shooter. fact number two, his parents have been charged in a groundbreaking case, four counts of involuntary manslaughter. you raised another important question there at the press conference about what about the school? how in the world was this young man allowed to go back into class on the day before the shooting he was searching for ammunition, on the day of the shooting another teacher saw the drawings, his parents summoned to the school and when they recklessly and irresponsibly said we want to leave him here, the school somehow let that stand. you asked that question about the anger in the community? there is anger over this. my producer and i have been here all week and talked to law enforcement officials, sheriff offices who ran too school, saw the blooded bodies and victims. as they started learning what the school knew, we had some information about it and the sources on the ground we ve been talking to have been apoplectic,
the pivotal figures in the case, the man who knocked kyle rittenhouse to the ground by kicking him in the head. rittenhouse is charged for reckless endangerment for shooting this guy. the prosecution knew his identity. they negotiated with him about testifying they withheld that from the defense. is that allowed? you know, i m a criminal defense attorney and i have to say there are points in this trial where i would have been apoplectic. referring to the silence of the defendant, which is the supreme court has said over and over again is a violation of constitutional rights. but this is also one of those glaring omissions. you know, you are referring to somebody in the charge without a name by the color of their pants. you go through an entire trial where this is one of the key counts and all along the prosecutors knew the identity? if they did not reveal the identity to the defense counsel and allow the defense counsel to call that person, i think it is a very serious violation. t
the man who knocked kyle rittenhouse to the ground by kicking him in the head. rittenhouse is charged for reckless endangerment for shooting this guy. the prosecution knew his identity. they negotiated with him about testifying they withheld that from the defense. is that allowed? you know, i m a criminal defense attorney and i have to say there are points in this trial where i would have been apoplectic. referring to the silence of the defendant, which is, the supreme court has said over and over again is a violation of constitutional rights. but this is also one of thoset glaring o omissions. you know, you are referring to somebody in the charge without a name by the color of their pants. you go through an entire trialal where this is one of the key counts and all along the prosecutors knew the identity? if they did not reveal the identity to the defense counsel and allow the defense counsel to call that person, i think it is a very serious violation. tucker: it sure seems it, yo
we are back with our politics lead and some new insight into how trump s big lie began. the election night details come from a new book called i alone can fix it written by the washington post s carol lenning and philip rucker who report that president trump was extremely confident he won re-election as early vote totals came in. but as mail-in ballots were counted, he came, quote, apoplectic. this scene unfolded in the white house, quote, why are they still counting votes, trump asked? the election s closed. are they counting ballots that came in afterwards? what the hell is going on? the president told kellyanne conway that he thought something nefarious was at play. i won in a landslide and they re taking it back. let us discuss. congratulations on your new editorship at the national review. let me ask you this. everybody who s paying attention
if she decided she wanted something, she got it. she was plotting all the time. she had schemes going. and then my mother fell in love with the prince and that s what really set her off. the german prince? the prince was fine, but she was hysterical about germans. the idea that her daughter was going to marry this german and take my mother off to live in bavaria in some castle made her apoplectic. and my mom s grandmother began to plot a way to stop this from happening. she should be a vanderbilt, she should be in the united states, and that s her birthright. i used to as a child lie in bed in the house in paris in the