>> she was not remorseful at all actually. >> and what is she thinking with these nails? >> do you frighten children ever? >> one on one with the nail lady. it's all right here, right now on cnn. good evening, everyone. i'm don lemon. we begin with the stunning turn of events and the deepening and embarrassing hacking and bribery scandal infecting fox news channel's parent company news corp. tonight, rebecca brooks who headed up murdoch's newspapers is out on bail after her arrest earlier in the day. another shocker. the head of the same department that arrested brooks, london's metro police commissioner falls victim to the same widening scandal. >> i have taken this decision as a consequence of the ongoing speculation with news international at a senior level and in particular to mr. neil wallace who, as you know, was arrested in connection last week. >> what brought sir paul stevenson, london's top cop down? his dealings with a former police department media consultant, neil wallace, who was once executive editor of a news of the world paper. that brings us to rebecca brooks at the top of the news corp. food chain, possibly the linchpin, reaching the britain corridors of power. as cnn's atika schubert reports tonight, brooks had a long way to fall. >> reporter: in the cozy world of british politics and media rebecca brooks was at its center. she wined and dined the rich and powerful on behalf of her boss and mentor. brooks first came to news international as a secretary at news of the world. she quickly developed a reputation for her tenacity as a journalist, reportedly once disguising herself as a cleaning lady to scoop a competitor. described as both ruthless and charming she was soon the youngest editor of the news of the world. shortly after that, the sun, both owned by murdock international. she spear headed a campaign to quote, name and shame alleged pedophiles publishing names and addresses in the paper. as the editor of the sun she testified that her paper had paid police officers for information. it was under her editorship that the news of the world allegedly paid a private investigator to hack into the voicemail messages of millie dowler, a 13 year old girl murdered in britain whose court case and investigation made front page headlines. the allegations didn't come to light until almost a decade later after brooks scaled the public ladder to be chief executive of news international, a position she resigned last week. brooks has denied having any knowledge of phone hacking by her staff. it was brooks who cemented a relationship with prime minister david cameron, inviting him to lunches at her country home with the head of news corporation, rupert murdoch's son, james. there have been several arrests in the phone hacking scandal so far. rebecca brooks is the highest profile yet, and the one closest to rupert murdoch himself. >> in 2003, she admitted paying police for information i asked lisa bloom why it wasn't a bigger deal back then. >> i think we got the answer to that today, don. it appears law enforcement was intimately tied up with the hacking and corruption scandal, with britain's top cop saying he should have handled things differently. i believe this is the beginning of the uk's watergate. there is too much corruption at too high of a level. this is a woman virtually admitting, sure, we paid police for information. now the police have four years' worth of files of at least 4,000 hacking victims and they did nothing. they didn't even notify victims of hacking. i think this is just the beginning of an unfolding scandal that will get bigger as each day goes by. >> i had a chance to speak with jeff jarvis. he thinks the scandal is enough to force rupert murdoch out of the news business all together. >> news corp. is primarily an entertainment company. nobody expects that entertainment executives are anything but rapacious, but in the news business they can't stand the murdoch name and the pressure on them now. how do they sell newspapers in this day? there is no market for them. i think they will get rid of news organizations in the uk first. in the u.s., the new york post will go. fox news? i can imagine a leveraged buyout. the wall street journal? well, murdoch overpaid for that. who knows what happens to it. the end of the day i think this becomes an entertainment company. >> the scandal is reaching deep into rupert murdoch's inner circle. you can be sure the man at the top is feeling the pressure. >> shame on you! shame on you! >> murdoch has ads running in seven british papers through monday saying, quote, we are sorry. for the phone hacking scandal, the popular tablloyd he just shut down. here he is in his own words. >> i'm the founder of the company. i was appalled to find out what happened. i apologize. i have nothing more to say. >> well, the scandal is widening to another paper, the sunday times. now even the fbi is opening an investigation. the allegations -- hacking the personal phones of public figures and the not so public. from murder victims to dead war heroes. >> there is a firestorm, if you like, that is engulfing parts of the media, parts of the police and, indeed, our political system's ability to respond. >> murdoch's news corp., the parent company of the fox news channel also owns 20th century fox, the fx network, the new york post, wall street journal, harpercollins publishing and probably your local fox affiliate. among many others. the charges against the company are criminal and could have dire implications for murdoch, the people under him and the prime minister. david cameron's -- former news of the world also arrested in the scandal. what did david cameron know and when did he know it? >> let me say once more, if i was lied to, if the police were lied to, if the select committee was lied to it would be a matter of deep regret and a matter for criminal prosecution. >> order! anybody might think that some orchestrated noise is taking place. order! the house will come to order and these -- order! these changes will continue in an orderly way. mr. ed milliband. >> the prime minister has made a very important admission. he has admitted his chief of staff was given information before the general election, that andy coulson hired a man jailed for seven years for criminal conspiracy who made payments to the police on behalf of the news of the world. this evidence casts serious assurances that the phone hacking investigation was an example of illegal activity. >> do you know what, mr. speaker? i think the public and the victims of this appalling scandal want us to rise above this and deal with the problems that this country faces. [ shouting ] >> mr. ed miliband? >> mr. speaker, he just doesn't get it. [ cheers ] >> he just doesn't get it. >> i'm afraid, mr. speaker, the person who is not getting it is now the leader of the opposition. >> this unfolding firestorm was brought to light recently by hollywood actor hugh grant who secretly taped a former news of the world reporter talking about the unsavory practices he says everyone in his organization condoned and encouraged. here's hugh grant in an awkward picture with the reporter paul mcmullen. i spoke with mcmullen about who knew what. >> were people as high as rupert murdoch complicit in this? would murdoch know about these practices? people under him? >> well, people under him certainly should have done. when rebecca brooks, his right-hand woman in britain was doing my job i was looking at the same books. we both had. we were sending 4,000 pounds a week on private investigators doing these kind of practices. just extraordinary if she was the department boss who then moved up to be editor. how could you not notice expending over 100 grand a year on this kind of thing and not ask what it's for. her position is ludicrous. >> rupert murdoch and his son james will testify tuesday at a parliamentary committee hearing on the scandal. rebecca brooks is supposed to testify as well. her arrest may limit what she says. still ahead on cnn tonight. >> miss -- you will be held in contempt of this court. >> i don't care. i haven't done anything to this court. i haven't done anything to him. >> she'll be arrested for contempt of court. go now. >> what was she thinking? attacking a judge? security officers to the rescue, all caught on camera. we'll talk with the guy who took her down. and a story we have kept an eye on. a rochester woman arrested after recording police making a traffic stop. now it is a national debate. we're checking in on social media. check in with us on twitter, facebook, cnn.com/don and on foursquare. and "transparent" available anywhere books are sold. c@ma , one sheet of bounty leaves thn as 2 sheets of the bargain . ♪ why use more when you can use less? ♪ super durable. super absorbent. super clean. bounty. the one-sheet clean picker-upper. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ introducing purina one beyond a new food for your cat or dog. our girl's an architect. our boy's a genius. we are awesome parents! biddly-boop. 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[ male announcer ] want to pump up your gas mileage? come to meineke for our free fuel-efficiency check and you'll say...my money. my choice. my meineke. >> you will be held in contempt. >> don't care. i haven't done anything to this court or anything to him. >> she'll be arrested for contempt of court. go now. you can probably imagine a kentucky woman is in big trouble with the law after she attacks a judge in court. court security officer adam dodson was the first to take her down. i talked with him earlier and asked what did the judge said to make her go ballistic. >> the judge was telling her to stop using foul language and if she kept using foul language in her court then she would be held in contempt and face more charges, and the lady was very upset already and she just basically disregarded anything the judge said and continued to talk. >> you've been doing this for a while now. have you seen anybody react this way especially towards a judge? >> i have seen people react this way but only in training videos, and the training they send us to. not in actually any courtroom i've worked in in the 3 1/2 years i've been there. >> when you grabbed her and you subdued her. what happened? was she remorseful? did you have to take her away? what happened? >> she was not remorseful at all actually. i had to administer the handcuffs on the floor. she was resisting arrest. she was fighting with me. another bailiff tried to hold her feet. she was sort of fighting with him. we finally got her handcuffed. picked her up off the floor and walked her out of the courtroom and still using foul language and she actually made another threatening comment to the judge. >> did you give her any sort of test afterwards, do you know if she was under the influence at all? did she smell of alcohol? did she seem to be under the influence of something? >> she was not under the influence of anything that we could tell. she was just very angry. i think she has a history of these types of situations. and she just had it in her mind it didn't matter what we done or anything, actually. she was just showing disrespect for the court, for my position and she was just disregarding anything we were trying to do. >> she was there for a domestic violence charges against her husband and he watched the whole thing go down. didn't he? >> yes, sir. >> he was not shown in the video but he was standing to the left of the woman there. and he watched the whole thing. he was standing behind the podium and moved the podium out of the way so we could finish the handcuffing process. >> in addition to the contempt of court and domestic charges she's now charged with terrorist threatening. and resisting arrest. >> a tour bus crash left two dead and several injured on inter390. a number of hospitals received patients from the crash. those with more serious injuries were transported by helicopter. not only was there no carmegeddon in los angeles, the highway project that was supposed to cause it finished 17 hours ahead of schedule. interstate 405 re-opened at noon local time after crews finished demolishing a bridge earlier than expected. the city braced itself when ten miles of interstate 405 shut down. traffic dropped by two-thirds averting the monster gridlock predicted. the u.s. women's soccer team's world cup quest has ended in heartbreak. the american team lost the final to japan on penalty kicks after overtime. it ended with a 2-2 tie. the team hoped to be the first americans to win the cups since 1999. japan was the underdog in the match but persevered to be the first asian team to ever win the tournament. congratulations to them. a key nomination from the white house is expected on monday. president obama made the decision on the nominee decision on the nominee for the new consumer financial and its population healthier. closure we've already answered some of the nation's toughest questions. and the over sixty thousand people of siemens are ready to do it again. siemens. answers. ♪ i like your messy hair ♪ i like the clothes you wear ♪ i like the way you sing ♪ and when you dance with me ♪ you always make me smile [ male announcer ] we believe you're at your best when you can relax and be yourself. and at thousands of newly refreshed holiday inn hotels, you always can. holiday inn. stay you. and now stay rewarded with vacation pay. stay two weekend nights and get a $75 prepaid card. we want to make prices clear and we want to make risks clear and we want consumers to be able to compare two or three credit cards or two or three mortgages head to head. >> it is a developing story out of washington tonight where the white house says that woman you just saw, elizabeth warren, will not head up the new consumer financial protection bureau. instead president obama will nominate richard cordre to the post. he is the former ohio attorney general. elizabeth warren basically created the job. why is the president giving it to someone else? >> bottom line she can't get confirmed. they don't have the votes for her. it would have been a battle with the senate and the business community. there are two concerns. in an election year and is that a good way to start a new bureau? no. why not take the path of less resistance? >> why are folks in the financial services industry so opposed to warren? >> well, from their perspective they would say she's predisposed to seeing bankers and mortgage lenders as the bad guys. she says she wants to protect consumers from what she calls tricks, traps and predatory lenders. they say she's crushing innovation. a battle between them. they often just say they don't like her. >> she has a very accomplished resumé. what's in her future, jessica? >> it's interesting. she's not saying. there is wide speculation that she could go back to massachusetts, where she's been a professor at harvard university and has lived for years and run as a democrat against senator scott brown. it's a blue state where democrats feel they have a chance of winning back the senate seat from a republican. they just need a candidate. she's raised her profile, has been outspoken and could be a candidate for u.s. senate as a democrat in the 2012 election. she's not saying but don't be surprised to see her in the race. >> all right. jessica yellin, thank you. listen to this. >> if you're trying to get to $2.4 trillion without any revenue, then you are effectively gutting a bunch of domestic spending that is going too burdensome, and not something i would support. >> president obama drawing a line in the debate over spending cuts and raising taxes. the nation's debt ceiling has to be raised by august 2nd or the government risks defaulting on its obligations. but the president may have an advantage here that a lot of people are overlooking. errol lewis joins me now. i know you think the president and congress will cut a deal. why do you say that? >> well, you know, if you look at some of the numbers we are going into the final round of negotiations. august 2nd is getting closer. the polls suggest most people believe the president. he's got a 47% approval rating. it's not great. congress has a 26% approval rating. the poll suggests that people trust this president rather than congress on the economy. and then you have a republican leadership that's divided over their tactics. so they've got a weak hand going into the last round. it looks like they are going to give up the fight at some point. >> if the president has won the battle for public opinion, how did he do it? is it because americans want budget cuts as long as the cuts only affect someone else? >> look, this is how politics works. the president has the bully pulpit and he's used it. when he had a mid-day news conference it was covered by everybody. they stopped the soap operas and game shows. so everybody could hear it. republicans came on an not even all the cable stations carried it. it's a powerful position. he's a persuasive guy. that's why he's president. >> let's talk about political pledges. we are hearing about republicans who took pledges not to raise taxes ever when they were candidates. now their hands are tied. rick santorum writes it's an in "usa today," said it is an honor to take the pledge is -- -- an oath to honor our word. is he right? >> not really. there is a superseding oath to protect the people and follow the constitution. the reality is if this was easy and you could feed checklists into a computer that's the way we would run the democracy. it is not that easy. for example the famous tax loophole for owners of private jets. if close that are you raising taxes or not. that's something pledges don't let you figure out. >> let's talk about news corps. rupert murdoch's empire appears teetering a bit. can anything good come of this? >> it shows the need for a diverse press. it was the guardian, a rival to the rupert murdoch empire that broke this story and set the avalanche in motion. that's what you get. if you had only one news organization running the whole show this may never have come to light at all. >> errol louis, thanks. it is official. the woman acquitted of murdering her child, casey anthony, is now a free woman. that report is next. plus, an in-depth report about the story behind this video. >> what in the world! i'm sorry. i was standing in my front yard concerned about what was going on in my neighborhood. and you're arresting me! >> police put the cuffs on emily good and set off a national debate. erience to 55 million more americans, many in small towns and rural communities, giving them a new choice. we'll deliver better service, with thousands of new cell sites... for greater access to all the things you want, whenever you want them. it's the at&t network... and what's possible in here is almost impossible to say. that's how it is with alzheimer's disease. she needs help from me. and her medication. the exelon patch -- it releases medication continuously for twenty-four hours. she uses one exelon patch daily for the treatment of mild