Former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin is set to be sentenced today for the murder of George Floyd. Chauvin was found guilty in April for second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter. The death of George Floyd last summer sparked protests across the U.S. demanding police reform and ending systemic racism. The debate continues to shift today on how we reform police departments across the country as crime in major cities continues to rise. Bill Bratton is a former police commissioner of Boston, New York and Los Angeles and author of a new book “The Profession.” He joins today and weighs in on the debate about the future of policing.
On Monday June 21st, the Supreme Court passed down a unanimous decision, ruling that the NCAA cannot limit the amount of education-related monetary benefits colleges could offer recruited athletes. As of right now student athletes cannot be paid. However in his decision, Justice Brett Kavanaugh wrote he has serious questions about NCAA restrictions on player compensation and NCAA President Mark Emmert has implored schools to pass reforms to allow student athletes to make money off their name and image. Founder of Outkick.com and Fox News Sports Contributor Clay Travis joins to explain what this court case means for the future of college sports, the issues that could arise from universities compensating student athletes and he addresses the NFL’s Carl Nassib news and MLB’s sticky substance crackdown.
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Plus, commentary by FOX News contributor Joe Concha.