Alaska Gov. Mike Dunleavy Holds A Press Conference On A Bill To Combat Crime

  • 3 months ago
Gov. Mike Dunleavy (R-AK) held a press conference on Thursday to discuss a bill to combat crime.

Fuel your success with Forbes. Gain unlimited access to premium journalism, including breaking news, groundbreaking in-depth reported stories, daily digests and more. Plus, members get a front-row seat at members-only events with leading thinkers and doers, access to premium video that can help you get ahead, an ad-light experience, early access to select products including NFT drops and more:

https://account.forbes.com/membership/?utm_source=youtube&utm_medium=display&utm_campaign=growth_non-sub_paid_subscribe_ytdescript


Stay Connected
Forbes on Facebook: http://fb.com/forbes
Forbes Video on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/forbes
Forbes Video on Instagram: http://instagram.com/forbes
More From Forbes: http://forbes.com
Transcript
00:00All right, let's get this thing on the road.
00:05First of all, I'm James Cockrell, I'm the Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Public
00:08Safety.
00:09I just want to welcome everybody, all the guests, legislators, the governor, for setting
00:13this up.
00:14This is a momentous occasion when it comes to providing tools for law enforcement.
00:21And with the signature of House Bill 66, this is a continualization of the administration's
00:28strive to make Alaska safe.
00:30I want to welcome you to our Department of Public Safety hangar.
00:39Most people don't realize that we have the largest aircraft fleet of any law enforcement
00:43agency in this country, and we're very proud of it, and we're really proud of what we do
00:48with our aircraft in this hangar facility.
00:53So I'll get my speech up and going.
00:55Today is a great day for Alaska law enforcement, the men and women standing behind me, and
01:01I appreciate their attendance today.
01:05And those patrolling across the state will gain many tools with the signing of H.B. 66.
01:11Most notably, an offender can now be charged with second-degree murder if they knowingly
01:16manufacture illicit drugs to another person that dies as a result of those drugs.
01:24Tragically, Alaska's rate of overdose deaths is continuing to rise because of fentanyl
01:29flooding into Alaska coming through our southern border.
01:33Recently, troopers based out of the airport seized over 4,600 potential fatal overdoses
01:40of fentanyl-laced counterfeit pills for a small western Alaska village of less than
01:461,000 residents.
01:48That was enough fentanyl to kill every man, woman, and child in that community four times
01:54over.
01:55Recently, in the past month, our Alaska State Troopers and Task Force officers at the airport
02:00have seized over 50 pounds of drugs in one month, coming into our state.
02:06Last year, Alaska law enforcement seized almost 42 million potential fatal doses of fentanyl
02:11across the state.
02:12Yet, tragically, we still lost 342 Alaskans to overdose deaths in 2023.
02:19HB 66 will allow law enforcement to hold those who are killing Alaskans accountable for the
02:25destruction that they are causing and the valuable lives that they are taking.
02:30Your Alaska State Troopers will continue to be committed to working with our local, state,
02:37and federal law enforcement partners to aggressively dismantle and disrupt drug trafficking organizations
02:42across the state.
02:44And again, I really appreciate everybody here, especially our legislators, because they've
02:51done nothing but support the Alaska State Troopers and Department of Public Safety.
02:56With that said, I'd like to bring up Alaska Attorney General Trigg-Haley.
02:59Thank you, Commissioner Cockerell, it's my pleasure to be here today.
03:11I love press conferences where I'm able to smile because we've been able to accomplish
03:15something here that's going to help law enforcement, it's going to help crime victims.
03:20The Terminus Crime Bill that we're here to sign today, or the governor will sign today,
03:25represents a lot of hard work from a lot of different individuals, including concerned
03:29members of our community, crime victims, members of the legislature, and many public servants
03:34in the executive branch under the leadership of our governor, Dunleavy.
03:38There are many parts to this legislation, so I wanted to just give a high-level overview
03:43of some of those parts.
03:45First, Commissioner Cockerell already spoke about raising the stakes for those that push
03:50drugs in our communities.
03:52Drug dealers will now be facing charges of murder in the secondary when a buyer overdoses.
03:58The bill also clarifies sex trafficking laws and creates a new audience of being a patron
04:03of a victim of sex trafficking.
04:07It creates a new crime of assault in the presence of a child charged when a person engages in
04:13domestic violence or sex assault, and there's a child present in the dwelling.
04:19The bill increases the penalty for stalkers who continue to stalk after a protective order
04:25is issued.
04:26It ensures appropriate sentencing for violating multiple conditions of release.
04:31It requires sex offenders coming from other states to register in Alaska and to provide
04:36additional information that will help protect our communities.
04:40The bill will also provide victims of certain crimes additional information designed to
04:44help keep them safe.
04:46It expands our involuntary commitment law, which comes into play when a person has been
04:51found incompetent to stand trial for criminal charges, and it provides a mechanism for making
04:57sure a person has an order for involuntary commitment before they are taken into custody
05:02by law enforcement.
05:04And finally, it protects survivors of crime from having to unnecessarily appear before
05:09a grand jury and relive their attack.
05:12They can now wait until trial to provide their testimony.
05:16I am proud of this legislation, and firmly believe that it does make Alaska a safer and
05:22better place to live and to raise our families.
05:25Thank you.
05:26With that, I'll turn the time over to the Governor of Alaska, Mike Dunlap.
05:31Well, first of all, thank you all for being here today.
05:40This is an important milestone for the state of Alaska.
05:43I want to thank all these folks behind me, too, who are on the front lines and have to
05:47deal with the issues of crime here in the state of Alaska.
05:51I want to thank all of you in the audience.
05:53I see a lot of folks that, unfortunately for us, have been touched by crime.
05:58I don't think there's a person I know in Alaska that hasn't been touched by crime in one form
06:01or another.
06:02And the last couple of months, I've had to make some forays out of the state of Alaska
06:07and go to other cities, both in North America and in the United States, for business.
06:14And, you know, as awful as some of our statistics are that we're working on, and we're getting
06:20better at it, there are places in this country that literally have no-go zones.
06:26Very dangerous places.
06:29And it's just a reminder to me that we have a lot of work to do in Alaska, but there's
06:33a lot of work that needs to be done across this country.
06:36And I want to thank everyone that's been involved in putting this together.
06:42Shregg had mentioned what was the components of this bill, again, by closing loopholes
06:47and narrowing in on the fentanyl crisis, and making the road to justice easier for those
06:53who are victims of sex crimes.
06:57The legislation marks a significant milestone in our ongoing commitment to public safety.
07:01Alaska, unfortunately, we suffer one of the highest statistical, I guess, unfortunately,
07:10milestones of having a high domestic abuse situation, as well as sex abuse of children.
07:19And we are constantly affecting that through legislation, regulation, and budgets.
07:26And again, I want to thank everyone for putting a focus on the most vulnerable of our Alaskans.
07:33We need to keep doing that until we actually see a cultural shift, a driving down of those
07:39crime rates, because, quite frankly, I don't think any of us are proud of them.
07:44And it's the motivation to do better.
07:47So as was mentioned, this bill closes sex offender loopholes, and if you're convicted
07:54of a sex crime outside of Alaska, you have to register now as a sex offender if you're
07:58residing here in Alaska.
08:00There was a loophole there.
08:01It does make it a second-degree murder to knowingly manufacture or deliver certain controlled
08:08substances, and a person dies as a direct result of that action.
08:16So many of Alaskans, so many Americans have been touched by the fentanyl crisis, the opiate
08:22crisis, and other drug crises that we've had to deal with.
08:27And for anyone to consciously say, we don't care, the profit motive is all that matters,
08:38we don't care who the victims are, we don't care how many people die, we don't care how
08:43many kids are impacted, we don't care about how many accidental poisonings there are,
08:49we're going to remind them that they better start caring.
08:52Because if they don't care, they're going to be charged with second-degree murder.
08:55And there's a lot of us that have had conversations about increasing the penalties for this,
08:59because this is so important.
09:01As I mentioned earlier, we've all been impacted by crime, we know people that have been impacted
09:05by crime, but this crisis, not just in Alaska, but across this country, is truly a man-made
09:11crisis, as crime is.
09:12But this one has caused so much pain and anguish in the state of Alaska.
09:21Adds a new crime for assault in the presence of a child.
09:27Adds to the crime of stalking when a stalking or sexual assault protective order is violated.
09:33Adds to the crime of human trafficking when a person is induced to engage in adult entertainment
09:40or labor.
09:42Changes the term child pornography to child sexual abuse material, to reflect the heinous
09:47crime and traumatic impact this has on children.
09:52Expands the definition of a sexual felony to include a patron of a victim of sex trafficking.
09:59Expands the definition of domestic violence to include interference with a report of domestic
10:03violence.
10:05Changes grand jury process to decrease trauma for victims by allowing key witnesses, typically
10:10the officer in the case, to summarize the testimony of other witnesses.
10:14This has been a tough one, especially when you're dealing with children, especially when
10:19you're dealing with victims of this type of crime.
10:25As I mentioned, I want to thank everyone.
10:26There's an individual that's not here today, Representative Craig Johnson, who was instrumental
10:32as well as a number of folks here in getting this bill passed.
10:36And bills like this are not easy, because there's a lot of different viewpoints of
10:40what a bill should look like at the end.
10:42But again, I think what we have here is we've moved Alaska forward, and what we're going
10:48to do is get right back to work here probably next week on looking at all the bills and
10:52regulations and loopholes that we have and making it even a better place for Alaska.
10:57So Representative Johnson, we met at the beginning of the 2023 legislative session to talk about
11:02crime, and it quickly became evident how personally important it was to him—again,
11:06all of us have been impacted by crime, and some more so than others—to address the
11:10fentanyl crisis.
11:12And I'd just like to take a moment for all of us to recognize the families and victims
11:20who have lost loved ones to the overdose crisis, the fentanyl crisis, and if we could just
11:27take a moment and just think about that, because there's a number of folks here today that
11:31have either been directly impacted or know people that have.
11:49And then finally, I'm going to turn this over to Deputy Attorney General John Skidmore to
11:56get into some detail.
11:59But again, I want to thank everyone for being part of this, and there are people that couldn't
12:03be here today that were part of this.
12:06And I look forward to working with each and every one of you on making Alaska a much safer
12:11place than it is.
12:12We've got a lot of work to do.
12:14But anyway, John.
12:15HB 66 makes Alaska a safer place.
12:37That's the bottom line.
12:39It makes it a safer place, and it gives victims all across the state a greater voice in the
12:45criminal justice system.
12:47It gives them that voice by allowing them to more actively participate when there are
12:52individuals charged with crimes, and there's a civil commitment because a person can't
12:57be charged, can't be held criminally accountable because they're found incompetent.
13:02It gives victims a greater voice and greater protections by allowing us, the prosecutors,
13:07to not have to re-traumatize them by calling them mere days after they've been victimized,
13:13sometimes suffering one of the worst days of their life, into grand jury, to retell
13:18that story, that horrible account of what happened to them, to 12 to 18 complete strangers.
13:24And instead, this bill brings us in Alaska in line with over 30 other jurisdictions,
13:31including the federal government, by allowing prosecutors to simply call the hardworking
13:36men and women that you see behind us here, law enforcement officers, to summarize their
13:42investigation and to present to the grand jury the information that says that somebody
13:47should be held accountable.
13:49These are monumental changes for us, and something that each and every one of us should be proud
13:53of.
13:54It won't take effect until January of 2025.
13:58That's to allow us to have time to train and to prepare all those within the criminal justice
14:03system for these significant changes that will be coming forward.
14:09It is also something that I would echo the comments of the Governor on.
14:15This is not something that comes to fruition because of the efforts of one person or two
14:20people.
14:21This is truly a team effort.
14:24There are so many of you in the audience that I had the pleasure of working with throughout
14:28this last legislative session to try and help bring this forward.
14:32The number of people there are to thank, I don't think I could list them all right now,
14:36but I do want to highlight just a couple of folks.
14:39Where I'd like to start is I'd like to start by thanking Governor Dunleavy.
14:43It is his leadership on public safety that has allowed us to pursue these issues, and
14:48it's that leadership and support that has made our state a safer place, that has resulted
14:53in us having the lowest crime rates in the last 40 years.
14:58Let me say that again.
15:00The lowest crime rates in the last 40 years.
15:03It is under his leadership that we've been able to achieve that.
15:07Bringing together a bill like this is not possible without the help and support of those
15:21in the legislature.
15:22There are individuals from the legislature here today.
15:25If I were to call out any of them, the few people that I would call out immediately would
15:29be Senator Matt Klayman, who will have a chance to speak to me.
15:32He's the chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
15:34He took great strides to bring together multiple different pieces of legislation to provide
15:39us with the bill that we have in front of us today, and I want to thank him for those
15:43efforts.
15:44I want to thank Craig Johnson's staff, Patricia Babcock, who is here and played a tremendous
15:49role in working behind the scenes to help bring all of this together.
15:53She deserves our thanks.
16:02All of the House Majority Caucus and the Senate Majority Caucus played key and significant
16:06roles in helping us, but of course, we can't get to any of these places without the voices
16:12of the victims and the advocates.
16:15Brenda Stanfield, Lori Morton, Angela Harris, and Sandy Snodgrass were all victims or victim
16:23advocates who were instrumental in sharing their voices and helping to galvanize our
16:28elected leaders to take this very important and positive step.
16:33And last but not least, I would be remiss if I didn't say my personal thanks to those
16:39that I worked most closely with in my department.
16:42The Criminal Division Director, Angie Kemp, stepped in at multiple times to help move
16:46this piece of legislation forward when I was unavailable.
16:49Casey Schroeder helped to draft it and is the expert in all things for the legislature
16:55for our department.
16:56And her support from Katie, who is a new person that's come to join us in the last year,
17:03was an intern with us before.
17:05She has a very bright beginning, and I'm pleased that she could be here to see this celebration
17:10as we move forward.
17:12I want to thank everyone for their work on this, and at this point, I'll turn the floor
17:16and the microphone over to Senator Matt Klayman, the Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
17:31Good morning.
17:32I'm Senator Matt Klayman, Chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee.
17:36And as we sometimes say, welcome to Senate District H. More people come through this
17:41district than any other district in the state, because it's the airport.
17:46Governor Dunleavy, thank you for the opportunity to speak today.
17:50It is an honor to be here with you all.
17:52Thank you for signing this essential piece of legislation.
17:56This legislation began with the shocking news in February 2022 that a man had stabbed Angela
18:01Harris in the back while she was returning books at the Loussac Library.
18:06The man who attacked Angela had attacked two women just weeks before, and they had dismissed
18:11the charges against the man because he was incompetent to stand trial.
18:17The attack on Angela Harris highlighted a gap in our justice system.
18:21We introduced Senate Bill 53, which is part of this legislation, to close that gap.
18:28Thank you, Angela.
18:30You were a fierce and courageous advocate.
18:33Coming to Juneau again and again, sharing your story with legislators and Governor Dunleavy,
18:40you testified before every committee that heard Senate Bill 53.
18:43I know it wasn't easy, but we couldn't have made it here without you.
18:52You never gave up, and your passion made sure that we did not give up.
19:08With the Governor signing this essential piece of legislation, dangerous individuals
19:12who are incompetent to stand trial will be held and evaluated for involuntary commitment.
19:18Victims of crime will now have the right to attend involuntary commitment hearings of
19:24those who attacked them, and they will have the right to know the status of those involuntary
19:28commitment proceedings going forward.
19:31This legislation will help protect all Alaskans.
19:37Another important feature of House Bill 66 are the sex trafficking changes.
19:42The bill has a detailed definition of include inducing and causing a person to engage in
19:47commercial sexual conduct, and it establishes a new offense of being a patron of a victim
19:53of sex trafficking.
19:55With this legislation, Alaska is taking important steps to address human trafficking and sex
20:00trafficking in our state.
20:02The last component I want to highlight are changes to the rules of criminal procedure
20:07to allow public safety officers to present hearsay statements of crime victims to the
20:12grand jury.
20:14The court rules in 37 of our sister states allow grand jury hearsay.
20:20So do the federal rules.
20:22So let's look very briefly at a little data.
20:25The FBI publishes uniform crime statistics for every state in the Union dating back to
20:30the early 1980s.
20:33Looking at the graph, it compares Alaska's per capita rape rate with the national rape
20:38rate over time.
20:40We have been two to three times the national rate for over 40 years.
20:47Currently, Alaska has a per capita rape rate of 134, the highest in the nation.
20:55The national average is 40.
20:57Alaska is over three times the national average.
21:01By comparison, Washington, our closest neighbor, has a rape rate of 39.2, just under the national
21:07average, and much lower than Alaska.
21:11The four states with the lowest rape rates are New Jersey, Connecticut, Delaware, and
21:16Massachusetts, all well below the national average.
21:20I believe we must all be challenged by this unacceptable disparity.
21:26The policy changes that we have tried over the decades to try and address sexual violence
21:30in our state have not made meaningful changes.
21:33And we know from victimization surveys, and across the nation and in Alaska, that crimes
21:39of sexual violence are underreported.
21:42So we must do better.
21:45One step is to make the criminal justice system more accessible and more trustworthy for victims
21:50of rape and other crimes of sexual violence.
21:53And that's part of why, in 1994, we added victims' rights as an amendment to the Alaska
21:59Constitution.
22:01You might ask, what do Washington and the other four states I referenced with the lowest
22:06rape rates have in common?
22:08They all permit police officers to provide hearsay testimony of crime victims to the
22:13grand jury.
22:14The crime data and common sense tell us we should do the same thing.
22:19That's why House Bill 66 changes the court rule to allow grand jury hearsay.
22:26By allowing peace officers to present a victim's hearsay statements to the grand jury, we're
22:31telling victims that we hear them, and we're working to minimize the trauma that they experience
22:37while seeking justice.
22:40The Alaska Network on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault and other activist groups support
22:45this feature.
22:47They support helping victims of rape and child sexual abuse to avoid re-experiencing and
22:52reliving their trauma when they testify to a grand jury.
22:57Yes, there is more work to be done.
23:00And it will take more than this change to the court rules about hearsay testimony to
23:04grand juries.
23:06But I am confident that this change in House Bill 66 will improve the relationship that
23:11victims have with our criminal justice system.
23:14And it will lead to safer communities all across Alaska.
23:19In closing, House Bill 66 makes important progress in our work to improve public safety
23:25and make wise use of our public safety resources.
23:29It reflects collaborative work with the House, the Senate, the courts, the Department of
23:34Law, and the executive branch.
23:36So Governor, thank you very much, and thank you again for signing this bill into law today.
23:41And last, Angela, I want to thank you for your fierce and courageous work on this legislation.
23:48And I'd ask you to come forward now with your remarks.
24:11Thank you.
24:28You're doing great.
24:36Thank you.
24:38When the DA said my assailant could have murdered me and still walked the streets freely due
24:55to his incompetence and inability to be restored, I knew change needed to be made.
25:03Senator Klayman, I appreciate you and your staff for allowing me to share my story and
25:07efforts to bring necessary change.
25:11There are many of you in and out of this room who work together to incorporate SB 53 into
25:18HB 66, and for that I'm eternally grateful.
25:23I pray that this is just the beginning of providing assistance with mentally ill persons
25:29who are a threat in our state.
25:32Thank you.
25:34Now we'll hear from Sandy.
26:02My name is Sandy Snodgrass.
26:03I'm the Director of AK Fentanyl Response.
26:07More importantly, I'm Bruce's mother.
26:10Thank you, Governor Dunleavy, for asking me to speak today.
26:14When my only child Bruce Snodgrass was a victim of a drug-induced homicide on October 26,
26:222021, here in Anchorage, law enforcement and prosecutors did not have the option to file
26:30second-degree murder charges.
26:33Bruce, only 22 years old, unknowingly received fentanyl and tragically died where he stood.
26:41This happened within shouting distance of help, in a wooded area behind a Wells Fargo
26:46drive-thru and a McDonald's drive-thru, beside the car's grocery store on Boniface and DeBar
26:54Road.
26:55His body was discovered two days later by a dog walker.
27:01No one has been arrested, charged, or convicted for his murder.
27:09Today marks the culmination of two years of hard work of many dedicated individuals with
27:14the signing of House Bill 66.
27:17This law will bring justice to families who have lost loved ones and will help prevent
27:22further loss of life by stopping individuals who are dealing poison to our people.
27:29This law will prevent drug dealers from being released back into our communities to continue
27:33victimizing Alaskans with their poison.
27:37This law will save lives.
27:41There are individuals who knowingly sell fentanyl and tell their customers, this is fentanyl,
27:48make sure you have naloxone when you use this so you don't die.
27:55When a death occurs under these circumstances, that dealer most assuredly is guilty of second
28:01degree murder and needs to be removed from our society to prevent them from continuing
28:06to poison Alaskans.
28:11This law is an important tool in our toolbox to combat the scourge that fentanyl is wreaking
28:17on our state.
28:19However it's only one tool.
28:22We need all the tools we can get to fight against fentanyl effectively.
28:28We must hold drug dealers accountable for their actions.
28:33These individuals are not just selling drugs, they're selling death.
28:40Fentanyl is a lethal substance that can kill in minuscule amounts.
28:46And those who distribute it are fully aware of its deadly potential.
28:53By holding these dealers accountable, we're sending a clear message that our community
28:57will not tolerate reckless endangerment of our citizens.
29:05Moreover, the ripple effect of a single fentanyl death is devastating.
29:14Families are torn apart and communities are left grappling with the aftermath.
29:21The emotional, psychological, and financial toll on families is immeasurable.
29:26No parent should have to experience the pain of losing a child to such a preventable cause.
29:36By enforcing stringent penalties, we can deter others from engaging in this deadly trade.
29:44Drug dealers often target vulnerable populations, preying on individuals struggling with addiction,
29:53mental health issues, and economic hardships.
29:57By removing these predatory dealers from our streets, we're protecting our most vulnerable
30:03citizens and giving them a chance to seek help and recovery without the constant threat
30:13of this deadly substance being pushed on them.
30:17Furthermore, holding drug dealers accountable is a matter of public safety.
30:23Fentanyl poses a significant risk not only to the users, but also to the first responders
30:29and the law enforcement officers who may be inadvertently come in contact with it.
30:36By cracking down on those who distribute fentanyl, we're reducing the risk to everyone in the community.
30:45We need comprehensive education, prevention programs to inform youth and the public about
30:52the dangers of fentanyl and other opioids.
30:56We need to increase support for addiction treatment and recovery services to help those
31:02struggling to break from the cycle of addiction.
31:06And we need to continue to collaborate between law enforcement, public health officials,
31:12and community organizations to create a united front against this epidemic.
31:19In conclusion, the signing of HB66 is a monumental step forward in our fight against fentanyl.
31:26It honors the memory of those we have lost, including my beloved son, Bruce.
31:33And it represents our commitment to protecting our community from further tragedy.
31:39Let us continue to work together, using every tool at our disposal, to combat the fentanyl
31:46crisis and save lives.
31:49Thank you.
31:50So before we sign the bill, and we're going to have folks come up here and gather around,
32:08because I think this is a very important occasion, it's another benchmark, again, Flasca.
32:14I just want to sort of close before we do the signing, but public safety is job number
32:23one for any executive anywhere in the world, and it has been throughout history.
32:28If you can't provide a safe place for our most vulnerable, our kids, our elders, and
32:36society as a whole, then you've failed.
32:39And so, as I mentioned earlier, the crime statistics are a real motivator, I think,
32:44for all of us, to continually, continually, continually make this a better place.
32:49I think Alaska is the greatest state in the country, it's got incredible potential, it's
32:52the greatest country in the world, the United States, and for 350 million people in this
32:57country, with the form of government that we have, where there's a lot of freedoms
33:02and we have to protect those freedoms, but the expectation is that every American and
33:07every Alaskan has the right to be able to go to their job, be safe in their house, be
33:13safe in their car, their kids are safe, I mean, that is a cornerstone for any effective
33:18government anywhere on the planet.
33:21So our commitment to the people of Alaska, with the help of the great people behind me
33:25and a number of amazing people here in the audience, is to continually take a look at
33:31our system, continue to look at how we can help people, and how we can prevent tragedies,
33:38a number of which we ourselves have experienced, and many here in the audience have.
33:44And so, I just want to thank everyone for being here today.
33:47What we're going to do is, I'm going to have some of my staff bring up some folks
33:51here that were very, very significant, both in being impacted by crime, but also significant
34:00in their work at making this a better place.
34:03So with that, if we can start getting some folks up here and getting around, we can get
34:08to the point of signing this bill.
34:09Once the bill is signed, it's the law of the land here in the state of Alaska.
34:14So I'm going to ask Laura and her staff and others to bring some folks up here.
34:26I think what we'll do, I'm going to have you stand there.
34:34I think we'll have Angela there, have you stand over here.
34:41Is anybody the techie guy that can unplug this for a moment so we can move this out
34:44of the way?
34:45Do we have a techie person here?
34:49Here's a...
35:03Not just the commissioner.
35:05I have a connection down here.
35:19I'm going to have you stand over here.
35:29I'm going to have you stand over here.
35:35I'm going to have you stand over here.
35:41I'm going to have you stand over here.
35:43I'm going to have you stand over here.
35:53I'm going to have you stand over here.
35:59I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:03I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:07I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:09I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:15I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:21I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:25I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:29I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:33I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:35I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:39I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:43I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:47I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:51I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:55I'm going to have you stand over here.
36:59I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:02I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:06I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:10I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:14I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:18I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:22I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:26I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:28I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:32I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:36I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:40I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:44I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:48I'm going to have you stand over here.
37:52I'm going to have you stand over here.

Recommended