issue in a lot of key states. abigail abrams, great to have you with us. thank you. a former employee of the cia convicted for carrying out the largest leak of classified data in the agency s history, skrosh wi joshua worked as a computer engineer and accused of giving wikileaks a huge trove of classified data in 2016. wikileaks published the leak known as vault 7 in 2017, a federal jury in new york found schultz guilty wednesday of all nine counts including illegal gathering of national defense information. boston s newly named police commissioner once sued the department and won. michael cox is a former boston officer, he was mistaken for a suspect and severely beaten by other officers back in 1995. he successfully sued the department claiming it had tried to cover up that incident. after this incident happened,
patient and the idea that you have to get up to the line of being about to die is just quite stunning to say the least. it is like medieval times. abigail, nice to see you. thank you so much. all right. now to this, ernst & young is being fined a record $100 million by the u.s. government. regulators discovered the company knew some of its auditors get this were cheating on their ethics exams for several years and did nothing to stop it. ernst & young says it is complying with the s.e.c. s order to reinforce its culture of ethics. cheating on the ethics cheat. nice. can t make it up. just ahead, where you should not be throwing your fourth of july party this weekend. and former aide telling all to the january 6 committee. place it with a new one of the same make and model. get a whole lot of something with farmers policy perks.
their states and washington, d.c. as the legal battles intensify. thanks to erica hill for that report. let s bring in abigail abrams, time magazine. so nice to have you back. appreciate you getting up with us. you know, technology has transformed access to abortion in so many different ways and now of course the majority of women in the united states get abortions through the two medications that you take. they are not going in for surgeries, at least in the majority of cases. how is this all going to shake out where you have states where abortion is legal and other people, you know, in states where it isn t legal and the worry of course is that people can be tracked, right? that s exactly right. now that we have so much more technology, the abortion landscape really looks different than it did pre-roe. we have different states having
writer abigail abrams. so nice to have you on early start with us. so let s start with the fact that this now appears to be a battle that has moved from what was happening in clinics to what is going to happen in the mail. with roe on the line at the supreme court, that seems where the next frontier is headed. and you have been writing about how most women these days, 54% of women who need to terminate a pregnancy do so through medical indicated abortion. so how are red states gearing up to crack down on being ass acce to that? that s right. medication abortion which is two drug combination that people can really take at home or in clinics, any location, has been getting more common. and last december the fda even loosened regulations that allow the pills to be prescribed by tele health or via the mail. but now as you said, republican
illinois as well are passing laws to protect providers from being extradited to other states where abortion would be outlawed. they are adding more resources. so in places like illinois, they are creating a hub, a bigger abortion clinic there, that can take the influx of patients that might be fleeing from states that are going to outlaw all kinds of abortion. abigail, thank you so much this morning. up next for you, wall street s worst day all year. christine will tell us what happened. will stocks bounce back? it was ugly. plus four astronauts in a dramatic splashdown just a short time ago.