new york attorney general is coming after the trump organization, for what? lying about the property values of their stuff. we have got our legal experts here to bring it all down. and the countdown to midterms is on, and less than 45 days, heading to the polls for what i think is a critical election. so we are going to check in on some critical races, the new nbc poll finds enthusiasm for upcoming midterms that an all-time high. plus, we are launching a new series today focused on the organizations known as the divine nine. their efforts to drive voters to the poll. we are taking the series off with the national president of this sorority, she is giving us a peek into what he asked he is up to. i am simone sanders, i am back, and i have something to say. donald trump, he had a bad week. he is facing new legal challenges. first, there are developments involving the mar-a-lago case. and those documents seized by the fbi. three appeals court judges for the 11th circ
makes it all the more concerning when you look at how many of trump s pardons carried the stink of political patronage and best in corrupt self-interest at worst. according to pew research center over the course of his four years in office trump only granted 237 acts of clemency. that s the third lowest number of pardons for any president in history. only the two president bush is pardoned fewer people. it would seem that trump was extremely selective about who he pardoned. still some of his pardons were widely praised. like alice johnson in 2020 who was serving life in prison for a nonviolent drug conviction. he posthumously pardoned the historical figure season being anthony, arrested for voting illegally. in 1870 to inject johnson the first black heavyweight boxing champ who is subject to a racist conviction in 1913 for transporting a white woman across state lines. but he also pardoned a robes gallery of political figures including many of his own associates. some of whom
last week at sparks widespread outrage when charges were downgraded in the suspect was released without bail. governor hopeful is claiming credit for his rearrest. her refusal to repeal bill reforms biz criminals back on the street in the first place. alexis mcadams is live in eric city with more, alexis. there was a lot of anger here. everyone was waiting to find out what happened next. in the ex-con walked free. the innocent victim is still in a coma though. after the outrage were talking about new york s governor stepped in and said the convicted offender had clearly violated its parole, listen. quickset person is now in custody. that is at my direction. people of new york need to know that as their governor i will stand up and protect them. the guy was out before he was rearrested. police tell us 55-year-old was caught on camera punching in the fact of the head last week with the video is pretty hard to watch there for the guy had no clue a person was even behind him
inflation is taking out of your wallet. or protest and night outside of washington, d.c., at the homes of supreme court justices john robertson brett kavanaugh may continue. malden police dispatch tonight with a decimal meter to keep protesters and check out assault complaints. they are getting more complaints from neighbors. one officer telling a fox news grow on site that enforcement action could be an option if the complaints continue. we ll be here in future weeks if the noise if we get complaints and the noise remains high and they don t disperse, enforcement action may take less. shannon: also tonight, the quite certain the democrat led city is reportedly to blame for starbucks closing its doors at more than a dozen locations nationwide after employees reported an increase in assaults, theft, drug use. we begin tonight with more bad news on inflation for the president had for american families. all of us struggling to make ends meet. what a correspondent kevin cor