it s hard to know which direction to go. we were just never going to know. but someone knew. she called me and she said, i think i know something about a murder. we never could find out why trent was killed because it was something this weird. she became the key. would she also become the next victim? she was scared to death to confront him. let me ask you a question, you re not setting me up, are you? she knew what he was capable of. and thus she was terrified. and thus she was terrified. hello and welcome to dateline. trent digiuro was a force on the football field, popular and fiercely loyal to his wide circle of friends. then late one night, the charming athlete was shot dead. his killer left few clues, and the case sat cold until someone came forward with a stunning secret. what police asked the tipster to do next would make her a target. how much would she risk to right a wrong? here s keith morrison with the motive. her heart was on f
, right next guest. is one of those nights. it s one of those, nights have a great show lawrence. thank you alex thank you. it was just about two years and two months ago on a monday night that i will never forget, after a weekend and i will never forget, when rachel maddow and i were here marveling and i mean just marveling at a weekend of breaking news like we had never seen before involving the united states department of justice, attorney general william barr tried to fire the manhattan district attorney geoffrey berman and this is the part that was so stunning. geoffrey berman fought back in a way that we did not know is even possible. just when you think you can t be shocked, the friday night attempted firing of the u.s. attorney general the southern district of new york was starting and then geoffrey berman come back, you can t fire me was even more stunning, and ultimately jeffrey berman s in that hour you described it just kind of indescribably important. wh
history. it will lower health insurance costs. lower energy costs. i want to take the most aggressive action ever, ever, ever, to combat the climate crisis. i will build the future here in the united states of america with the american workers, american companies, with american-made products, and after years of some of the biggest corporations in the united states paying zero in federal income tax, they will begin to literally pay their fair share. it is not easy and it never has been. but i know with conviction, commitment, and patience, progress does come and is coming now. as much as they chalked up the timing of the event today with the anniversary of signing the act, it is obvious that today was all about the midterms. showing exactly how much democrats have delivered for voters. across the aisle, republicans have a little bit of trouble. this afternoon, south carolina care senator lindsey graham instituted a bill that would prohibit abortion after 15 weeks of pregnanc
see their say their final good-bye. yet, for all of its anticipation and its singular history, this moment felt eerily realm necessary of this one. the very young brothers made this same march because they re mother s coffin. it s a painful image of one of the most painful moments in the history of the modern monarchy, not to say anything of the grief the brothers felt and most feel again. the crowds felt it too then and they felt it again today. thousands crowded the streets down the mall and along white hall. some straining to catch even a glimpse of the coffin draped in the royal standard. there was spontaneous and subdued clapping, but mostly the people were silent, quiet. the steady beat of the drum stirring even the stiffest of upper lips. her coffin lined with led weighs a quarter of a ton. it was lifted off the gun carriage and carried by eight men of the queen s company first battalion. swell pouring off their brows, the weight of the coffin combined with the weigh
we ll discuss the implications on u.s. relations with beijing. live from cnn center, this is c cnn newsroom with kim brunhuber. we begin with two major weather events unfolding right now. the first here in the united states, a dangerous and blistering heatwave continues its stranglehold in the western part of the country. more than 40 million people are under heat alerts as temperatures soar 10 to 20 degrees above normal and electric companies in california are asking companies to turn off unnecessary lights addrend appliances in order to save energy. and in asiain, a powerful typho is bathering the southern islands with strong gusty winds and heavy rains. luckily it skirted past taiwan without making a direct hit, but waves hit the northeastern coast. and there is a heavy rain advisory for northern parts of the island. joining us now with the latest on both these stories is meteorologist derek van dam. so records being shattered across the western u.s. and typhoon acros