-Yes, the woman with exposed abdomen was Heather Heyer. You seemed unsure in your video whether that's her. It is.
-Question: Do you have a timestamp for this footage you released / have you attempted to sync it to anything else? What fascinates me is that you actually have an occupant in the maroon van at 3:44 into this. It seems like the one thing none of us can figure out is what was going on with that car (why presumably she exited at some point and left the car there).
-You're questioning why a) People were screaming "medic" even in spite of police being there. b) Why people covered cameras.
Answers: a) At the time, I estimated 16 people were hurt. It was reportedly 19, plus Ms Heyer. Anyway, the scene was chaotic and bloody, and people were screaming for help for the people they were next to. Police weren't even remotely close to sufficiently providing first aid. Street medics, who I often say "Are good for handing out granola bars and water bottles but not at saving lives," attempted CPR on HH before cops showed up. It was a while until professionals were at every injured person.
b) People with cameras were crowding around the images to get shots. I actually see myself in this video you've shared going back to the sidewalk to make room, where I remain most of the time. Most journalists did that after people covered cameras and screamed for them to leave. The perception was they were distracting from and blocking first aid.
-Regarding my camera setup: You still seem confused about how it works. The livestream is 100% from an iPhone. If you have one, take it out and "go live" on Facebook. There's a button you can press to switch between in front of you and selfie mode. Every iPhone has this. It's not switching between two full cameras, it's switching between the two directions on the iPhone.
My studio type camera footage is already online, here:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e72XcJXNYm4I can make an unlisted version that has every single clip back to back without cuts if it's helpful, but this basically shows everything I found usable and posted ASAP (I got home on the 13th). That camera has a finite amount of battery (the iPhone is effectively infinite since I have a battery pack constantly charging it, which is why you usually see a wire between me and the phone) and data (a bit less than four hours can be recorded between two cards. I didn't bring a computer to Cville, so I had to effectively only record 4 hours the whole three days I was there). So needless to say, I only filmed on that when something important was happening (fighting, the car crash aftermath, etc). The livestream would get everything though, even totally extraneous crap like me drinking water. Obviously I didn't film the vehicles that later became relevant on Water Street because I had no idea they'd become relevant, and I only got my camera on and running in the crash aftermath as early as you see in that YT link above.
Regarding a conversation: Needless to say, it would have to be live somehow. That said, your rule about essentially removing all context from the day (I filmed august 11th to 13th and you're focused on 8 minutes) seems dangerous. Here's why: The crux of your accusations surrounds me stopping to drink water. The context, that I literally am seen on video running around since 9:30am, pepper sprayed and on hardly any water or breaks, is really important. If I'd known the fact that a woman would die soon after my drink of water blocks away, I'd obviously have wanted to get to that scene. If I'd started filming for the day in the afternoon, I'd follow around activists. Ignoring this context is silly. If you're serious about dismissing it, please find in my several livestreams that day examples of me drinking sufficient water, ever eating food (I hadn't eaten at all until well after the crash), or ever passing a source of water and passing it up. It's a fools errand.
Regarding footage to the FBI, actually, everything I gave them is online. I initiated a conversation by calling them to alert them to two things and was asked to submit on their portal. I actually just sent links. I alerted them to two incidents: The Challenger seven minutes before the attack, which was only on my livestream, and the guy who pulled a gun on the crowd, which I referred them to a livestream showing it and linked them to the raw video. Here's their portal
https://tips.fbi.gov/digitalmedia/8b8abd1ef31b408Someone else from there called me back and I emailed links to these things as well as putting it through the portal. The guy who pulled the gun was actually arrested last Saturday, he actually shot at somebody later in the day.