country like just stashed on his person or in his home, giving them out. how in the world does that happen? shocking and it raises so many questions that we re going to get to this morning. it s one of many big stories we re covering. so let s get to the five things to know for this friday, april the 14th as we were just talking about the suspect in the leak of classified million terry documents will be arraigned in court today. federal court the fbi arrested him in massachusetts yesterday. officials tell cnn he s just 21 years old and he is a national guardsmen. alright, so that s a massachusetts and then in florida governor there. ron desantis has signed a six week abortion ban into law. the white house condemned it as extreme and dangerous. the man accused of killing tech exec bob lee set to appear in court today in san francisco. police say the suspect was someone lee knew also magic johnson maybe close to owning part of the washington commanders were told that deal is ne
what they teach. in the meantime what has to figure out whether can even teach students about the civil rights era. that doesn t for us tonight. i will see you next week. now it s time for the last word with lawrence o donnell. good evening, we have a statement from new york city mayor, eric adams on the death threats of the district attorney brag received today. the mayor says, while we cannot comment on the specifics of any ongoing investigation, no public officials should ever be subject to threats for doing his or her drop. i am confident that every elected official in the city including manhattan da brag will continue to do their work undeterred. and anyone found to be engaging in illegal conduct will be brought to justice. and so that is the mayor of new york s latest statement about this threat to the district attorney today. it s an important letter and could not commit more of a critical time considering the threats, the stakes, the rhetoric. president trump ha
in the meantime this college what has to figure out whether can even teach students about the civil rights era. that does it for us tonight. i will see you next week. now it s time for the last good evening, we have a statement from new york city word with lawrence o donnell. word with lawrence o donnell. mayor, eric adams on the death threats of the district attorney brag received today. the mayor says, while we cannot comment on the specifics of any ongoing investigation, no public officials should ever be subject to threats for doing his or her job. i am confident that every elected official in the city including manhattan da brag will continue to do their work undeterred. and anyone found to be engaging in illegal conduct will be brought to justice. and so that is the mayor of new york s latest statement about this threat to the district attorney today. it s an important letter and could not commit more of a critical time considering the threats, the stakes, the rheto
things that they spent the last few days doing and then, of course, his name became public. the new york times published his name yesterday. while the fbi was sitting on his house waiting for him, waiting for the for the right moment to move in for the arrest. obviously one of their questions has to be where you acting alone. did you share these with anyone else? physically they could continue sharing them online. but one of the things that i thought was striking yesterday is that officials would not answer questions about why his job level 21 years old woodwork working overnights at this base in cape cod would would mean that he needed access to these right. so there s a lot of questions for the pentagon this morning. it still has not fully explained. you know how it is. what briggs, for example. why? what? what? vetting he had um how is it that he got promoted just recently. so it appears people in the military thought he was doing a great job. and meanwhile online, he s living a dif
and look, the reality of this prosecutor oversight bill, or i should say bills, because there were two of them. one was born in the house of representatives, h b 2:31 i believe is the number. and then of course we have senate bill 92, which is the companion bill. both of those bills passed their respective houses. both are now in the other house waiting to be voted on. you have two more, legislative days. so it s possible that one or both of these bills will make their way to the floor and will receive a vote. after that happens, if they get a majority, which they probably will because republicans to have a constitutional majority in our georgia general assembly, the bill would be on the governor s desk. we don t know what will happen with fani willis s investigation by then. i think it s safe to say, if she does intend to seek an indictment we will know that in advance.