livingston
20×102mm Vulcan
Katie Couric has described how two of her producers were hit by a 'urine bomb' while she was covering the protests in Charlottesville last week.
The broadcast journalist, 60, was filming the violent Virginia rally as part of a six-hour documentary series she is working on for National Geographic.
Couric wrote an op-ed that was published Friday by the outlet as a way for her to 'reflect on her experiences'.
In the op-ed titled 'Being in Charlottesville Broke My Heart. It Also Filled Me With Hope', Couric said two of her producers were splashed with a mixture of mud and urine.
'Observing the rising battle of protest chants, two of my producers were standing on an elevated edge of the park when suddenly they were doused with a concoction of human urine and mud,' Couric wrote
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4806282/Katie-Couric-producers-sprayed-urine-Charlottesville.html#ixzz4qNvVnoHx
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
I know it is not Durham but it shows what the left is using in their protests
Gassing, also known as chucking, is prison slang for the act of throwing feces or some other bodily fluid such as urine, blood or saliva at a jail or prison staff member.[1]
Gassing is an act of rebellion by inmates against custodial staff and is a felony in most U.S. states.
Victims of gassing are encouraged to undertake medical testing for possible infectious diseases. Gassing may occur spontaneously – such as when an inmate spits in the face of a correctional officer – or in a planned encounter – such as when an inmate mixes urine or feces with another liquid substance and throws it at a staff member when given the chance. In the state of California, for example, since 1998 a conviction for gassing has carried a sentence of up to five years segregation in prison.
The broadcast journalist, 60, was filming the violent Virginia rally as part of a six-hour documentary series she is working on for National Geographic.
Couric wrote an op-ed that was published Friday by the outlet as a way for her to 'reflect on her experiences'.
In the op-ed titled 'Being in Charlottesville Broke My Heart. It Also Filled Me With Hope', Couric said two of her producers were splashed with a mixture of mud and urine.
'Observing the rising battle of protest chants, two of my producers were standing on an elevated edge of the park when suddenly they were doused with a concoction of human urine and mud,' Couric wrote
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4806282/Katie-Couric-producers-sprayed-urine-Charlottesville.html#ixzz4qNvVnoHx
Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
I know it is not Durham but it shows what the left is using in their protests
Gassing, also known as chucking, is prison slang for the act of throwing feces or some other bodily fluid such as urine, blood or saliva at a jail or prison staff member.[1]
Gassing is an act of rebellion by inmates against custodial staff and is a felony in most U.S. states.
Victims of gassing are encouraged to undertake medical testing for possible infectious diseases. Gassing may occur spontaneously – such as when an inmate spits in the face of a correctional officer – or in a planned encounter – such as when an inmate mixes urine or feces with another liquid substance and throws it at a staff member when given the chance. In the state of California, for example, since 1998 a conviction for gassing has carried a sentence of up to five years segregation in prison.
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