We begin with the news that thousands of Police Officers serving in Northern Ireland were dreading, that details of their surnames and places of work have fallen into the hands of dissident republican groups who do not support the peace process. The Chief Constable of the Police Service of Northern Ireland confirmed this today after last weeks data breach, in which details on more than 10,000 employees was mistakenly released online. A document posted on a wall in largely catholic west belfast, close to the sinn fein office, allegedly shows some of the information that was uploaded. Sarah girvin has the full story. When news of the psni data breach broke six days ago, the forces Chief Constable said he was aware of claims from dissident republican paramilitaries that they had access to it. Today he confirmed the information was in their hands. We are now confident that the Workforce Data set is in the hands of dissident republicans and it is therefore our Planning Assumption that they
illegally. he was here in my county. five people died in my county, and that s where my heart is, in my heart is. we protect our people to the best of our ability. a texas sheriff reacting to the latest deadly mass shooting in america. this time it s five people shot in their home by their neighbor. we ll have the latest on the manhunt for the gunman. plus, former president donald trump is making headlines for hugging a woman who served time in prison for taking part in the capitol insurrection and who has also called for the execution of members of congress. and we ll have an update on the efforts to evacuate americans out of sudan, now more than two weeks since the deadly violence broke out in that country. good morning and welcome to way too early on this monday, may 1st. i m jonathan lemire. thanks for starting your day and week with us. we ll begin with breaking news. another american bank has failed. just this morning, financial regulators in california seize
more a part of maga mainstream as trump openly embraces their messaging. plus it has been a week dominated by major headlines, we re gonna mix it up with a new team to break them all down as the 11th hour gets underway on this friday night. good evening once again i m stephanie ruhle, the former president and his week in even deeper legal jeopardy as he clings to political power in control of the gop tonight investigation into the classified documents seized at his club in florida is heating up. intel officials tell nbc news they have reviewed they, have resumed their view of the top secret records as they tried to figure out the potential damage to national security. this comes days after appeals court judges gave the greenlight to the feds to access the evidence remember, it has not been nearly seven weeks since the fbi search and trump has yet to explain what he was to doing with the documents in the first place. his former personal lawyer suggest trump s motives may have
thanks so much. violent anti government protests continue in iran. police have arrested more than 700 people. at least 35 people have been killed. world powers condemn the self styled referendums being held in parts of ukraine on whether tojoin russia. hello and welcome to bbc news. a leading think tank the resolution foundation has said that middle income earners stand to lose the most money from the tax policies announced yesterday by the government with the very richest benefitting most. but the government insists the tax cuts are fair to all and will get the economy growing. our business correspondent, marc ashdown, reports. a bit more money for everyone will get businesses investing and people spending that s the government s aim but at this market in buckinghamshire there s scepticism about who will benefit most from these tax cuts. well, the higher end will be a lot better off, but the lower end, what is it, a penny? it s nothing. considering the cost of li
tonight the investigation into the classified documents seized at his club in florida is heating up. intel officials tell nbc news that they have reviewed resumed their review of the top secret records as they try to figure out the potential damage to national security, this comes just days after appeals court judges gave the greenlight to the feds to access the evidence. remember, it has not been nearly seven weeks since the fbi search and trump has yet to explain what he was to meet with the documents in the first place. his former personal lawyer suggest trump s motives may have something to do with that many investigations that are all unfolding around him. obviously he took personal momentous in that way he can show off to people, when he would go thereafter to maybe saudi arabia and say hey, i got this letter, i got this love letter who gets love letters from king jong-un? i believe she took the secret documents for the sole purpose of using it as a get out of jai