comes out, assumes there's some kind of robbery or something, and he starts to walk away with our shooter. Our shooter’s in custody now. "The video is crystal clear over everything that occurred." "This was clearly, clearly, the video shows this was an out and out assassination." He holds out his hand from point blank range and just opens fire.

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In Minneapolis on January 13, a man who appears to be Alex Preti interacts with federal immigration agents, eleven days before border patrol shot and killed him. The BBC analyzed the footage and confirmed his identity to a 97% degree of accuracy. Early that morning, a tip indicated federal agents were blocking a street at East 36th Street and Park Avenue. The news crew arrived around 10:15 AM and saw observers shouting at the agents as they walked back to their vehicles. When the agents started driving away, the man kicked their taillight. An agent then got out of the vehicle, fired tear gas and pepper balls into the crowd. They continued to hold the man down before they retreated and he walked away. The man in the footage is wearing a similar outfit to what Preti was wearing on the day he was killed, and what appears to be a gun is visible above his waistband. On the day Preti was killed, the Department of Homeland Security claims Preti, a 37-year-old ICU nurse, approached officers holding a handgun. That claim has been contradicted by analysis of bystander videos from multiple news investigations, which concluded that Preti was holding a phone, not a gun, when he was pinned to the street. Shortly after the altercation filmed here on January 13, federal agents drove away. Soon after that, the team left the scene.

Breaking Points

Krystal And Saagar DEBATE Fatal ICE Shooting In Minneapolis
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In this episode of Breaking Points, the hosts dive into a highly charged discussion about the Minneapolis shooting involving an ICE officer and a civilian, Renee Good, who was killed after a vehicle-related confrontation. The hosts scrutinize the sequence of events, including the initial contact between federal agents and the driver, the number and timing of shots, and the subsequent delay in medical aid. They challenge the government’s and specific officials’ early characterizations of the incident, arguing that public statements and a rapid domestic terrorism framing appear to conflict with the video evidence and eyewitness accounts. The debate centers on whether the officer’s use of deadly force can be justified as self-defense, considering that the driver was attempting to leave the scene, and whether de-escalation or alternative actions might have been more appropriate. The hosts emphasize the importance of transparency, an independent investigation, and a potential grand jury process to determine accountability, while also noting the political and media dynamics shaping the narrative around police and federal agents. They also discuss broader patterns, including the reported rise in ICE shootings, concerns about training standards, and the interplay between protest movements and government responses in a highly polarized media environment. They widen the lens to address Venezuela and geopolitics, reflecting on how energy plans and regional competition intersect with U.S. policy. The conversation then shifts to domestic politics and policy proposals from Trump regarding executive measures on housing and the implications for Republican strategy in the midterms, framing it within a broader critique of party cohesion and accountability for government institutions. A recurring theme is distrust of official narratives and the role of media and political leaders in shaping public perception, with an emphasis on evaluating evidence before rushing to verdicts in high-stakes cases. The episode also critiques the portrayal of immigration enforcement and sanctuary city policies, highlighting tensions between federal authority and local governance, and calling for rigorous scrutiny of how cases are presented to the public. Finally, the hosts reflect on the quality of reporting and the ethics of sensational framing, urging careful consideration of facts over partisan storytelling during crises and protests.
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