was and what he was doing, and he told attorneys today he told prosecutors, he was not trying to manufacture an alibi when he now admittedly lied to investigators around that time. here with me is cnn s jean casarez who has been watching so much of this trial and what jumped out to you at the end here, particularly the dramatic finish of that cross-examination? he went through every single name of his partners, the people that should have gotten millions of dollars from the law firm, his family, everyone for decades he had lied to over and over and over again. then he lied about not being down where the murders happened with his wife and his son. so close in time to when their phones locked forever, meaning they never were on them again because they had been murdered. trying to show this jury, you can t believe today anything he says on that sand because he s a liar and always will be. let me dig into that a little bit more, the specific moment, now that murdaugh admits t
time frame. todd: steve harrigan life in the ground on kiev one-year anniversary of the war, steve. ukraine has already been out and about downtown performing a ceremony with soldiers saying ukraine will do everything possible to win back the war against russia within this year. in the meantime, u.s. g7 nations expected to announce a new series of economic sanctions against russia. this comes as the u.s. is also announcing $2 billion more in military aid to russia and since provided since the war began $50 billion of economic and military aid to ukraine. that is $113 billion that has been authorized. some military analysts are beginning to express cautions about president biden s message that the u.s. would support ukraine as long as it would take. when we say, like the president said, listen, i applaud them coming to ukraine. i applaud the speech he made reaganesque like in poland but we will be there until the end. that is playing into putin s end? he wants the end to
maggie s phone and my car were never together. at any point in time. now, you have an inaccurate times in many statements to law enforcement in this case, have you is not? i did. and we reviewed some of those on your directed examination. one was paul getting to moselle around 5:00. do you remember that? i do. were you lying to agent owens or anybody when you said paul got there at 5:00 p.m.? no. i wasn t lying to them. i thought that at the time. and when you most of the times a lot of the times when i gave times, i qualified them and said, but you know, you can look at this.
were you lying to agent owens or anybody when you said paul got there at 5:00 p.m.? no. i wasn t lying to them. i mean, i thought that at the time. and when you most of the times or a lot of times when i gave times i qualified them and say, you know, you can look at this, pointed them to my office, to the call log, to the key card, like we talked about, or my phone or my onstar. and when you told the agents that you thought you got to the office at 8:30, 9:00 on that morning of june 7th, you were wrong, right? i was wrong. were you lying? i wasn t lying. and when deputy green drove up and first you had your first encounter with him, i