tennessee, kentucky and mississippi yesterday. the red cross is on the ground offering shelter to residents. nicole valdes is on the ground in nashville, tennessee with the latest. nicole what do you see. honestly unspeakable damage as we mourn the lives of six people across tennessee who lost their lives one of those a child in montgomery county and let me show you what were seen it is so horrific, you can take a look at this home, look to the left of it, that is somebody s bed completely in the open the sheer force of the tornado that moved through madison tennessee that ripped up the wall surrounding the bedroom. i will take a walk to show you it s not just isolated to one home, this entire street, each house has significant severe damage, roofs, unimaginably torn to pieces, using the power lines that are just laying on the driveway. take a look further that is another home, the second story most eviscerated in the force of the storm and were waiting for a lot more i
your card from donald trump about his verdict, but what about stormy daniels? this hour, i will speak with her attorney, clark brewster, to learn how stormy learned of the verdict, and how she is doing now. and, her choice to wear a bulletproof vest. good to see you back in the studio. welcome to alex witt reports, i am yasmin vossoughian in for alex. there is even more new fallout from the verdict in donald trump/money trial, guilty on all 34 counts, if you don t know by now. a new poll conducted by reuters in the hours after the verdict shows 11% of republicans saying they are less likely to vote for trump, following his conviction, while 34% say they are more likely to vote for him. the new numbers are almost identical to true verdict pulling. with the majority saying the verdict would not change their vote. another new snap poll from morning consults shows that 54% of registered voters approving of the verdict, and 34% saying they disappear. these numbers, by the way, t
they want to hear again, and this morning the jury will also re-hear four pieces of critical testimony in the case at their request. nbc s yasmin vossoughian is outside the courthouse. also with us, msnbc legal correspondent and host katie phang along with catherine christian, former assistant manhattan district attorney. kristy greenberg, former federal prosecutor and sdny criminal division deputy chief. and harry litman, former deputy assistant attorney general. yasmin, i want to go right to the courthouse. let s start with what we heard from the jurors in this new note today. reporter: so we needed clarification on what they wanted out of jury instructions, right? we didn t know if they wanted the entirety of the jury instructions read back to them after yesterday s note or they wanted a portion. it turns out they wanted a portion. they essentially wanted what the jury considers as evidence in the lead up to count one. that s really the entirety of all of the instruction
get paid back up to ninety percent on unexpected vet bills, use any vet, and cancel any time. fetch pet insurance. get your free quote today. i think it is politically motivated. i think he is probably guilty of having done that, but i don t think it was something that is, necessarily, an indictable offense. a witchhunt, but a witchhunt for what? he seems like he s guilty of everything. they are not really hiding it. you can ask 100 different americans what they think of the criminal conviction of donald trump, and you will probably get 100 different answers. we are about five months from the presidential election, if you can believe it. plenty of time for either president trump or present biden to capitalize on the moment. joining us from wisconsin, a county that trump won by only .3% in 2016.
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