with president trump or his representatives. all right. gloria allred, thanks for your time tonight. thank you. for more on the president s growing legal mess, i m joined now by former federal prosecutor harry litman and author of both above the law blog which is a must read for me every day. i don t quite get it. i can tell you what mike cohen is trying to do. he is trying to become the worst lawyer of the decade at this point. think about it this way. michael cohen was sent to the store with one job. buy stormy daniels a tall glass of shut up. that was his job. he has come back from the store with a potentially federal complaint about campaign violations. he has made himself a target for the mueller investigation who might be interested in how trump or david dennison launders money. and oh, by the way, i happen to know the president likes to be spanked, which is information i can t unsee. that s what he has done.
really, we are talking about the suitability of the people that they have put into these positions. that s what s at question. but, you know, once someone of these people who hasn t received this clearance but is able to see classified information you can t unsee classified information, right? the toothpaste is out of the tube. garrett or nada, isn t part of the point to get the clearance before you see secrets? absolutely. i had to jump through many hoops to get my top secret clearance and see compartmentalized information. you can t contain classified information in a manner without being able to make sure that people who are handling the information can be trusted and understand what to do with the information. because they are also vulnerable to being recruited by a foreign intelligence service because they haven t cleared the background check. what about jared kushner, garrett? he s more than just a staffer.
nightclub last year. the chief john mina is with me now. chief, i would say nice to see you, but i actually wish we didn t have to have this conversation, you know? let me begin with this. we just heard ted cruz, texas senator you know, thoughts and prayers of course, for the families in the community and gun violence doesn t want to go there. the president traveling, and he was in japan and talk about a place that doesn t have this problem at all saying this is a mental health issue. you have seen things you can t unsee. how do we stop this? well, first, my heart goes out to the people and the victims and families that are affected in sutherland springs that are dealing with this tragedy. it s a very complex issue, how do we stop this? yes, it is a gun control issue and it s also a mental health issue and it s a domestic violence issue and there are
and you know, i think that s the focus right now here in our community really is to do that and bring people together and start the healing process. two points i tried to make, senator. to your point, along the way in our coverage today, number one, to have witnessed but survived this will only for some people mean a life of trauma. because as they say you can t unsee or unlive what you ve lived over the past 24 hours. that s one. two, to your point about first responders, there are first responders in this country who will serve their entire lifetime and never treat a bullet wound, never see a bullet wound, never experience a gun fired in anger. so between the people who lived, who are embracing each other and happy they re alive today, and the people whose only job last night in that all of ambulances, that wall of police officers and
all over the place and people dying in front of him. you don t forget that. family members will never forget what they saw, friends will never forget what they saw and urban environment, it s more like a war scene, a war movie, something you don t think is real until it touches you in your own community. you re a dad, i m a dad, think of bringing young kids, again on otherwise nice night, to see a concert. and as they say, you can t unsee, you can t erase the mark that witnessing that much carnage is going to leave on anyone, to say nothing of little kids. it s absolutely right. in fact, i talked to my son, who is now 22 years old. he had friends there, hasn t been able to get in touch with. and there were a lot of young folk there s. brian, you and i think of 22 years old, still a kid to me. that s a kid.