What A Day - Colorado Mourns Again
Episode Date: March 24, 2021Boulder police have identified a suspect in Monday’s deadly shooting in Colorado, which killed 10 people. President Biden addressed the nation and called on Congress to not wait "another minute" bef...ore working to act gun control laws, including a ban on assault-style rifles and high-capacity magazines. An independent oversight board accused Astrazeneca of choosing data that was “most favorable” instead of the most updated and complete info. And in headlines: attacks on AAPI people continued in New York City in spite of protests, jurors selected for the murder trial of Derek Chauvin, and Prince Harry scores his first 9-5 gig.Show Links:"Boulder shooting victims: Identifying the 10 lives lost"https://www.denverpost.com/2021/03/23/boulder-shooting-victims/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whataday.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Wednesday, March 24th. I'm Akilah Hughes.
And I'm Gideon Resnick. And this is What The Day, your source for vaccine efficacy numbers that seem to change every hour.
Yeah, you know, I'm done with the numbers. Now I just judge the vaccines based on Dr. Fauci's tone of voice when he's talking about them.
I am truly number blind and I love all vaccines equally. On today's show, we just can't
quit AstraZeneca, then some headlines. But first, the latest. I don't need to wait another minute,
let alone an hour, to take common sense steps that will save the
lives in the future and to urge my colleagues in the House and Senate to act. That was President
Biden speaking yesterday about the second mass shooting we've seen in the United States in as
many weeks. We're going to get more into Biden's response, but we'll start with the details on the
shooting in Boulder, Colorado. These details are still developing, but Gideon, what more do we need to know at this point? Yeah, so all this information
is as of last night at 10 p.m. Eastern, but we know that 10 people were killed in this horrific
shooting, which took place at a King Soopers grocery store. And we feel that it's important
to first acknowledge the victims here. Among them was Ricky Odds, a 25-year-old manager at the store.
Friends and family described her to the Denver Post as bubbly and a person who loved cats and hiking in Colorado. Lynn Murray was a 62-year-old former
magazine photo editor who reportedly was working for Instacart in her retirement.
Her husband told the New York Times that she once charmed the actor who played the soup Nazi
on Seinfeld. Terry Laker was a 51-year-old employee of the store who had reportedly worked
there for about 30 years. Kevin Mahoney,
61, died as well, according to his daughter, who shared photos of her wedding and called him
her hero. That post was trending on Twitter as well as the radio station where she's the news
director. The other victims include Eric Talley, a veteran of the Boulder Police Department,
20 year old Denny Strong, another employee, 23 year old Neold Nevin Stanisic, 49-year-old Treloana Bartkowiak,
59-year-old Suzanne Fountain, and 65-year-old Jody Waters. We will link to the Denver Post
in our show notes. They've been spotlighting the lives as more information is gathered.
Yeah, it's just really sad all around. But what else have we found out in the last 24 hours or so?
So yesterday, the Boulder police chief identified the suspect as 21-year-old
Ahmad Alyssa of Arvada, Colorado. The chief said that he had been taken into custody with a leg
injury from being shot but was in stable condition. He was reportedly armed with a semi-automatic
rifle and a pistol and was charged with 10 counts of first-degree murder. Officials are attempting
to determine a motive at this time, and the New York Times said that he was known to the FBI due
to his link to another individual who had been under investigation, but the other details there are murky.
We had mentioned in the show yesterday that the suspect was a white man. As an update,
court records reportedly showed he was born in Syria in 1999, and reportedly he had lived in
the U.S. since he was three. Regarding his gun purchases, there was a police affidavit made
public that showed the suspect had purchased a semi-automatic pistol last week, but reportedly law enforcement hasn't
made clear just yet if that was specifically used in this attack.
Yeah, and a lot of focus has been on a potential assault weapons ban in Boulder as it relates
to this, so let's explain that a little bit more.
Right, so in 2018, the city of Boulder enacted a ban on assault weapons, which came in part
as a response to the mass shooting in Parkland, Florida that year.
But that ban was blocked in court just 10 days before this mass shooting happened.
That was due to a legal challenge from two Boulder residents, a local gun shop and the Colorado State Shooting Association, according to the Denver Post.
The judge essentially said that under Colorado law, localities can't go stricter than state and federal laws.
And the NRA, of course, was enthused by the ruling, and their lobbying arm actually supported the lawsuit.
The Post notes as well that police have not said yet whether the ban would have prevented Alyssa
from buying the weapon or using it within city limits. So we'll keep following that part of the
story too. But Akilah, let's turn to more of what Biden had to say and some other responses that
came in yesterday. Yeah, so the day was filled with responses and calls to action on gun control. In President Biden's address, he said that he and
the First Lady are devastated. And as we heard in the clip, he called on Congress to not take
another minute to act. Specifically, he called for a ban on assault-style rifles and high-capacity
ammunition magazines. Biden has some history on this issue as well. Following the Sandy Hook
shooting in 2012, then-Vice President Biden led a gun violence task force that met with the NRA and asked if
they could support a ban on assault rifles. They said no. And while the NRA is currently in shambles,
their lobbying efforts with the GOP senators seems to have kept this issue from ever being
addressed in any meaningful way. Yeah, that is the truth. And to that point,
yesterday, Senator Ted Cruz from Cancun talked about narrow reforms that would not have prevented the two mass shootings the country has been rocked
by in recent days. But what else have people said in response to the violence?
So Ted Cruz went on to make some sort of inane comment about how the left is canceling thoughts
and prayers, but he remained reticent to consider the mandatory background check bills that passed
in the House last week. As far as people who actually have consciences, former Arizona Congresswoman Gabby Giffords spoke out. She told Politico that
she supports universal background checks, but said that that can't be all we do to address the issue.
As a reminder, Giffords is married to Senator Mark Kelly of Arizona and was shot at point-blank
range in an assassination attempt at a grocery store in 2011. 19 people were shot and six were
killed in that incident, and the GOP has not
advanced a single piece of gun reform legislation since then. Colorado officials spoke out as well,
so let's talk about some of what they had to say. All right, so Congressman Joe Neguse,
who represents Boulder and who you all may remember from his closing remarks in Trump's
impeachment trial, spoke in Boulder yesterday. Here's a clip. Like many of you, my heart is heavy
and it is in grief and in anguish. The loss of life is truly heartbreaking and unimaginable. And
so our hearts, our thoughts, our prayers are with the families of those victims, with the survivors
of yesterday's terrible mass shooting, with the frontline grocery store employees,
and with every member of our community here in Boulder.
He also retweeted statements from the victims' families,
shared mental health resources in Colorado,
and called for an end to the filibuster
to enact meaningful gun reform,
including universal background checks
and banning assault weapons.
We'll keep you updated on this situation,
but one last story to check in on from yesterday. AstraZeneca, you know, you've been following the crazy ins and outs of this saga.
We really were just joking about talking about them every single day, but it does seem to be
our lives now. So what is the latest here? I honestly feel like my brain is going to
explode from this. So cliff notes. Yesterday, we talked about this encouraging information
released by AstraZeneca about their U.S. vaccine trials, the company's first uniformly good bit of news in a while.
Well, that lasted about 24 hours, less than after midnight on the East Coast that day.
An independent oversight board that was helping to oversee the trial accused AstraZeneca of basically selectively choosing data that was, quote, most favorable instead of the most updated and complete
info. And here's the thing. According to the New York Times, the efficacy might have been something
between 69 and 74 percent, and the one that was presented was 79. That's, again, also the arguably
less important number than the 100 percent success against severe disease. But I digress. Anyway,
the company has just made a ton of unnecessary errors for a vaccine that is by
most measures successful. As Dr. Fauci put it following the update from the board, quote,
any type of thing like this could unfortunately contribute to a lack of confidence in the process.
AstraZeneca, meanwhile, said that it is going to share its latest data with the monitoring board
and put out fuller results soon. I hope that everything I just said is still relevant a few
hours from now, but that's the latest.
It's Wednesday WOD Squad, and in place of today's Tim Check, we're trying out a new segment called Nothing But Net,
where we talk about a story that took over the internet.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
So today we're looking at yesterday's Shrimp-A-Mint Toast Crunch Saga.
Shrimp-A-Mint Toast Crunch, the tails you can see.
Oh, my God.
Right.
So basically, a comedian named Jensen Karp found sugar-encrusted shrimp tails in his Cinnamon Toast Crunch.
Yes, he did.
He tweeted out a picture of it.
Everyone was grossed out, and Diderot Mills responded,
claiming the shrimp tails were just, quote,
an accumulation of the cinnamon sugar.
I don't know how they can believe that.
It looks like shrimp tails.
I have seen shrimp.
From every angle.
Yeah, don't tell us what we're seeing.
Carp's bag seemed to have clear tape along the bottom,
so someone could have tampered with the bag
after it left the Cinnamon Toast Crunch factory.
As of last night, Jensen was trying to get the cereal tested
to understand its contents, which also included unidentifiable black things,
probably eyes from the shrimps.
Yeah, we can only assume.
Yeah, not great.
Gideon, as a citizen of the internet, were you following this,
and how did it make you feel?
I did follow this.
It made me feel disgusting, you you know like that you would eat uh
shrimp tails possibly by accident in otherwise good and sugary cereal um i also thought that
they the company was just kind of playing themselves in the way that they were responding
to this with these like really serious like uh statements that were they had like i feel like
wanted like a hotline on it
or something that was like if this has happened to you please call um yeah so it was just like
it was really you know just take just take the l and either privately explain what happened
but don't turn it into like a pr win for this guy who is clearly writing it to the bank like he has
thousands of posts now that are like really going full hog on
telling the story. Yeah. I mean, you know, we've all been in the house too long. The most exciting
thing is what comes out of your cereal box. You know, I get it. Yeah. It's also weird that his
last name is carp as well. There's too many fish words that are all there's too much convenience
that is going on here. Yeah, definitely. Yeah.
How are you feeling about this?
Did you follow the ins and outs?
I mean, I did a little bit.
I feel like I kept seeing stuff about Cinnamon Toast Crunch,
and then I finally saw the picture.
It does look like shrimp tails.
I just want to say on the record, I can see what everyone else is seeing.
I would like it to be just chunks of cinnamon sugar, but that's just not realistic.
Also, if you've ever had Cinnamon Toast Crunch, there's always a bunch of cinnamon sugar at the
bottom. It's never shaped like shrimp tails. It's a bad alibi. But one thing I also thought was that
we haven't had good prizes and cereal boxes in a long time. And maybe this is the prize. This is
what they came up with. So congratulations. You
poured some cereal, you got some free shrimp. Why are you complaining? It's not that bad. When you
think about it like that, it's not that bad. Yeah. Well, just like that, we've explored the internet
and we'll be back after some ads. Let's wrap up with some headlines.
Headlines.
Five people of Asian descent were attacked in New York City this past weekend.
The attacks happened as hundreds of people in the city and across the country marched to protest violence against the AAPI community.
A 68-year-old Sri Lankan man is in critical condition after an attacker yelled a
racist slur and punched him on the subway. Disgusting. In another incident, 37-year-old
Katie Ho was attacked in front of her daughter while the two were on their way to an anti-hate
protest. The attacks are being investigated as possible hate crimes by the NYPD, and they've led
a large group of volunteers to create a civilian patrol team in the city. That group plans to cover
Flushing and Northeast Queens, which have large Asian populations with the goal of stopping hate
crimes and keeping people safe. Fourteen people in Minnesota have been selected as jurors in the
murder trial of Derek Chauvin. According to the courts, the jury will consist of eight white
people, four black people, and two people identifying as other. The selection process
was notably slow and deliberate, which speaks to the difficulty legal teams had finding jurors they considered impartial. Chauvin's defense was particularly
concerned about the $27 million settlement that the city of Minneapolis reached with Floyd's family.
They said the news could prejudice the jury and asked to move the trial from Hennepin County,
but the judge overseeing the case said there was nowhere else in the state where Chauvin could get
a fairer trial. Opening statements are set to begin next Monday.
Another sign of a recovering jobs market out of work,
Duke Prince Harry finally got a nice gig,
working as chief impact officer for a Silicon Valley life coaching startup
called BetterUp.
Congratulations, sir.
In that role, Prince Harry will be involved in product strategy
and charitable contributions.
His move to an executive role differs from the way most high-profile celebrities join companies,
which is to get a seat on their boards.
Harry has long been open about his struggles
with grief and mental health,
which is why Better Up says he is a natural fit
for his new role.
Presumably, he'll be the one on Slack
reacting to every message with a crown emoji.
That is so like him, if I know the guy.
Better Up didn't say how Prince Harry would be compensated,
but it's doubtful that they can match his salary from his old boss, every person who pays taxes in England.
Wow. Yeah, I'm glad his first job is as a C-level executive. Good for him. Former Trump lawyer and
noted Kraken tamer Sidney Powell is defending herself against a defamation suit by employing
an advanced legal strategy. Basically, she said psych.. Hull was sued by Dominion Voting Systems
for pushing conspiracy theories
that their machines tilted the election towards Biden,
maybe contained the ghost of Hugo Chavez,
shot Abraham Lincoln, and so on and so forth.
In a new court filing, her lawyers say
that she only advanced these claims as opinions
and they were so removed from reality that, quote,
reasonable people would not accept such statements as fact.
One issue, though, with this argument is that as many as three quarters of Republicans bought these claims or others like them.
I guess it still works if Powell is just saying that Republicans aren't reasonable people.
And if she is, Ms. Tinfoil Hat Lawyer Esquire, welcome to the resistance.
Congratulations. We always knew you can make it over to this side
and we're just we're happy to see you here. Yeah, thanks so much. And those are the headlines.
One last thing before we go. On this week's episode of America Dissected, Dr. Abdul El-Sayed
talks to former Chicago City Health Commissioner and member of President Biden's COVID-19 Transition Task Force,
Dr. Julie Morita, about the lessons we've learned and those we still need to learn in this pandemic.
Listen and subscribe to America Dissected wherever you get your podcasts.
That is all for today.
If you like the show, make sure you subscribe, leave a review.
Let those crown emojis fly if you are a prince and tell your friends to listen.
And if you're into reading and not just the whole entire internet like me,
What A Day is also a nightly newsletter.
Check it out.
Subscribe at crooked.com slash subscribe.
I'm Akilah Hughes.
I'm Gideon Resnick.
And keep fighting the good fight, Dominion Voting Machines.
Yeah, we believe in you.
You're going to get justice and a fat ass paycheck.
What a Day is a production of Crooked Media.
It's recorded and mixed by Charlotte Landis.
Sonia Tan is our assistant producer.
Our head writer is John Milstein and our executive producers are Katie Long, Akilah Hughes and me.
Our theme music is by Colin Gilliard and Kashaka.