good evening, everyone. welcome to cnn tonight. former vice president mike pence has been subpoenaed by the special counsel investigating donald trump to testify about his former boss. a special counsel seeking information from pence about his interactions with donald trump leading up to the election and what happened on january 6th. [ chanting ] nothing like that or like this has ever happened before. plus, the latest installment of the george santos soap on that raffle we have new info involving puppies, amish dog breeders and $15,000 worth of bad checks. and what liberals can learn from ron desantis. there s a piece in the new york time that warns liberals not to underestimate desantis. he may resemble trump but not in his intellect or resolve. right to the news. with me in studio, we have natasha, former assistant special watergate prosecutor nick ackerman and john berman. seamless, people. seamless. you walked all the way over here. across a bridge, everyone. gre
secret files at a location that is not his former office. the white house begin a chance to come clean about this damning new discovery but refused to comment. has he looked into whether any other documents have been taken to any other office? i won t speak to. this i will let the process continue. it s an on-going process. i won t to speak to this from here. it s more prudent and appropriate for my colleagues at the white house counsel. joe finally broke his silence about the initial batch of classified documents. claiming he had no clue how they ended up in his private office. i take classified documents seriously. i was briefed about this discovery and surprised to learn that were any government records that were taken there to that office. i don t know what is the documents. i turned over the boxes. they have turned over the boxes to the archives. we are cooperating fully with the review. don t expect any answers from the white house. the press secretary sideste
police. we will ask a survivor who knows the answer to that question firsthand. sandra: she will talk about her experience and why the horror in idaho is so familiar to her, including the moment she, like the survivor in idaho, came terrifyingly close to the attacker. america reports rolls into hour two on this monday afternoon. i m sandra smith in new york. hi, john. john: john roberts in washington, good day to you, too. the survivor joins us with insight what the surviving students in idaho are likely going through and what could come next. not all that s new at 2:00. sandra: seattle public schools are warning students are in crisis, a habit driving them into depression and turning classrooms into ground 0 for mental health. that habit, social media. john: all new at 2:00, the school district serving more than 50,000 kids is suing big tech companies taking them to court for exploiting the vulnerable brains of youth. 91-page complaint ties tech giants, including
cyclists call for britain s roads to be made safer, as a survey finds a quarter of motorists admit driving dangerously close to bikes. a damning report has warned that hundreds of police officers in england and wales have been cleared to serve when they should have failed vetting procedures. forces accepted applicants with convictions for robbery, indecent exposure and domestic abuse. the police watchdog looked at eight forces, reviewing hundreds of vetting files. his majesty s inspectorate of constabulary, fire and rescue services focused on the poor treatment of women, and sexual misconduct, following the murder of sarah everard by a serving officer. the review found officers with criminal records, significant debts, or whose families had links to organised crime. police chiefs have promised to put the problems right. tom symonds reports. in 2012, nicola brooks reported she was being abused and stalked online. an inspectorfrom sussex police handled her case, but he carried
a sharp escalation in military tension between north and south korea, with both sides firing missiles into the sea near each other s coasts. he shouldn t be doing that. and the drivers who think cyclists shouldn t be on the road and deliberately drive too close to them. coming up on the bbc news channel, india hang on to win a rain affected nailbiter in the t20 world cup against bangladesh and put themselves top of group b. good afternoon and welcome to the bbc news at one. the prime minister rishi sunak said the migrant crisis is a serious and escalating problem and admitted that not enough asylum claims are being processed. the prime minister insisted the government is getting a grip of the situation and backed home secretary suella braverman s handling of the issue. at prime minister s questions in the commons, the labour leader sir keir starmer said just 4% of people arriving in small boats last year had their asylum claim processed. it comes as the prime minist