WOULD NATIONAL GUARD HELP PORTLAND FIGHT DRUGS (9/25/1992)
SOME PEOPLE THINK THAT OREGON NATIONAL GUARDSMEN SHOULD BE BROUGHT IN TO HELP IN THE FIGHT AGAINST STREET GANGS.
PORT FIGHTING
COLOR PRINT 50 SOF / OPT. MS MAN SHOOTING RIFLE. MS ROCKET FIRE HITTING WAREHOUSE. VS DAMAG- ED BUILDINGS AND DEBRIS IN STREETS. MS GANG OF ARMED YOUTHS. VS GUNMEN FIRING FROM WINDOW. CI: WAR: LEBANON. GEOGRAPHIC: LEBANON, BEIRUT
NY: FORMER NY GOV PATERSON ASSAULTED (SOUND)
<p></p>\n<p><b>--SUPERS</b>--</p>\n<p>Saturday </p>\n<p>New York, NY</p>\n<p></p>\n<p>Former Governor David Paterson </p>\n<p>New York </p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--SOT</b>--</p>\n<p>My stepson, Anthony Sliwa was walking his dog on the other side of this building when he saw three rather younger people climbing up the side of the building, which has been a way that people have been able to gain access to the building and to uh either vandalize or rob the building in the past, whether or not it was our business. At which point, a woman who is clearly an adult, at least in her thirties comes into the situation and confronts my stepson to the point where she's practically pushing him into the window at mcdonald's and telling him, um, whatever it was that she wanted to tell him and uh telling him that he should never uh fight with anybody. Uh But oddly enough, when the fight actually started, she threw the first punches in the actual fight and another adult was the second person to throw punches. So this just wasn't an incident involving uh young people who were getting out of hand.This was an incident, uh where adults who were competent to know enough to know the difference between right and wrong and how far to go in a situation like that were involved.</p>\n<p></p>\n<p></p>\n<p><b>--KEYWORD TAGS--</b></p>\n<p>NEW YORK CRIME GANG ATTACK NYPD GOV PATERSON</p>
TIME TO REMEMBER - AROUND THE CORNER ( 1932 ) reel 2
Pathe have rights to clips in Time to Remember programmes but not to commentary or whole programme as screened. <br/><br/>Reel 2.<br/><br/>Industrial scenes in United States of America (USA).<br/><br/>L/S Manhattan sky line.<br/><br/>L/S rocky mountains. Various shots cattle roaming over plains. Various shots horses being rounded up by cowboys. L/S logs on train wagon. Timber going down chute into river. L/S river full of timber. C/U wheat in man's hand. Various shots row of combine harvesters crossing large fields. Various shots miners working in coal mine. Small train towing coal wagons coming out of mine. Various shots Texas oil field. We see oil being pumped out into trains. Various shots of massive factory, visitors arrive outside by bus. Various shots furnace.<br/><br/>Various L/Ss Manhattan skyline in New York city. <br/><br/>Various shots crowd on the stock market, people shouting. C/U on the face of the man with glasses bidding. Big business, transformation of the natural resources into wealth on which American people depend. M/S of a man writing the newest stock prices on the blackboard. <br/><br/>M/S of the crowd in front of the bank. Cut to a face of a John D Rockefeller in a suit. Voice-over concludes: "yes, when and if you know how, you too, can become a millionaire."<br/><br/>Various shots of building sites and street markets - good New York street scenes. In 1932 power to administer the wealth lagged far behind the ability to produce it.<br/><br/>L/S of a crowded New York streets where police and ambulance attend to dead and dying - victims of a gang warfare. L/S of a police car with bullet holes and broken back window. People are around the car and a dead body covered with the sheet lies next to it. Cut to the police pushing people back from the crime scene. Closer look at the broken window and the bullet holes on the back of the police car. Reverse to the L/S of the people around the crime scene.<br/><br/>Vigilantes patrol organise to fight the crime - High angle shot of people carrying guns, walking. Panning shot of a man with the gun, walking. Narrator identifies the prohibition as the origin of gangsterism. C/U on the hands holding a bottle of liquor. L/S of men unloading illegal cargo from the boat. People behind the fence watching the operation.<br/><br/>Gangsters move to another field - racketeering. M/S of the three men, two younger and one elderly. Elderly man claims that he does not need protection. C/U on the faces of younger men. Cut to M/S of a man pouring paint over a dress hanging on the shop stand. <br/><br/>In 1932 the bootlegging and crime were triggered by Depression. Various shots of fuming factories. Several shots of the openings of factory gates, workers leaving factory and gates closing. Due to Depression, even those with jobs are often unsatisfied. When their demands are not met, they react by organising strikes and riots. <br/><br/>Shots of masses of workers demonstrating and the strike-leader speaking are juxtaposed with the shots of the opposite gathering where angry politician proposes drastic measures in fight against communists.<br/><br/>Various shots displaying the power of the US (United States) army. Line of trucks, cars, troops with guns marching. Army clashes with workers. Various shots depicting riots: gun shots, smoke, fires, stones. In the 1932 in the great industrial centres things did not go too well. <br/><br/>Things did not go well in the countryside either. Shots of plants and animals suffering from pollutants and paying the price of the industrialisation. Because of the ruthless timber felling and unplanned agriculture, topsoil has been blown away or washed off millions of acres. Shots of dead cattle, deserted land, corn fields dying. Farmers have no choice but to leave the dying land. "They call them 'Oakies', displaced farmers, migrant workers". Several shots of farmers packing up and leaving. <br/><br/>L/S of the Empire State Building. Cut to M/S of unemployed people sitting on the benches. Nearly one in four of working population is looking for work. L/S of a man stopping people on the streets, asking for job or possibly begging. Exterior of the employment agency. Inside the agency, a crowd asking for work. C/U on the back of the man's head while looking at the board with advertisements.<br/><br/>Often only a stone's throw from the glamorous skyscrapers live the unemployed. Panning shot from the nice, clean New York buildings to the ghetto of the unemployed. Several shots of the shanty towns of the poor with the skyscrapers in the background.<br/><br/>"It was about time that somebody from somewhere came and did something." - narrator says. <br/><br/>Panning shot of the moving car approaching the house. C/U on the face of a man in the car - Franklin Delano Roosevelt, future president of the United States of America. M/S FDR.<br/><br/>Title reads: "Time to Remember end of Part One". <br/><br/>Item continues on reel 3 - see separate records.
CRIME
HOT ROD FULL OF RED NECKS PULLS UP TO HOUSE, TROUBLEMAKERS. LOOK IN WINDOW. KNOCKS ON DOOR. GUY COMES OUT. PUNCHES BULLY. SMASHES WINDOW. FIGHT. MOTHER SCREAMS, PASSING OUT. HITTING WITH CLUBS. HATE CRIME. TEEN GANG
[Tunisia: fishermen come to rescue migrants]
Pathe
Eye-witnesses give accounts of Dillinger Gang shootout and escape from Wisconsin lodge
FOOTBALL RIVALS
kid fires burning sling shot; kid hit in ass, smoke; kids fall on collapsing fence; gang chases gang; kids knock down laundry man; gangs into mansion; kid throws vase onto kid's head; LENGTHY vase fight;lots of dust FUNNY; kids covered w/ dirt; black kid laughs, gets hit w/ white dust; kid tries to jump through fake window, bounces off; sign THROUGH THE WINDOW BY A BIGGE PAINE; rich woman hit w/ vase, pigeons fly off hat; Napoleon hat on woman's head; woman's ass sits on spiked WWI helmet; gang escapes from house
Sending The Mane Message
A gang of outlaws beat a cowboy while their ringleader holds a gun on him. Another man scribbles a note and whistles through the cracks of a boarded window. A horse trots up and the man ties the note to the horse's mane.
JOLIET FIGHTING GANG VIOLENCE
COVERAGE FOR A KATHY WOLFF CS VO IN JOLIET, ILLINOIS ABOUT JOLIET FIGHTING GANG VIOLENCE. 08:00:29 EXT FTG. WS POLICE CAR DRIVING DOWN STREET. 08:00:37 INT SQUAD CAR DRIVEN BY JOLIET POLICE OFFICER JOHN. INTV W/ JOLIET POLICE OFFICER, LIONEL ALLEN. 08:02:52 EXT FTG. INTV W/ GANG MEMBERS ON STREET CORNER. 08:03:53 PAN OVER TO GANG MEMBER WEARING KNIT CAP WHO SAYS, WHEN ASKED IF THINGS ARE COOLING DOWN BECAUSE OF THE POLICE CRACKDOWN, IT'S DEFINITELY THAT. IT'S GOT TO BE THAT, BECAUSE THERE AIN'T BEEN NONE SINCE. 08:07:36 WS GANG MEMBERS CLIMBING INTO THEIR LARGE AMERICAN SEDANS. 08:07:46 DUSK FTG. INT POLICE CAR W/ ALLEN AND JOHN. 08:08:58 FTG OF GANG MEMBERS WALKING DOWN STREET THROUGH POLICE CAR WINDOW. 08:10:30 POV THROUGH CAR WINDOW OF HOUSES RAIDED BY JOLIET POLICE. 08:17:17 MS POLICE OFFICER JOHN DRIVING THROUGH GANG NEIGHBORHOODS. INTV W/ JOHN. 08:17:44 JOHN SAYS, HAVING KIDS GROWING UP IN THIS AREA IS VERY, VERY DIFFICULT.
PUPPY LOVE
kids throw kid; boy, girl talk, looks romantic; gang jeers; CU kid rubs hands ready to fight, boys beat him; blacksmith shoes mule, who bites his ass; black kid sits on hot tools; girl plays w/ dolls CU, boy watches CU; kids ride soap box cars w/ sails down street; boy openly watches through window as woman applies make-up at mirror; man drives up in car w/ lettering AH COM ON; boy talks to man, throws candy to dog; CU sad boy scratches face; kid drives up in tiny goat-drawn cart, talks to other kid, gives him candy
Cars Damaged by Gang Gunfight
In Scarborough, police tape blocks off damaged cars with windows shattered by bullets in the aftermath of a nighttime gang gunfight, followed by a scene of an ambulance of a hospital. Metro constable Howard Rosenberg states the fight was an ambush by one gang on another. A resident in a nearby apartment complex expresses his concern about the neighborhoods safety. PLEASE NOTE News anchor and reporter image and audio, along with any commercial production excerpts, are for reference purposes only and are not clearable and cannot be used within your project.
CNN GOES INSIDE HAITI AS GANG VIOLENCE ESCALATES
&lt;p>&lt;b>**This package/segment contains third party material. Unless otherwise noted, this material may only be used within this package/segment.**&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--SUPERS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>0:46 - 0:50&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Junot Samedi&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Protester&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>0:56 - 1:01&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Port-au-Prince, July 2021&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>1:05 - 1:18&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Port-au-Prince, 29 February 2024&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Social media&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>1:18 - 1:21&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>TikTok&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>1:21 - 1:25&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Social media&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>2:53 - 2:58&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Caitlin Hu&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>CNN Senior Editor&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>3:07 - 3:19&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>CNN Senior National Correspondent&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>3:44 - 3:52&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Port-au-Prince, 2023&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Law enforcement source&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>4:15 - 4:21&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Inspector Odric Octina&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Brigade for the Security of Protected Areas (B-SAP)&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>5:33 - 5:38&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Jean-Martin Bauer&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>WFP Haiti Director&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--LEAD IN&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>HAITI HAS BEEN ENGULFED IN TURMOIL FOR YEARS AND GANGS ARE TIGHTENING THEIR GRIP. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>CNN'S DAVID CULVER GOES INSIDE HAITI AND EXPLAINS WHY MANY FEAR THE COUNTRY IS ON THE BRINK OF EXPLODING.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--REPORTER PKG-AS FOLLOWS&lt;/b>--&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver,CNN Senior National Correspondent: So we’re like a block away?” &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>IT’S AS CLOSE AS WE CAN GET DRIVING. SO WE LAYER UP AND WALK. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>look at people still making their commute as tires are burning in the middle of the street here &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>NO POLICE BARRICADE… NO FIREFIGHTERS… MOST SEEMINGLY UNFAZED. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THESE FLAMES HAVE BEEN BURNING FOR SEVERAL HOURS. HAITI HAS BEEN ENGULFED IN TURMOIL FOR YEARS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver,CNN Senior National Correspondent: We don't have homes to live in, we don't have food to eat… that’s what they’re shouting.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>MANY HERE NOW FEAR THEIR COUNTRY IS ON THE BRINK OF EXPLODING… &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver,CNN Senior National Correspondent: does it feel safe right now? &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Protestor: No. No… &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver,CNN Senior National Correspondent: it doesn’t? &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Protestor: no doesn’t (feel) safe.My country is broken right now. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THESE FOLKS BLAME THE CURRENT GOVERNMENT AND PRIME MINISTER ARIEL HENRY…APPOINTED FOLLOWING THE ASSASSINATION OF PRESIDENT JOVENEL MOISE IN 2021. THEY WANT HENRY TO GO. BUT, HE SAYS, HE WILL NOT STEP DOWN. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THIS AS PANICKED STREET SHOOTOUTS LIKE THIS ONE HAVE BECOME A NEAR DAILY OCCURRENCE. IT’S OFTEN A CLASH BETWEEN POLICE AND THE GANGS WHICH HAVE ESSENTIALLY TAKEN HAITI HOSTAGE.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THEY FLAUNT THEIR WEAPONS AND WEALTH ON TIKTOK… &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THREATENING POLICE AND BASKING IN LAWLESSNESS. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>MANY RESIDENTS NOW LIVING BEHIND BARRICADES&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver,CNN Senior National Correspondent: This is not the gangs doing this, this is the folks that live in these neighbourhoods who are putting these up to prevent gangs from coming in and kidnapping.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>USING WHATEVER MIGHT STOP OR SLOW THE KIDNAPPERS - EFFORTS TO PROTECT FAMILIES AND PRESERVE INNOCENCE.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THAT INNOCENCE SHATTERED FOR OTHERS - THIS 14-YEAR-OLD SAYS HE WAS RECRUITED AT 11… &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>TELLS ME HE’S OFTEN FORCED TO BURN THE BODIES OF THOSE KILLED BY OTHER GANG MEMBERS.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>“I WANT TO CHANGE MY WAY OF LIFE,” HE TELLS WITH A HEAVY LOOK OF SHAME. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>AT AN EARLY MORNING FOOD DISTRIBUTION… WE MEET DOZENS OF WOMEN WHO’VE FELT THE WRATH OF GANG VIOLENCE. AT TIMES - WE NOTICE A LOST STARE IN THEIR EYES… SEEMINGLY NUMB TO THE HORRORS THEY’VE ENDURED.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver,CNN Senior National Correspondent: All of them have been victims? So no one here has not been a victim?&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THIS WOMAN’S SISTER… SHOT AND KILLED … THIS ONE’S HUSBAND… BURNED ALIVE INSIDE THEIR HOME… THIS WOMAN tells us she was RAPED… SHE SHOWS US THE MARKS LEFT BEHIND… IN RECENTS MONTHS - GANGS HAVE SEIZED MORE AND MORE CONTROL OVER THE COUNTRY… INCLUDING THE ROADS LEADING TO PORT AU PRINCE. OFFICIALS ESTIMATE THAT GANGS NOW CONTROL AS MUCH 80-PERCENT OF THE CAPITAL. EVEN THE U-S EMBASSY AND INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT ARE MOSTLY SURROUNDED BY RIVAL GANG TERRITORIES. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>IT’S LED THE HAITIAN NATIONAL POLICE TO CREATE AN UNDERCOVER UNIT…WE GO WITH THEM TO THE FRONT LINES.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Caitlin Hu, CNN Senior Editor: This unit actually goes into gang areas, looks for gang members and fights them. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THE OFFICERS ASK US NOT TO REVEAL OUR EXACT LOCATION. AND THEY TELL US TO WORK QUICKLY…GIVEN WE’RE STANDING EXPOSED ON A WINDY HILLSIDE. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver,CNN Senior National Correspondent: As police have described it to me, basically everything behind me is occupied by the gangs. There are homes all around us - we’re standing on the foundation of one home - that have been abandoned” &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THEY OFFER TO DRIVE US CLOSER… &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Caitlin Hu, CNN Senior Editor: And you can see they’re getting ready.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver, CNN Senior National Correspondent: Yeah so our driver’s all geared up now ready for potential gunfire to come our way. Stay away from the windows as we come in here. The describe this as the last defensive point and beyond here is what they consider to be their font lines.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p> FROM HERE YOU CAN SEE THE BATTLEFIELD…NO SIGNS OF ANY SUSPECTED GANG MEMBERS… FOR NOW. POLICE AREN’T THE ONLY ONES TRYING TO GAIN THE UPPERHAND. IN A FRACTURED STATE… ALTERNATIVES TO THE GANGS AND GOVERNMENT SURFACE. WE’RE HEADED TO MEET A COMMANDER OF B-SAP…HAITI'S ARMED ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY THAT HAS SPLINTERED FROM THE HENRI GOVERNMENT....CHALLENGING ITS LEGITIMACY. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>WE PULL UP TO A GATED COMPOUND. THE MAN IN THE PURPLE SHIRT LEADS US IN. HE THEN CHANGES INTO HIS B-SAP UNIFORM. IT’S THE COMMANDER, HE’S IN HIDING FORM THE POLICE. HIS MESSAGE ECHOES THE ANTI-GOVERNMENT PROTESTER. HE FLEXES B-SAP’S STRENGTH IN NUMBERS AND ITS POTENTIAL TO HELP BRING STABILITY. BUT WHEN IT COMES TO HIS OWN FAMILY… &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver, CNN Senior National Correspondent: You mention you have four kids, what do you think their future is in the country? &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>HE FEARS THEIR FUTURE IS BEST SERVED LEAVING HAITI. THE DESPERATION IS FELT BEYOND PORT AU PRINCE... IN PLACES LIKE JEREMIE. THE U-N CHOPPER IS THE SAFEST WAY TO GET THERE. IT’S ABOUT AN HOUR RIDE. MEMBERS OF THE WORLD FOOD PROGRAM TAKE US THROUGH THIS RURAL COASTAL COMMUNITY… &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>DEVASTATED BY RECENT PROTESTS. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Jean-Martin Bauer, WFP Haiti Country Head: Right back there you had five people were killed last week.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver,CNN Senior National Correspondent: Right there? &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Jean-Martin Bauer, WFP Haiti Country Head: It was right there yeah.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>WE ARRIVE AT THIS AGRICULTURAL CONSORTIUM. THE W-F-P BUYS FOOD FROM THESE LOCAL FARMERS TO THEN HAND OUT… BUT THE PROTESTS HAVE BLOCKED DISTRIBUTION EFFORTS, LEAVING SOME FOOD TO SPOIL… IT’S FRUSTRATING FOR THE W-F-P OFFICIALS - AS THEY KNOW, YOU DON’T HAVE TO LOOK FAR TO FIND HUNGER HERE…&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>THESE FARMERS POINTING TO THEIR STOMACHS … LIFTING THEIR SHIRTS TO US. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>David Culver,CNN Senior National Correspondent: A lot of folks will look at Haiti and they’ll say it’s been messed up for for so long… and the question that no doubt people in the US will ask is well why should we help?&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>Jean-Martin Bauer, WFP Haiti Country Head: Well there are two reasons you should help: first of all, on humanitarian grounds…Then there’s also our own self interests in the US. The longer you wait to act on Haiti the more migrants there will be on the southern border, it’s that simple. &lt;/p>\n&lt;p>MANY HERE SEARCH FOR NORMALCY WHERE THEY CAN…EVEN WITH THE THREAT OF VIOLENCE… MISSING MASS FOR SOME IS NOT AN OPTION… THEY WEAR THEIR SUNDAY BEST AND UNITE IN PRAYER… PLACES OF WORSHIP ARE IMMUNE FROM GANG TERROR … BUT THEY AT LEAST OFFER A MOMENT OF TRANQUILITY… AND HOPE FOR NOW.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>DAVID CULVER, CNN, PORT-AU-PRINCE, HAITI.&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>-----END-----CNN.SCRIPT-----&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;b>--KEYWORD TAGS--&lt;/b>&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>PORT-AU-PRINCE GANG VIOLENCE HAITI CARIBBEAN&lt;/p>\n&lt;p>&lt;/p>
CONTEMPORARY STOCK FOOTAGE
AERIAL VAR skyscrapers, computer generated satellite & space shuttle; gang members smoking & talking BG graffiti walls, diff. gang members sneaking up on other gang members; gang members w/ a stick & bat run up & start beating each other up & fighting; VAR people wind surfing, TILT-D palm trees & sunset over ocean, Z-IN sunset over ocean FG palm trees ; Z-OUT orange clouds to palm trees on beach & ocean; PAN WS mtn & valley w/ BG clouds, blue ocean & beach w/ FG palm tree, Z-IN coastline to catamaran; MS old black & white picture of baby; man w/ cameras taking pictures, CU man adjusting dials of camera; MS marathon w/ men running down st., man running down street w/ crowd cheering them on, man taking pictures of runners; VAR INT yacht, yacht window on deck, wind blowing sails & yacht deck, man loosening sail; VAR yacht's bow, TILT-D sails & side of yacht, CU EXT yacht man steering ship, CU compass, view of aft; TILT-U yacht's deck, HS dolphins leaping out of ocean, VAR AERIAL yacht @ sea; AERIAL lighthouse & cliffs, AERIAL yacht, Yacht designer talking ;
Gang - Rape - Arrests
Police in Albuquerque, New Mexico arrest suspects in alleged gang rape of 15-y-o girl.
SILENT COMEDY SHORTS
SILENT COMEDY KIDS THROW DARTS AT FRUIT & DRAGS IT AWAY FROM FRUIT STAND. COP CHASES KID. FALLING DOWN. HIDES IN TRASH CAN. MAN LIGHTS CIGARETTE. THROWS MATCH IN TRASH. BOY'S BUTT BURNING. TALKS TO BOY. SCENE OF LITTLE BLACK BOY IN PRISON STRIPES ON CHAIN GANG. COPS TAUNT HIM WITH RIFLES. BLACK MAN IN MAKESHIFT BOXING RING. LITTLE BLACK BABIES IN DIAPERS BOXING. BABIES CRY. TWO BULLIES FIGHTING. CHILDREN ARRANGE A BOXING MATCH. PUNCHING DUMMY, PUNCHING BAG HIT BY DUMMY ON REBOUND. LITTLE GIRL DRIVING CAR. USING HAND SIGNALS. REALLY ON BACK ON TRUCK. LITTLE BLONDE GIRLS APPLAUD. HITTING BELL. BOXING MATCH. FIGHTING IN THE AUDIENCE. KID ON ROOF WATCHES FIGHT THRU HOLE. MULE KICKS HIND LEGS. AERIAL SHOT OF FIGHT. FIREWORKS. BOY KNOCKED DOWN. KIDS CHEER. BOY CRIES. KIDS EXCITED. NICELY DRESSED BOY TIPS HIS HAT TO LITTLE GIRL FLIRTING. LITTLE GIRLS LEAVE WITH RICH BOY. ANGRY GIRLS STAMP THEIR FEET. BOYS BEAT UP RICH KID. BLACK EYE. CUT. GIRL RESCUES BOY. BOXERS SHAKE HANDS. COP COMES. KIDS RUN AWAY. CRAWL OUT WINDOWS. HIDE IN BARRELS, RUN DOWN STREET. UNDER CRATE.
Gang Busters Serial Trailer
Movie trailer for the serial Gang Busters. A cop blows a whistle beneath a street lamp and sign at the corner of Hell's Kitchen. Closeup of a prison guard firing a tommy gun. Silhouetted guards in tower on candlestick phone. Several closeups of tabletop radio. Lots of kitschy title cards superimposed over shots of racing police cars, cops grabbing guns, etc. A Model T style car knocks down a street lamp. Tracking shot of motorcycle cops at night. Cast credits superimposed over principal leads. Two window washers fire shots into office. Shots of cops and detectives huddled around desk. Lots of fighting behind superimposed titles of serial chapters. Men fight in a cockpit, killing pilot in process. Man forces woman to stand on car running board as he rams roadblock, crashes through cliffside guardrail.
MEXICO: IMMIGRANT FAMILY SEPARATED (EXTRA B-ROLL)
*****PLEASE SEE INFORMATION BELOW AND ON IN-139MO****\n *****SPANISH INFORMATION ALSO AVAILABLE ON SN-03TU*******\n\n **ATTENTION AFFILIATES: NEWSOURCE IS REPORTING LIVE IN ENGLISH OR SPANISH ON THE U.S./MEXICO BORDER IN MCALLEN, TX. CAMILA BERNAL WILL BE LIVE TUESDAY NIGHT FROM 4PM ET THROUGH 9PM ET AND WEDNESDAY MORNING FROM 6AM ET THROUGH NOON ET. BOOK HERE: https://newsource.ns.cnn.com/planner/upcoming-live FOR QUESTIONS, CALL 404-827-2915.**\n\n --SUPERS--\nThursday\nTijuana, Mexico\n\nJune 14, 2018\n\n --VIDEO SHOWS--\nVillatoro looking out the window of his room\nCloseup of Villatoro's face\nVillatoro working \nVillatoro talking to Rosa Flores and describing his room\n\n -----CNN INFO-----\n TIJUANA, Mexico (CNN) -- From a cinderblock church shelter that sits on a Tijuana public landfill, Ignacio Villatoro used a spotty internet connection to call his three children in immigration detention in New York. His bloodshot eyes filled with tears as he stared at his phone while waiting to see his three sons appear.\n But only the face of his 13-year-old filled the screen.\n "They don't want to talk to me?" Ignacio asked about his two other sons, ages 2 and 6.\n "No," the boy said, avoiding eye contact with his father.\n "But are they OK? They are not sick, are they?" Villatoro asked, holding back tears as his hands visibly shook.\n Before hanging up, Villatoro pleaded with a case worker who took over the call. He asked for a video chat with his two youngest children.\n His cell phone screen went dark as the call disconnected.\n "They are traumatized," Villatoro said between sobs. "I would give my life for my children." \n The Villatoros are caught in the middle of the Trump administration's hard-line immigration policy, which has officials detaining asylum-seekers and separating them from their families.\n The six members of the Villatoro family fled violence in Guatemala together, only to find themselves divided between sanctuary and detention in two countries and across three US states. \n His three sons in New York feel abandoned and blame him, Villatoro said. And the 41-year-old has limited communication with his wife and 20-year-old son, who are detained in separate detention centers in Texas and California, respectively.\n\n In a sanctuary but separated from his family\n\n As Villatoro looked out a small window of the shelter, at the buckled graves of a cemetery just feet away, he pondered how his family fell apart. The owner of a once-thriving bakery lives with four other immigrants in a church in Mexico. A small pile of clothing -- which is everything he owns -- lay next to his bed, made with raw two-by-fours and a piece of plywood for a mattress.\n Taking the perilous journey from Guatemala to the US-Mexico border was a decision, he said, that was forced onto him because of the dangerous gangs that rule his home country. But he didn't leave without putting up a fight.\n He and a dozen of his neighbors armed themselves with machetes and clubs to stop rapes, kidnappings and killings on their street, he said. They built a civil police force. They patrolled their neighborhood day and night.\n But those efforts put Villatoro and his family in the crosshairs of the vicious gangs. Villatoro said that the last threat they received was so vicious, he refused to utter it -- for fear his children would one day read or learn about the menacing details in news reports.\n The plan to have his wife, Maria, and their children, ages 2, 6, 13 and 20, turn themselves over to US immigration officials and ask for asylum appeared to work at first -- with one exception. The older son was sent to a detention center in California. \n Villatoro had to take sanctuary in the church in Mexico because an earlier deportation barred him from seeking asylum and entering the United States.\n He said he found solace in knowing that his three youngest children were with their mother, safe in a detention center thousands of miles away from the gang violence from which they were escaping. \n But his relief was short-lived.\n\n Permanently barred from US\n\n Immigration and Customs Enforcement separated his wife from the three youngest children on May 19. In a statement to CNN, ICE stated that Maria Villatoro was convicted of falsely claiming to be a US citizen in 1999 and sentenced to 75 days in federal prison -- something the agency said bars her from entering the country again, even legally. \n Then US Attorney General Jeff Sessions implemented a new policy rejecting gang violence as a basis for asylum -- the premise for the Villatoro family's asylum claim.\n "Don't sign deportation papers," Ignacio Villatoro said he told his wife by phone. "Be strong. Be strong."\n The couple's phone conversations have veered back and forth between tears and moments of silence as they both try to be strong for one another. Villatoro said he fears his wife could end up deported alone back to Guatemala, where she could be kidnapped or killed.\n "My soul is broken," Villatoro said. "It's torture. I feel trapped."\n In the last month, Villatoro has lost weight. He said he can't eat. He can't sleep. The pain and agony take over at night, and he tosses and turns in his bed. \n During the day, Villatoro tries to stay busy by helping break a concrete floor with a jackhammer. The church giving him refuge plans to expand a shelter area to house the growing number of immigrants who need a place to stay in Mexico while their families seek asylum in the United States. \n\n 'Zero tolerance'? Not always\n\n While the Trump administration's "zero tolerance" immigration policy vows to prosecute every person who crosses the border illegally, there appears to be some leniency. \n Bernardo Orellana, who works with Villatoro to expand the shelter, said his wife and three children asked for asylum a few days before Maria Villatoro and her children. The two families were even housed in the same detention center in Texas. But while the Villatoros were separated, his family has been allowed to stay intact.\n As Orellana described his situation, his phone rang. His wife was calling from Louisiana, where she is living with family while she and her children await an immigration check-in. Orellana explained that his wife has one thing in her favor: She has never attempted to enter the United States illegally. He, on the other hand, has two prior deportations and is, for now, barred from re-entering the country.\n\n Family life via video conference\n\n Ignacio Villatoro tried to call New York several times Thursday, hoping to talk to his two youngest children. \n He flashed back to the last time he saw his 2-year-old over video conference, perhaps one of the most painful exchanges any parent could have. \n When the toddler saw him on a cell phone screen, the boy rushed with open arms to hug Villatoro -- and abruptly learned his father couldn't hug him via video. That left him wailing.\n As Villatoro dialed this time, he looked down at his phone and his eyes welled up. \n His 13-year-old son again picked up the video call. His brothers, however, were absent.\n "Tell me you're fine. Tell me you're fine," Villatoro implored his son.\n\n 'Tell your little brothers that you talked to me'\n\n Villatoro stared at his phone screen anxiously waiting for a reply. Holding back tears, he encouraged his son to go to church and ask for strength. To learn English. To respect his elders. And he reminded him what an intelligent and well-mannered boy he was.\n "I love you," Villatoro said in a broken voice. "Tell your little brothers that you talked to me."\n After they spoke, the child's therapist took over the call and began scolding Villatoro.\n "Put yourself in their shoes," the unnamed therapist said. "They don't understand. They think that you abandoned them." \n "He (the 2-year-old) thinks it's your fault. Seeing you via telephone screen enrages him," the therapist said. "He feels you hurt him."\n "I can barely cope with the sadness and the depression," Villatoro said.\n He wishes he were at least surrounded by his children's toys and clothing. But the few items left behind after they departed north caused him so much pain he gave them away. He now regrets doing so.\n As he looks through the window bars of the shelter, at the handcrafted crosses in the nearby cemetery, he holds on to the only things he has that belong to his children -- their birth certificates. The outlook for his parental rights is as thin as the sheets of paper between his fingers, the outlook for what his family's future holds as bleak as the view before his eyes. \n Mending his broken family would take a pardon from President Donald Trump, he said. \n "Or a miracle."\n --KEYWORD TAGS--\nMEXICO GUATEMALA IMMIGRATION POLICY TRUMP BORDER IMMIGRANTS SEPARATED\n\n
FIVE YEAR OLD SHOT (01/21/1997)
A five-year-old girl was shot last night after a Martin Luther King parade celebration. The girl was shot by a man running down the street shooting a gun.