of the destruction and the ukrainians say they cleared around 8,500 tons of debris from this area in about 72 hours. and still, more bodies were found including children. while others remain missing. this man servie searching for h grandson venting his anger at russia. there is no mercy for them he says. ly i will curse them until the last day of my lives. they struck the buildings with a cruise missile designed to destroy aircraft carriers. she was in an apartment complex. she filmed the chaos and saw the destruction. we thought it was an earthquake or something she says, unclear what happened. when we opened the apartment, we saw smoke and dust and heard screams. the kremlin continues to deny the forces were behind the attack but moscow does say russian fighters are now making gains on the battle fields. meanwhile, ukrainian forces are still shelling russian troops around solidar the russians say is firmly under their control thanks to fighters from a private military com
jury investigating fundraising fraud. and breaking reports that stephen miller has been subpoenaed. then, new signals that donald trump s favorite judge maybe backing down to the justice department. plus, a victory for democracy and reproductive rights as the states supreme court smacks down michigan republicans. and as king charles greets his subjects for the first time, melissa murray on coming to terms with the imperial past of the british empire. all in starts right now. good evening from new york, i m chris hayes. the department of justice s investigation into january 6th, attempted coup, is once again expanding its scope. quite a bit, in fact. the doj sent out a raft of new subpoenas this week for just learning about. subpoenas of former trump white house and campaign officials. reportedly relation to trump save america pack, as well as the fake elector scheme. top trump policy advisor in speech writer stephen miller, and trump s white house political director brian jac
on the questioning graeme could face. georgia investigators want to get to the bottom of grams of georgia secretary of state brad raffensperger. raffensperger claims graham asked him if he had the power to reject a certain absentee ballots. in raffensperger s view, that was to toss out votes in a free and fair election. quote we re going to ask joyce matt vance about all this in just a minute. here s the broader context when it comes to these various investigations into trump s attacks on democracy. a clear majority of americans want investigations like the one in georgia to move forward despite whatever resistance there may be from trump allies. a new nbc news poll out just today claims 57% of voters saying investigations into trump should continue. joining me now to discuss senior legal affairs reporter for politico, child cheney msnbc contributor, joy s former u.s. attorney and professor at the university of alabama school of law. and vera investigative correspon
florida.. that would be miami-dade, sarasota, duval, martin, clamia. mi counties. de is miami-dade alone is one ofone the biggest school districts in the entireofgest in th country.0 it s got more than three hundred thousand students in it. so thi in it. in the futur major implications for the education and the future. e ofof millions of young people. it s not just happening ins scha florida, a texas school boardeas that flipped the republican party earlier this year rk is already workinging to cha toe things. it has voted to barace, han racd and gender cult ideology. in schools. so there may be a lessonn here. let s say a republican running for congress in november. you might be wondering how didte these republicans win at the these republicans win at the local level? lo it cas s a redcause wave year. a red wave year, because actually it s not really a red u wave here. so may far , despite what you ml have heard in other races so far , special elections, republicans have b
search played out in a florida courtroom today, the same fbi search that approved the warrant to look for those classified and top secret documents opened to the door to the possibility that portions of the affidavit could be made public as soon as next week. first, he s giving prosecutors the opportunity to propose redactions and explain why each piece of information should be kept from the public. the justice department says all of it needs to remain sealed. they say releasing it could, quote, cause significant and irrepairable damage to the ongoing investigation, as well as the witnesses. the judge did unseal four new documents tied to the search warrant. and there is some new info in there. last week we learned of the possible crimes the prosecutors were looking into, violations of the espionage act, obstruction of justice, and criminal handling of government records. so, now we re learning a little more about what those means. prosecutors say the potential crimes are, nu