as it relates to 2022-fc, count 1, terrorism causen a death, the sentence is the defendant shall serve life without the possibility of parole, credit for eight days served. counts 2 through 5, homicide, first degree, premedicated murder, the court s sense is the defendant shall serve the rest of his life without the possibility of parole, credit for eight days served. on counts 6 through 12, assault with intent to murder, on each of the occupants, defendant is septembered to 18 years and 9 months to 80 years, with the michigan department of corrections, credit for eight days served. on counts 13 through 24, those being felony phi arm, the defendant is septembered to two years on each of those counts, with credit for 30 days served. counts 1 through 12 are concurrent to each other. counts 13 through 24 are concurrent to each other. count 1 is consect tiff to 2, 2 to 14, 3 to 15, count 4 is consecutive to count 16. 5 is consecutive to 17. 6 is consecutive to 18, 7 is consecutiv
suing after a report highlighting anti-semitic content on the site sparked a devastating advertiser exodus. now, unfortunately, a severe storm system could come at the worst possible time. what you need to know. coming up, i m kate baldwin with omar jimenez. this is cnn news central. it is very close. that s the word from a u.s. official to cnn, and the word also now from two israeli sources, a hostage deal could be announced as soon as today. there seems to be a lot of moving parts and a lot of things happening at one. listen to the latest and urgent painstaking work to get the hostages released. innocent victims were kidnapped on october 7th. here s what john kirby said. obviously we are laser focused on the american citizens we know are being held hostage. everybody should be out now, but here we are in negotiation, and we re getting closer to the end, we believe, of that negotiation, so again, i m going to be careful. the israeli prime minister s office just annou
the government wanted, and candidly, i still don t know. it was such an opaque process. it wasn t that you had a gad order, you also weren t allowed to speak to barbara starr about it, who was involved. you weren t allowed to know what the government was investigating. can you just tell us what that was like to try to operate in this vacuum of information? what would have happened if you had not complied with that gag order? the penalties for noncompliance are you can be held in contempt of court or be prosecutor for felony obstruction of justice. it s an intimidating thing to have hanging over your head for almost a year. it s almost unconsciousable for a lawyer, that i cannot be relied to speak to a client in confidence, and not be relied upon. we tried repeatedly with the doj
president biden is vowing this will end, because it s so embarrassing, but this has been a problem for years. that s true. number two, the idea that the journalist lawyers can t even talk about the case, can t even inform of journalists that is something extraordinary, incredibly unusual. let s put it this way, the word gad order don t belong in the same sentence as the news outlet. our job is to speak the truth and try to figure out what s going. when they go after our confidential records and these investigations end up gagging orders, everybody needs to be concerned about whether it s an abuse of power. during the trump years, new york times, cnn and the washington post were the three outlets where there were secret subpoenas to try to get hood of journalist records, three outlets that president trump bashed at every turn on every