good evening. i m erin burnett. outfront tonight, a trump white house insider testifies. tonight, cnn has learned that former vice president mike pence s chief of staff, marc short, testified before a federal grand jury investigating january 6th. he is believed to be the highest ranking official in trump s white house to cooperate with the federal investigation. now, in just a moment i m going to speak with marc short live. he is a valuable witness. the day before the january 6th rally, he grew concerned about president trump s attack on pence and warned the secret service. here s a portion of his testimony to the january 6th select committee. concern was for the vice president s security, and so i wanted to make sure the head of the vice president s secret service was aware that likely as these disagreements became more public that the president would lash out in some way. and on january 6th, short was with the vice president who had to be rushed to safety when an an
two missing americans in ukraine, on the back of a russian military truck, hands apparently tied behind their backs. where are they now? let s go outfront. good evening, i m erin burnett, outfront tonight, donald trump was quote, pouring gasoline on the fire. how trump s former white house deputy press secretary describes trump s actions that put pence s life in danger on january 6th. this testimony showed at the january 6th committee this afternoon, rioters came within 40 feet, 40 feet of the vice-president at the capitol. committee showed these never before seen photos of the vice-president and these pictures are of pence at a secure loksz after rioters breached the capitol so when he s in that, you know, sort of rushed into that little back area of attempted safety. including this one that shows pence looking at the video trump tweeted, asking rioters to leave the capitol, the one sent many hours after the violence began, and hours after trump had repeatedly stoked the
it was true humor and nixon loved it. according to the treasury department social security and medicare financial status report, the social security trust fund for retirees and disability will run dry in 2033. three years earlier than projected last year. this is 30 minutes. good afternoon and welcome. i want to welcome my fellow trustees from the treasury and take this opportunity to thank the chief actuaries, steve gossen rick foster and their staffs brought their hard work on these reports. every year as you know the social security and medicare boards of trustees issue reports to congress on the strength of these two indispensable programs, and we just minutes to complete this year s financial review and to transmit to congress the final reports. millions of americans rely on social security and medicare for income and for health care, and billions more will do so in the future. as today s report makes clear these programs have the resources they need to fulfill their
publicly apologized for the train bombing in madrid. they thought they found his fingerprint on a bag of detonators in madrid, but they were completely wrong and had to apologize. this shows the fingerprint identification process is highly subjective. three drug reviewers reached the conclusion that his fingerprint was on the bad. even if it fingerprint turns out to be correct 90% of the time, it has never been steady. both sides are saying we should start with the fingerprinting. there s nothing to worry about, but because this is the best known discipline, other disciplines are likely to be weaker. let s move on from that to the others. host: last call, charlotte on the republican line from pennsylvania. caller: i was wondering if he did speak to was a little bit about the current status of the federal judge s serving under maritime law and how they are not down to uphold their constitutional rights. how can the citizens protect our constitutional rights and be heard by con
monkey wrenches in the machinery that drives our economy. now, you ll if you read the newspapers, and we hear people comments on why aren t people creating jobs? why is capital investment on the sidelines? why are people holding on to their money instead of investing their money in their businesses, or investing their money in other people s businesses so we can grow this economy, they re sitting on the sideline and not participating. you will hear both sides of the aisle in this house talk about the trillions of dollars that are being held back from investments. you ll hear arguments made by the other side, by the democrats in this house that it s the greed of the big corporations that s doing this. but when you study the problem, it s not just the big corporations that are sitting back and waiting, it s the small businessman. it s the guy with one shop, maybe thinking about adding on to that shop, thinking about adding one more machinist or one more salesman, but you know