Transcripts For CNN CNN Newsroom With Alisyn Camerota and Victor Blackwell 20240709

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hundreds of pages of documents can be handed over to the january 6th committee by tomorrow's deadline. >> and after lawmakers subpoenaed more than a dozen in trump's inner circle this week alone. they're focusing on those closest to former vice president mike pence. cnn's kara scannell is following the latest for us. it could be a game changer in the investigation, what we hear and see tomorrow. >> that's right, victor. as you said, the former president's lawyers have gone to a federal appeals court asking them to step in and briefly stop the national archives from turning over records to the house committee investigating january 6th. trump's lawyers, as you said, have been fighting this. they have lost. they're 0-2 in courts. that's why they're going to the appeals court and asking them to pause this release. the deadline is tomorrow. they have an agreement with the house for expedited briefing which means they could be fully briefed by early next week and the appeals court could rule on it. that has fast-tracked things somewhat if the appeals court takes this up. if not, the national archives could turn over these documents tomorrow. within these documents, former president trump says he wants to exert executive privilege over them. that includes white house visitor and call logs, drafts of speeches as well as three handwritten memos by trump's former chief of staff mark meadows. all of this very central and critical to january 6th. victor, alisyn. >> let's talk about mark meadows. it sounds like the committee is getting frustrated with him. it sound like they've been trying to negotiate or talk with him sense september. what's the status? >> we learned that he's informed the lawyers that president biden will not exert executive privilege over these documents they wanted. it brings us back to the same issue. meadows' attorney is saying this is before the courts. they'll let the courts decide. when the court does decide this matter, this whole delay by many allies of trump is because they're hanging on the issue of executive privilege. if the court rules that the former president can't assert it as the lower court has, we could see that defense break down very quickly. >> thank you so much. let's go to cnn legal and national security analyst, asha rang gap pa and cnn whouls correspondent john harwood. asha, first what we're learning about mark meadows. given the explanation we heard from jeffrey clark to the committee, i cannot and will not participate until this decision of executive privilege is decided. i'm going to come to you with the obvious question, any since what we heard from jeffrey clark a few days ago? >> maybe a notch more legitimacy than steve bannon because these were people who held positions and were giving advice. here is the deal, victor. the executive privilege exists to protect the core functions of the president, the office of the presidency, the official things that a president does, head of state, national security, these kinds of things. preventing the peaceful transfer of power is not a core function of the presidency. so beyond whether they qualify for the executive privilege as a threshold matter, the substance here is really potentially criminal activity, illegal activity which i can't imagine the privilege would cover regardless. this has been ground in attempt to delay the inevitable in my opinion. >> john, let's talk about what may be in the documents that we might see tomorrow if the appeals court doesn't stop it. one of the things that sounds innocuous is the visitor logs. what's the bombshell in the visitor logs that donald trump wants to get out? >> reporter: well, we'll find out when we get the information. you had a situation where donald trump was working with people both within the administration and outside the administration. remember that war room at the willard hotel, to plan for and anticipate the events of january 6th. we don't know the full extent to which president trump was involved in actually making the specific events of january 6th happen. but obviously he participated in the rally. his people were involved in setting up the rally. you had outside people like rudy giuliani and steve bannon operating out of the willard trying to foment this rebellion which steve bannon was forecasting on a radio show 24 hours before it lapd. happened. we don't know if he's specifically protecting these documents or would protect all documents. what we know about donald trump is, he doesn't care about the truth. he doesn't care about the law, and he doesn't care about american democracy. what he cares about is power. he's acting in a way to try to preserve that. that attitude filters down to people who worked for him in the white house, people in the republican party, voters out there, the most intense parts of his base. >> asha, we put up on the screen, handwritten notes, draft speeches. the judge said she would not look through these documents individually, would not second-guess the administration's decision here. is that relevant, that she didn't look through them on appeal? >> no. the appeal is based on -- the request for a stay pending the decision on the merits is really based on four factors. this is whether he's likely succeed on the merits, whether we'll suffer irreparable arm. the harm to the other party, in this case congress, if they do grant a stay, and the public interest. what the judge is saying here is executive privilege again is really about the interests of the office of the presidency and the person best suited to do that is a person sitting in the oval office which right now is president biden. what she was saying is i'm not going to second-guess the president by going through this document by document. but on the bigger issue, what trump is really arguing is kind of a crazy legal theory. if you remember the character pigpen from "peanuts" that had a cloud of dirt around him. >> i do, yes. >> trump is saying he has a cloud of executive power that follows him wherever he goes which is equal to or greater than the sitting president. he's very unlikely to succeed on that, and he doesn't have a personal interest in these documents. they're presidential documention, not personal documents. so it's really hard for him to show harm, whereas the harm to congress in not fulfilling its constitutional role is quite high. >> where is lucy in this story? >> so many questions about that analogy. the pigpen one i really get. it's quite visual. >> if the appeals court does step in in the next 24 hours and stops these from being released, what does the committee do next? >> the committee has got to president -- has apparently decided to go full bore as fast as they can on as many fronts as they can because they know all they're going to get from trump and his allies are resistance. they're trying, as you guys have indicated, to run out the clock. they know it is likely that democrats won't control the house and they're trying to gum up the works of this investigation. what the house committee is going to try to do is to get as many people. i think more importantly, because you can't necessarily count on the trump people to either provide information or provide truthful information, it's going to be the documentary evidence that i think is most likely that is emails, the logs we were talking about a minute ago, that is most likely to provide a -- furnish roadmap that would tell us exactly what happened and who participated in it. >> we'll see what happens in next 4 hours. asha rangappa, john harwood, thank you. kyle rittenhouse's defense team called a use of force expert to testify about each shot the team fired killing joseph rosenbaum and anthony huber. gaige groskreutz was also shot but survived. shimon prokupecz has more on that. >> reporter: initially yesterday the judge told the jury that he was thinking that the trial would end by monday or tuesday. today he came into court and said i was kind of confused about the day of the week. now i'm thinking this perhaps could wrap up tomorrow. what exactly that means is unclear. perhaps we would have closing arguments tomorrow. then he would send the jury home, charge them on the law and maybe deliberations would start on monday. it's not entirely clear. the defense is really pretty much wrapping up their part of their case and they could rest sometime this afternoon. they've called three witnesses. one of them, as you said, is a use-of-force witness talking about the sequence of events, the timing between the shots that kyle rittenhouse fired. there was a police officer that testified about shell casings that she herself found. finally, a witness on the stand who took some video. there's some issues about the video that he took. the other thing that's been happening in court, you can still feel and see the tension between the prosecutor and the judge over what happened yesterday. there was a brief exchange over an objection where the judge had something to say about the way the prosecutor was looking at him. take a listen. >> is there something that i'm saying that draws the face that you're making? go ahead, say what you want to say. >> i have to say, your lon or, yesterday i was the target of your eyre for disregarding your orders. today the defense is disregarding your order. i was under the court's eyre. >> i don't want to talk about -- >> i think it's a fundamental fairness issue. if i'm being held to obey the court's orders, i'm asking that the defense be held to that, too. >> i am going to interrupt you. i'm going to let you talk again. i was talking yesterday about the constitution of the united states and how the supreme court has interpreted it for 50 years. that's not what we're talking about here today. >> reporter: so really, guys, that was the only time that the prosecutor and the judge really addressed what happened yesterday. there's been no other mention of it. court is expected to resume shortly, and perhaps within the next few hours or so, the defense will rest their case. we may see a rebuttal for the prosecution and that would perhaps be it and we'd be set closing arguments perhaps as early as tomorrow. >> that dynamic between the judge and the pros kiert has been intriguing and exhausting i think to watch. >> reporter: the judge has been really interesting in all of this, right? >> on every level. shimon, thank you very much for all that reporting. let's bring in cnn legal analyst areva martin and civil rights attorney charles coleman. areva, can we take a 30,000-foot view here of what's happened in this trial? by that i mean the prosecutor dove in to such minutia yesterday that i think in some ways people watching lost the thread of, had kyle rittenhouse not brought an ar-15-style rifle top a protest, one he wasn't legally allowed to have, none of this would have happened. was the prosecutor leaning into that enough, or is there a legally relevant reason he wasn't? >> i think, alisyn, he did get lost in the weeds at certain points during his cross examination. overall i thought it was pretty effective. what he wanted to do is make the big-picture argument, which is the kid didn't have legal rights to be in wisconsin during this time period. he was violating the time frame someone should be on the streets. he had a gun he wasn't legally allowed to carry. he entered himself -- put himself into these situations that proved to be violent and volatile. he wanted to show the juxtaposition and the attitude. we saw that emotional breakdown on direct examination by kyle rittenhouse. but then we saw a very reversed kyle who used these phrases about how he was trying to protect himself against threats. he kept making that statement over and over again, as if he said it enough times, the jurors would believe it to be true. i think the prosecution wanted to draw this cross examination out to give the jury a sense that this is not some choir boy, some confused kid, but a teenager that had a very specific purpose for being in wisconsin that night and it was not a noble purpose. >> charles, areva brought up that moment of sobbing that prompted the judge to call for a break yesterday. we all watched that together. as it relates to showing remorse, we don't know if that's what that was. but what role does remorse play in getting an acquittal for a defendant like kyle rittenhouse? >> wemple, legally speaking, victor, remorse doesn't matter at all. i think that in terms of what we're talking about with the jury, and i think that's why you saw the theatrics and the crocodile tears we saw from kyle rittenhouse yesterday, the reaction there is about getting the jury to connect with you. some of it is just about theatrics. it's not necessarily about whether they believe the facts, but can you connect with them emotionally. if you recall, not only did kyle rittenhouse start crying, but almost on cue, right after that, his mother who was sitting in the gallery of the courtroom also began to cry as well. both of these things were seen by the jury. that matters. it matters because the defense has one job in this case, and that is get one or two or maybe three or four jurors not to believe the prosecution's case beyond a reasonable doubt, and you win. ultimately, when you do something like that, you don't need everyone to believe you. you just need enough people to believe you so you can cast reasonable doubt as to your frame of mind in that moment so you can secure an acquittal. that's what that was about. >> areva, as you well know, the judge doesn't want the two men who were killed being called victims. he thinks that's prejudicial. maybe we can put up their photographs as we talk. do you think there's been enough talk of who they were during this trial? >> just as charles talked about, the defense's job was to humanize kyle rittenhouse; i think this prosecution could have done more to humanize the two men who were killed, whether they were allowed to call them victims or not, they're human beings. they're somebody's son, brother, nephew. they mattered. their lives mattered. i'm not sure the prosecution spent enough time letting the jurors know that. we'll see how that plays out when the jury goes back to deliberate. i do think there might have been a misstep with respect to humanizing those individuals that were killed by kyle rittenhouse. >> we actually heard from one of those victims, the one who survived, shot in the arm, gaige gros groskreutz. let's listen. >> to me it seemed like a child who just got caught doing something that he wasn't supposed to. more upset he was caught and less upset about what he had done and what he had taken and the numerous lives he affected through his actions that night. i think the most important thing to remember is that kyle rittenhouse was an active shooter. he murdered two men and attempted to murder me. >> charles, your reaction to what you heard there from gaige grosskreutz. >> the first thing i react to is the fact kyle rittenhouse has been shielded by the media, the judge, a number of people, being cloaked in this infantalized notion that he was a young man, more or less a boy scout. even that gentleman as a victim referred to him, he reminded me of a child. a lot of the treatment we've seen by the judge has been almost coding him in the way of being a child. that doesn't bode well for the prosecution. it speaks to a larger issue about how we process these things. i want viewers to consider something. when trayvon martin was killed, he was 17 years old. the national conversation became about whether he should have had on a hood, whether he smoked marijuana, what his grades were like, whether he used racial epithets. kyle rittenhouse is a 17-year-old young man who walked into essentially a chaotic protest space with an assault rifle. we still have these references to him, even by some of the victims themselves referring to him as -- he reminded me of a child. i think psychologically that plays a part into why we're seeing things play out the way they do and the different parallels of how these things play out in different ways given the race of some of the parties involved. that point has to be understood by the people watching. >> certainly something to consider. you've told us several times the role of race in this case certainly must be remembered as we watch what happens inside the courtroom and the reaction outside the courtroom. charles coleman, areva martin, thank you. as dozens of lawsuits pour in, the red flags, prior to the astroworld concert, we keep seeing those now. we'll take you to houston next. plus skyrocketing prices are hitting grocery stores and gas stations across the country. the nationwide sticker shock and what president biden can do and how he's responding. you're noto , i go to work. ♪ strength isn't a given. it's grown. it's earned and tested. ♪ we all have the strength to see what's possible. it's up to us to unlock it. tonal. be your strongest. ray loves vacations. but his diabetes never seemed to take one. everything felt like a 'no'. everything. but then ray went from no to know. with freestyle libre 2, now he knows his glucose levels when he needs to. and... when he wants to. so ray... can be ray. take the mystery out of your glucose levels, and lower your a1c. now you know. try it for free. visit freestylelibre.us at vanguard, you're more than just an investor, you're an owner with access to financial advice, tools and a personalized plan that helps you build a future for those you love. vanguard. become an owner. more than 50 lawsuits have been filed in the deadly astroworld music festival. as investigators look into what caused the chaos, the president of the houston firefighters association is blaming the company hired for emergency services. >> i know our firefighters, there were four of them outside the perimeter, monitoring six radios in sort of a support role, if you will. what they asked these medical people is, do you have a radio so we can communicate if something goes wrong. what they were given is a list of cell phone numbers. if you don't have radios to community in an emergency, i don't know that cell phones are reliable when you have 50 or 60,000 people, especially when you have people who are dying. >> also a security contractor hired said he was so concerned by staffing problems that he walked off the job. cnn's rosa flores is in houston. what caused this security guard so much concern? >> reporter: the security guard said he didn't feel safe. he didn't feel there was enough security. he had seen on social media that people were planning to storm the gate. take a listen. >> you guys were obviously travis scott fans. how much do you hold him responsible? >> i heard other people mentioning online and in person that there was a plan to storm the gates. i mentioned that to my superiors. it seemed like it fell on deaf ears. >> you mentioned that, you heard that online and mentioned it? >> i did. i'm glad i just trusted my instinct and listened to myself and left for the day. i never would have imagined anything like that would have happened, but based on what i witnessed personally, i'm not surprised that an incident did occur. >> reporter: imagine when he learned that eight people had died. he said he was devastated. i checked with the fire chief in houston, and he said two individuals remain hospitalized, both of them in critical condition. >> really interesting we're hearing now there were more people ahead of time aware of the potential that something tragic could happen. we're hearing from travis scott's team as well. what are they saying? >> reporter: well, travis scott's attorney is saying officials here in houston is all they're doing is finger-pointing, sending inconsistent messaging and backtracking of statements. he goes on to say, quote, it was reported that the operations plan designated the only the festival director and executive producers have authority to stop the show, either of which is travis' crew. this also runs afoul of hpd's previous actions when it shut down the power and sound at this very festival when the performance ran over five minutes back in 2019. now, in talking about officials doing that, remember what police said initially, that a security officer had been pricked in the ek in and revived with narcan. now police say that didn't happen, that the security officer was hit in the head and went unconscious. alisyn and victor, no needles, no drugs according to police. >> okay. that's confusing. rosa, do we know how many lawsuits now have been filed against travis scott and what they claim? >> reporter: at least 58 lawsuits have been filed. many claim negligence, gross negligence, in essence saying that this concert was not a safe venue to attend. it was not a safe event. on top of that, they also claim emotional distress. that is the case of two brothers who spoke to our colleague john berman this morning on "new day." brian and jonathan espinosa, brian saying he can't sleep. he thought he had a 50/50 chance of surviving. another point he didn't think he was going to make it. there's a lot of trauma these two brothers are still dealing with. about the finger-pointing, travis scott's attorney saying officials, all they're doing is finger-pointing. now travis scott's fans are pointing the finger at him. take a is will en. >> you guys are obviously travis scott fans. how much do you hold him responsible? >> completely responsible, sir. he had the biggest microphone out of everybody. i just think it's crazy how poorly it was set up. >> reporter: alisyn and victor, i talked to various people who were concert-goers after this tragedy. they told me they're never going to a travis scott concert again. alisyn, victor. >> yeah. hard to know when the next travis concert will ever happen and if it will. rosa flores, thank you very much for all of that. well, just in time for the holidays, inflation hits a 30-year high. what president biden can actually do to stem the surging prices. that's next. why hide your skin if dupixent has your moderate-to-severe eczema, or atopic dermatitis under control? hide our skin? not us. because dupixent targets a root cause of eczema, it helps heal your skin from within, keeping you one step ahead of it. and for kids ages 6 and up, that means clearer skin, and noticeably less itch. hide my skin? not me. by helping to control eczema with dupixent, you can change how their skin looks and feels. and that's the kind of change you notice. hide my skin? 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>> the reason prices are up, relatively broad-based price increases by the way is mostly because of the pandemic. we have global supply chain issues, global labor shortages. hard to get workers on the floor to manufacture the stuff we buy, take it out of warehouses, put it on retail warehouses. the demand is even being more directed towards goods, towards stuff and away from services because services remain somewhat risky, things like travel or dining out. so people are trying to buy more stuff at exactly the same time that the pipeline through which that stuff must go through is more fragile. so you have shortages and you have price spikes. now, the white house has been saying for some time they expect this to be transitory. that echoes the languages of the fed as well as many other economists. transitory is a squishy word. it's meant to imply this is driven by temporary factors that will eventually unwind themselves. it isn't some sort of spiraling, self-sustaining inflationary cycle which is absolutely what we don't want, but i think that comes off sometimes as a little tone deaf because it sounds like it's going to be brief. it sounds like don't worry about it, it's just transitory which is not really the message they want to convey. i think biden now has been modifying some of his language to acknowledge that, yes, it is painful, even if it goes away eventually, it is painful now. it creates uncertainty now and we're not trying to dismiss your concerns. >> i want to talk about the rhetoric and the policy. phil, let me come to you, the president backing away from the transitory, temporary rhetoric in baltimore, and do they have a better ap legislation for just how hard this is hitting families, these prices going up, gas prices, food. we've got the list. we can put the graphic back up. >> victor, i think what you saw yesterday is something that the white house has been moving towards over the course of the last several weeks, a recognition that transitory isn't going to fly. transitory isn't believable to americans who are paying these prices on a regular basis. not only do they need to say, oh, it's going to go away soon, they need to empathize with it. i think you saw that from president biden last night, a addressing it right out of the gate. there's the political problem that this brings but also on the policy side as well. the biden administration wants to pass the second part of their domestic agenda, the $2 trillion economic and climate proposal. they know infliegs out there immediately gives a message to republicans, given the scale and scope of that proposal. the proposal is paid for. the proposal broadly would increase productivity which over a ten-year period will help inflationary pressures. that's problematic when you have, particularly a senator like joe manchin. trying to address it. understanding it's real, recognizing people are feeling it is a key part at least of the communications strategy we've seen from the white house which, guys, is a shift. >> let me read that tweet we have up from senator joe manchin. by all accounts, the threat i'm of inflation imposed to the american people is not transitory and is instead getting worse. from the grocery store to the gas pump americans know the inflation tax is real and d.c. can no longer ignore the economic pain americans feel every day. catherine, do you think this threatens the build back better plan? >> it could, but probably this piece of legislation won't have a big effect on inflation. biden argues it will reduce inflation. i think he's overpromising. his critics are saying it will increase inflation. there are elements that could do either or both of those things. for instance, if you build more housing, that will reduce inflationary pressures on housing prices. if you have buy american provisions, that could raise prices for some of the things the government buys, et cetera. either way, i don't think it will have a big effect. it will play a much larger effect around this legislation. whatever effect it has, it won't be felt for a while, probably won't be particularly significant and has little to do with the reason we're seeing price hikes in the here and now. >> catherine rampell, phil mattingly, through for those explanations. a then-police chief was caught on camera putting a kkk note on one of his black officer's jackets. that's officer is speaking out for the very first time. >> it was offensive and humiliating, beyond anything i've ever experienced. in my entire career, in my life. >> we'll have more that from officer just ahead. 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(vo) discover more in the all-new subaru outback wilderness. love. it's what makes subaru, subaru. ♪ ♪ when the chapstick goes on. it's on. get yours on at chapstick.com new jerseys are here! there you go. all-american club™? did you just turn us into subway® ads? yep! subways got so much new like the new turkey cali fresh, that they couldn't fit it in their ads. so, they bought space on your jerseys. go long italian b.m.t.® ♪ you pour your heart into everything you do, which is a lot. so take care of that heart with lipton. because sippin' on unsweetened lipton can help support a healthy heart. lipton. stop chuggin'. start sippin'. this just in to cnn, the ohio police officer who was targeted by his own police chief in a racist incident is now speaking out publicly for the first time. in a video that went viral this summer, you'll remember that you can see the former sheffield police chief, anthony campo place a kkk sign on the police officer's jacket. >> later he put on a makeshift kkk hat. at a press conference today, we learned the officer's name. this is the first time we're hearing this. his name is keith pool and he described how much this incident hurt him. >> even when i -- we watch it now, i'm in disbelief that this has happened to me. chief campo thought putting the words ku klux klan sign on my rain jacket and then wearing the ku klux klan hat was something of a joke. even worse, he told other officers to go look at what he did. it was offensive and humiliating, beyond anything i've ever experienced -- in my entire career, in my life. >> cnn's athena jones is here with more. this is awful. to think you go to your workplace and they place this on your jacket and parade around in a hat, that that would be funny in some way. >> it is. it's a shocking incidence of a racist workplace harassment, coming from this officer's own police chief, targeting this one officer who at the time was the only black officer in this police department. we saw some of his reaction there. we can now tell you his attorneys are bringing what's called a discrimination charge in ohio's office of civil rights, the office of civil rights commission. that's where you bring discrimination charges because of this incident with this police chief, anthony campo and this kkk sign. on this video, you can't hear the audio. there's no audio included. but officer pool in this press conference told reporters what he was feeling and how he responded. his exact words were are you serious? he said what else can you say to a police chief who does something so heinous and awful to the first black officer ever in that department. here is more of what officer pool had to say. >> this was not the chief's first time doing something racist and offensive to me or other employees. it was just the first time it got caught on video. and the city failure to turn over the public records documenting his misconduct makes me feel they want to protect the ex-chief. this didn't happen out of nowhere. it wasn't chief campo's first time doing something racist, and it never should have gotten to the point that chief campo felt comfortable making a joke about the ku klux klan in our workplace. >> so you heard officer pool say this was not the first time this former police chief had done this sort of thing. this is the second part of what his attorneys are doing. they're calling on the city of sheffield, calling on the ohio supreme court to mandate that the city of sheffield lake release records about this past misconduct. one example is this former chief would use a computer program to put officer's faces on different immanuels. he put the face of the only latino officer in the department on a bottle of hot sauce. this is something they clearly see as a pattern, and they want to make sure these records are released and that the city of sheffield lake does what it's supposed to do here. >> just how horrible. how brave of officer pool to come forward. >> he's still there. he says things are much better. clearly he was hurt by this. >> athena jones, thanks so much. a crew member from the film "rust" is suing alec baldwin and others in last month's fatal set shooting. what he's accusing him of, that's next. there are beautiful ideas that remain in the dark. but with our new multi-cloud experience, you have the flexibility you need to unveil them to the world. ♪ (music) at aetna, we're kicking medicare into high gear with affordable benefits you want. like an over-the-counter allowance and dental, vision and hearing coverage. medicare annual enrollment ends december 7th. call today to learn more. your mission: stand up to moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. and take. it. on... with rinvoq. rinvoq a once-daily pill can dramatically improve symptoms... rinvoq helps tame pain, stiffness, swelling. and for some, rinvoq can even significantly reduce ra fatigue. that's rinvoq relief. with ra, your overactive immune system attacks your joints. rinvoq regulates it to help stop the attack. rinvoq can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious infections and blood clots, sometimes fatal, have occurred as have certain cancers, including lymphoma, and tears in the stomach or intestines, and changes in lab results. your doctor should monitor your bloodwork. tell your doctor about any infections... and if you are or may become pregnant while taking rinvoq. take on ra. talk to your rheumatologist about rinvoq relief. rinvoq. make it your mission. learn how abbvie could help you save on rinvoq. theo is saving big holiday shopping at amazon. so now, he's free to become, thoughtful theo. and he's got a gift for everyone. so thoughtful. paul loves food. but his diabetes made food a mystery. everything felt like a "no". but then paul went from no to know. with freestyle libre 2, now he knows how food affects his glucose. and he knows when to make different choices. take the mystery out of your glucose levels, and lower your a1c. now you know. try it for free. visit freestylelibre.us okay. now to today's two to four things legal edition. the justice department says irt tends to make an example out of the qanon shaman. officials are seeking a four-plus year sentence. he is the one who is shirtless and wearing the headdress. >> how long have you been holding on to that? >> i've been saying that since it's happened. >> prosecutors call him the literal flag-bearer among the mob. they hope a harsh sentence will defer future attacks on the government. a federal judge is expected to sentence him next week. a crew member on the set of "rust" filed a lawsuit against alec baldwin and several others at the center of the shooting that killed hutchins. serge svetnoy says he was hit by materials in the blast. >> they say his severe emotional distress ask a result of negligence by alec baldwin, assistant director david halls, armorer hannah gutierrez reed and others. on wednesday, an attorney for the armorer says he believes his client is being framed. a federal judge has given final approval of a $626 million settlement for victims of the flint water crisis. t tens of how sands of people are expected to be compensated. >> nearly 80% of that will go to people who were 18 or younger at the time of the height of this crisis. that's because exposure to toxins at a young age can lead to learning disorders and other issues. the former mayor saying this doesn't go far enough. >> tens of thousands of people exposed to this, 626 million. the mayor saying it doesn't go far enough. we know there are other flint, michigans out there. you spoke with a gentleman in benton harbor who says they're going through the same thing. >> it's been lasting for three years and we're not paying enough attention. can we go back to the minuteur for a second? why would he be getting the harshest sentence? he's not one of the people who injured one of the officers. somebody was just sentenced who injured one of the officers, he got 40 months. how can you make the minuteur receive that much. >> this will be the top line here. we'll find out. >> they also said that the minuteur did spread a heck of a lot of misinformation. >> you're going to call him the minuteur from here on out? >> always. >> president trump yet again attempting to block his records from the january 6th committee. his last-ditch effort. time is running out. that's next. from the very first touch, pampers, the #1 pediatrician recommended brand, helps keep baby's skin drier and healthier. so every touch will protect like the first. pampers people everywhere living with type 2 diabetes are waking up to what's possible with rybelsus®. ♪ you are my sunshine ♪ ♪ my only sunshine... ♪ rybelsus® is a pill that lowers blood sugar in three ways. increases insulin when you need it... decreases sugar... and slows food. the majority of people taking rybelsus® lowered their blood sugar and reached an a1c of less than 7. rybelsus® isn't for people with type 1 diabetes. don't take rybelsus® if you or your family ever had medullary thyroid cancer, or have multiple endocrine neoplasia syndrome type 2, or if allergic to it. stop rybelsus® and get medical help right away if you get a lump or swelling in your neck, severe stomach pain, or an allergic reaction. serious side effects may include pancreatitis. tell your provider about vision problems or changes. taking rybelsus® with a sulfonylurea or insulin increases low blood sugar risk. side effects like nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea may lead to dehydration, which may worsen kidney problems. wake up to what's possible with rybelsus®. ♪ please don't take my sunshine away ♪ you may pay as little as $10 per prescription. ask your healthcare provider about rybelsus® today. everything you've seen me do was made possible by what you don't see. cause when you're not looking, i go to work. ♪ strength isn't a given. it's grown. it's earned and tested. ♪ we all have the strength to see what's possible. it's up to us to unlock it. tonal. be your strongest. your record label is taking off. but so is your sound engineer. you need to hire. i need indeed. indeed you do. indeed instant match instantly delivers quality candidates matching your job description. visit indeed.com/hire

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