you burned me. with people in east palestine, ohio, angry and afraid after the toxic train derailment, donald trump offers them trump brand water and cultural grievance. pete buttigieg called on the former president to reverse the safety regulations put in place by his administration. secretary buttigieg will join me in a moment. also, new evidence the right knew it was all a lie. as arizona s former attorney general buried a record refuting election fraud claims. and garrison hayes is here. you know him from his tiblth series, forgotten black history. tonight, he is bringing us some kick ass black history. we begin the reidout tonight with east palestine, ohio, where we heard directly from federal officials today about what caused the toxic train derailment there three weeks ago. the chair of the national transportation safety board did not hold back. but i can tell you this much. this was 100% preventable. we call things accidents. there is no accident. the ntsb
wish all of you have a good night. from all of our colleagues across the networks of nbc news, thanks for staying up late with us, i will see you at the end of tomorrow. of tomorrow. good evening chris, thank you my friend much appreciated. thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. really happy to have you here. the basic plot is, that even though he s a good guy, even though he is our hero, he has to steal the declaration of independence. he has to break into the national archives and steal it, but it s for a good reason. it s because he has followed the string of ancient, creepy totally non plausible clues, and those clues have revealed to him a big secret. the big secret is that there is a big treasure and to find a big treasure, you have to follow the treasure map and the treasure map inconveniently is printed in invisible ink on the backside of the declaration of independence. and so he has to steal the declaration of independence. not just because he wants the tre
quisling. the 11th hour with stephanie ruhle starts now. hle starts now tonight, the justice department tells a judge it has reviewed all the documents recovered at mar-a-lago, as pressure to indict the former guy weighs on the attorney general. and, while republicans predict violent fallout from the potential prosecution of the former guy, democrats are unveiling a bold new strategy pushing back at critics of their latest policies. plus, the economic impact of abortion bans across the country, and burdens women are facing while trying to get reproductive care. the current reality of our post-roe society, as the 11th hour gets underway on this monday night. good evening once again, i m stephanie ruhle. it s good to be back here, we have got a lot to cover. it has been exactly three weeks, three weeks since the faa searched donald trump s florida home, and tonight we know the justice department has completed its review of all of the documents that were seized by the fbi. doj l
legends, whose greatness will stand the test of time. these two great ladies take us off the air tonight. on that extraordinary note, i wish all of you a very good night. from all of our colleagues across the networks of nbc news, thanks for staying up late with, us i will see you at the end of tomorrow. tonight on all in. if there is a prosecution of donald trump on this classified information after the clinton debacle there will be riots in the streets. trump defenders use the january six playbook to manage the doj. we have seen these maga extreme republicans making these kind of comments, which is dangerous. tonight, as the reviewed evidence from mar-a-lago continues, the white house announces a primetime address on the threat to democracy. plus, while trump s attempt to slow down the investigation may be too late. plus is there more coming for the theft of ashley biden s diary? and allegations on a texas podcast that could be on to something when it comes to stude
you also do stories, i love the stories of, like, the military heroes, the pilots. the things that we don t hear about. i feel like we are kind of trained to believe that black history began with slavery and ended with dr. king saying that one sentence. but there is so much more to it. there is another great story that you do, and history on gibson, we have to get a woman there. talk a little bit about althia gibson. althia gibson is one of my favorite specifically about black resilience and amazing community. she s born in the segregated south on a cotton farm to parents who are sharecroppers. so she is coming of the direct legacy and evolution of slavery. her family, just like millions of other african americans said we don t want to be here anymore so they picked up and moved to new york during what is called the great migration. when they get their, althea is still struggling. she is skipping school, not