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The Fox News Rundown

Evening Edition: Are Violent Crimes Caught On Video Desensitizing Us, Or A Call To Action?

The Fox News Rundown

FOX News Podcasts

News, Daily News, Politics

3.41.7K Ratings

🗓️ 4 October 2023

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Violent crimes continue to rise in large cities across America with many of the incidents being caught on video. Both cell phones and surveillance cameras have become key in criminal investigations but how are we reacting to the constant stream of violence? Some say they are desensitized and others say it shows how bad crime, especially in big cities, is rising. FOX's Eben Brown speaks with Paul Mauro, attorney, former NYPD inspector and co-founder of 'Ops Desk', about various examples of violent crimes caught on video and the impact on the public. Click Here To Follow 'The FOX News Rundown: Evening Edition' Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

I'm Maria Barter-Rummo, I'm Greg Gutfeld, I'm Tammy Bruce, and this is the Fox News rundown.

0:08.8

Wednesday, October 4th, 2023, I'm Evan Brown, is violent crime in cities,

0:15.6

even worse, a number of high-profile crime suggests so, and who is to blame

0:21.2

besides the culprits. Wake up and pay attention that the fun stuff is the disaster. I don't know

0:27.7

by what metric they think that these criminal justice reforms are working.

0:32.0

This is the Fox News rundown evening edition.

0:57.7

Henry Quaylar, once a proponent of defund police policies,

1:01.9

survived a car jacking at his DC apartment building. He was uninsured, but he was held up by three

1:08.2

men with guns. The incident follows a number of high-profile homicides, including that of a female

1:14.6

tech CEO in Baltimore, a former city spokesman in Philadelphia, and an anti-police community activist

1:21.6

in Brooklyn, New York, and many of these horrific things are all on video.

1:26.6

As the old saying goes, the revolution will be televised. Well, today, the devolution is being

1:30.8

televised. Paul Moro is an attorney and a former inspector for the New York City police department.

1:36.4

He is also the operator of opsdesk.org because everybody has a smart phone or a camera is

1:42.5

every place. And so what's happening is that I think that the viewing public is getting a window

1:47.7

into what a cop's life is actually like. In the past, it would be only cops who would show up and

1:53.4

see this kind of thing. But now, thanks to all of this video, people are seeing what it looks like.

1:58.7

So I think it's probably both. I think that there is a culmination of interest in this. And you

2:05.0

know, we can't ignore the political aspect of it as well. We're coming into a campaign season.

2:08.8

This is obviously going to be a very big talking point for the conservatives. I think actually,

2:13.0

they haven't addressed it enough in my estimation. And so I think all of those factors are sort of

2:17.6

coalescing into a place where people are really becoming aware of the fact that we're losing our

...

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