harvard law professor laurence tribe, thank you very much for joining us on this night when this story does appear to be taken on a sore turn. we appreciate you joining us. thank you lawrence. and coming, up a prosecutor who has investigated donald trump s actions in the justice department. andrew weizmann will join us. justice department andrew weizmann will join us trust safelite. in one easy appointment. pop rock music tech: .we can replace your windshield and recalibrate your advanced safety system. dad: looks great. thanks.
territory for many, many days to try to unearth what these details were. what the team learned was that so much of particularly marc short s conversation with the grand jury was dominated by what did trump say, and what did trump do? what did trump tell his lawyers? then what was trump s reaction to that? that description over and over again of the grand jury prosecutor who s not asking for a fishing expedition. a grand jury is one of prosecutor is asking questions they know they need the answer to in preparation for trial, in preparation for prosecution. so the significance of this goes way, way up when a prosecutor says, so tell me with the former prosecutor set a president said about this. that dominant feature of the grand jury also took us aback
the other big question is what is the justice department going to bring former vice president mike pence before a grand jury? i think they have to. i d be very curious about andrew weizmann s views on, up to me that s part of the story. pence s aides have heard the story, but i think everybody should hear from him himself. that s a good point, because the grand jury is a totally different appointment from the it s 100 percent private. the vice president s testimony is absolutely secret and can only be revealed in a later court proceeding, whether might be a statement from the grand jury that is quoted. and so, there is no spectacle aspect to it, but there is a huge historic influx to the point that we do is subpoena the vice president? that decision to go all the way up to the attorney general. that s exactly right. the grand jury is the opposite