A surveillance video captured the moment a motorcycle rider and passenger crashed into a car that had pulled into busy traffic in Temple Hills, Maryland. POLL: What scares you the most? Both the rider and the passenger of the motorcycle were taken to a local hospital and are expected to survive. The Prince George's County Police Department said they are looking for the driver of the white sedan that caused the accident about 2:30 p.m. Monday. The collision was captured on a Ring security camera. The video shows the white sedan pulling into traffic and forcing a car in the first lane to stop. As it pulls into the second lane to try to make a left turn, the motorcycle plows into it and the rider and passenger are sent sailing over the car. The resulting collision was so forceful that one of the red shoes of the victims can be seen flying off and landing many yards away in the parking lot. Although the white sedan paused for a second after the collision, the driver flees the scene as bystanders go to help the victims. "I turned around, and I just saw bodies going up in the air," said Daniel Rush, part-owner of the mattress store near the scene of the accident. The video came from the mattress store's Ring camera. Rush said that many people ran out to help the victims of the accident. "There's an accident here every couple of weeks. You've got a sign right there that is blocking people's view that's trying to get out," he explained. Police said the crash is still under investigation as they seek the hit-and-run driver. Here's the video of the Ring security video:

On Thursday night, CNN host Chris Cuomo dedicated a short segment on “Cuomo Prime Time” to apologize for advising his brother, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo, on sexual harassment allegations made by a number of former staffers.

“If you would, allow me a moment. If you’ll remember, I told you back in the beginning of March, I can’t cover my brother’s troubles. It wouldn’t be fair. And you got it then, and I appreciate you understanding. Now today, there are stories out there about me offering my brother advice. Of course I do. This is no revelation,” he explained. “I’ve said it publicly and I certainly have never hidden it. I can be objective about just about any topic, but not about my family. Those of you who watch this show get it. Like you, I bet, my family means everything to me and I’m fiercely loyal to them. I’m family first, job second.”“But being a journalist and a brother to a politician is unique and a unique challenge, and I have a unique responsibility to balance those roles. It’s not always easy,” the CNN host said. “People can say and write what they want, but I want you to know the truth.”

According to the CNN host, he “understand[s]” why the network was put in a difficult situation when he was “looped into calls” with Andrew Cuomo’s advisors and staff. He vowed the incident “will not happen again.”

“It was a mistake because I put my colleagues here, who I believe are the best in the business, in a bad spot,” Cuomo explained. “I never intended for that. I would never intend for that. And I am sorry for that.”The CNN host went on to say he purposefully doesn’t cover the allegations made against his brother.

“I’ve never tried to influence this network’s coverage of my brother,” he explained. “In fact, I’ve been walled off from it.”

Cuomo said he knows where “the line” is and how he can manage his professionalism while also being there for his family.

“I have to do that. I love my brother. I love my family,” he said. “I love my job. And I love and respect my colleagues here at CNN.”

The CNN host ended the segment with one final apology to his viewers and colleagues.

“And again, to them [his colleagues], I’m truly sorry,” Cuomo stated. “You know who I am. You know what I’m about, and I want this to be said in public to you who give me the opportunity and to my colleagues who make me better at what I do.”

The apology comes after The Washington Post published an expose earlier in the day indicating that the CNN host participated in strategy calls with his brother’s communications specialists, lawyers, and at least one aide.

“Four sources familiar with the calls told the newspaper that Chris Cuomo advised his brother on how to handle the political fallout produced by the allegations. Chris reportedly told his brother to refuse to resign and strike a defiant pose, claiming he was standing up against ‘cancel culture,'” per a report from The Daily Wire. “The governor has said he will not step down from office and offered only the most formal of apologies to his accusers.”


 

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