in fact, all around the is horr million jews slaughtered. so important indeed. and to our viewers thanks very much for watching. erin out front next, breaking news. trump hit with a more than $83 million verdict for his repeated attacks on e. jean carroll. a c? plus fighting intensifies in gaza. you ll hear from an american doctor who has just returned from the area. why he calls this conflict and what he saw on the ground the worst he s ever seen. and new tonight a border shutdown. cnn learning a key group of senators have now agreed to close the southern border if m specific number. let s go out front. good evening. i m erika hill in for erin burnett. out front tonight, breaking news. $83.3 million. that is what a jury says donald trump must pay e. jean carroll for defaming her while he was president. this is the woman of course trump was found liable for sexually abusing. $83.3 million is a massive number. there s no way getting around that. it was agreed upon afte
you ve got donald trump saying let federal flood across mpthe border and kill americans. democrats, the border and a little hocus pocusus. this is the embankment where those caves have been dug out easilywher been big enough to . the solution to the homelessj crisises are caves. my husband is at work making a paycheck. my co-parent is at the daycare center where their kid and i m about to have a nice cup of coffee and go worthe dawith y novel. do we need a fourth person involved here? american couples get are everywhere. what you need to know. plus. welcome to a special edition of jesse waters, prime time. every great nation has had thi s in common. great walls. the athenians had the most beautiful metropolis in the world. worl for enemies, though, since athens was perched on the coast. it was a wal coast.l that madee th the city impenetrable during their war with sparta. the byzantines fortified their city with walls that towered over 40 feet tall.f for over a
again i m stephanie ruhle. alongside my partner ali velshi, covering our breaking coverage of this historic friday as the government has unsealed and estimating devastating 37 count and i meant against former president donald j trump. also the leading tender for the presidential nomination for the republicans. he s accused of mishandling documents and blocking efforts to get them back for mar-a-lago. the charges against him included violating the espionage act, improperly retaining national defense information. within the indictment, photos of what the government says are boxes containing classified material. onstage at mar-a-lago, in the ballroom, stacked to the ceiling in a bathroom. let s take a look at that. there s a toilet or. they re in a bathroom, classified government documents, piled up inside a storage room and spilling out across the floor in another room. today, for the very first time, we heard from the special counsel himself, who has spent some six months
Pristine peak, broken boards and piles of cheap polystyrene dump on our beaches. Its dump on our beaches. Its reall dump on our beaches. It s really disheartening to see this amount of waste. Surfers may enjoy this amount of waste. Surfers may enjoy the this amount of waste. Surfers may enjoy the fresh this amount of waste. Surfers may enjoy the fresh sea this amount of waste. Surfers may enjoy the fresh sea air, l may enjoy the fresh sea air, but the industry relies on toxic chemicals, producing suits and boards derived from oil and living that dream of being at one with nature is getting more and more difficult. Getting more and more difficult. We do want to encourage difficult. We do want to encourage people difficult. We do want to encourage people to i difficult. We do want to | encourage people to get outdoors, but it the same time, at what cost to the planet . So i want to know, can surfing clean up its act . I have served for more than a decade, but this is my first day on the
the perfect look. but beneath the surface lies a murkier side. for every pristine peak, broken boards and piles of cheap polystyrene dumped on our beaches. it s really disheartening to see this amount of waste come forward. surfers may enjoy the fresh sea air, but the industry relies on toxic chemicals, producing suits and boards derived from oil. and living that dream of being at one with nature is getting more and more difficult. we do want to encourage people to get outdoors, but at the same time, at what cost to the planet? so i want to know, can surfing clean up its act? i ve surfed for more than a decade, but this is my first day on the water for over three years. new year s day 2020 and the fin of my board went into my face. i was left with 16 stitches, and it has taken me this long to start trying to get over my fear. today i ve come to the calmer waters of an inland surf lake near bristol to try and start getting back my love of surfing. as a journalist covering the