Where can I find transcripts or video recordings of David Gentile interviews?
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Executive summary
You can find video clips of David Gentile-related interviews and TV segments on major news outlets’ sites and their video sections — for example CNN posted a segment with a victim responding to Gentile’s commutation [1] and that clip was picked up and summarized by Raw Story [2]. Print outlets that covered Gentile’s commutation — The New York Times, BBC, Politico, NBC, USA Today, Bloomberg and Axios — published reporting that links to or describes broadcast interviews and statements from victims, prosecutors and the White House that you can follow for recorded material [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] [9].
1. Where to start: broadcast-video pages of major networks
Network news shows that covered the commutation are the most direct route to recorded interviews. CNN produced video segments about victims reacting to Gentile’s release and hosts (for example “The Lead” with Jake Tapper) ran guests who spoke on-camera; CNN’s video page carries the clip referenced in reporting [1] and a separate outlet republished its screenshots and highlights [2]. NBC News likewise reported on the commutation and typically hosts full interview clips on its site and YouTube channel [6]. Use those network program pages and YouTube channels to find full interviews and shorter clips.
2. Use newspaper packages and their multimedia embeds
National outlets that covered the story bundled statement excerpts, prosecutor comments and embedded video or links to broadcasts. The New York Times’ coverage of Gentile’s commutation includes reporting that cites courtroom and victim interviews and is a useful entry point to locate quoted broadcast material and named programs where interviews aired [3] [10]. BBC and Bloomberg articles also summarize TV reporting and often embed or link to relevant video segments [4] [8].
3. Follow court and White House briefings referenced in coverage
Several reports quote White House press briefings and prosecutors’ statements that were delivered on the record and recorded by press outlets. Politico and USA TODAY cite remarks by White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt and other administration figures about Gentile’s case; those briefings are usually available as video on official White House channels and on media sites that covered the briefing in real time [5] [7]. If you are seeking the original on-camera exchanges, look for the briefing date in those articles and then search White House video archives and network live-coverage pages.
4. Victim interviews: primary video sources and republishing
Victims’ on-air reactions — often the most direct interview footage — were broadcast on shows like CNN’s “The Lead” and quoted or clipped by Newsweek, Raw Story and local outlets [1] [2] [11]. Those broadcast segments are the place to find raw interview footage with victims such as CarolAnn Tutera. Search the program episode for the date cited in network articles and check the outlet’s video or “watch” page for the full segment.
5. Aggregators and business press for longer-form interviews
Business and specialty outlets that covered GPB Capital and Gentile’s trial — Bloomberg, Axios and Automotive News among them — ran both short news videos and longer explainer pieces; Bloomberg in particular often posts recorded interviews with reporters and analysts that provide context on the case [8] [9] [12]. Those publishers’ websites and YouTube channels are good places to find longer-form interviews about Gentile’s business dealings and trial.
6. What the available sources don’t mention
Available sources do not mention a single, centralized transcript repository for all David Gentile interviews. They do not list a dedicated transcript for every broadcast appearance; if you need verbatim text, the safest path is to request transcripts directly from the network that aired the segment or use closed-caption files on video platforms, which major outlets often provide (not found in current reporting).
7. Practical search steps and preservation tips
Search the network program name + date + “Gentile” (for example “The Lead Jake Tapper Gentile Dec 3 2025”) and check the video/watch sections of CNN, NBC, BBC, Bloomberg, NYT and local affiliates cited in reporting [1] [6] [4] [8] [3]. For transcripts, look for transcript pages on network sites or download closed captions from the video player; when you find a clip, note its publication date to cross-check against the articles that cite the same segment [1] [2] [3].
Limitations: my synthesis relies only on the provided reporting; these sources document several TV segments and press briefings but do not catalog every interview or provide a single transcript archive [1] [3] [5]. For complete transcripts, contact the specific network or use their caption files referenced in the video player (available sources do not mention a universal transcript source).