welcome back. the former president arrived to the courthouse a little over an hour ago via underground garage. he has already been booked and digitally fingerprinted. he is expected to plead not guilty to a 37-count indictment. mr. trump is accused of mishandling classified documents containing sensitive defense secrets about everything from nuclear programs to potential military vulnerabilities. while he s not expected to stay much many court today, trump has been saying plenty of social media. he s posted nearly a dozen times on the case just in recent hours and that includes multiple attacks on the essential counsel, jack smith, calling him a thug and accusing him of planting evidence all while police are keeping a close eye on the crowds gathered outside the courthouse in miami for the arraignment. but so far, no problems there. seems to be relatively peaceful. let s bring in our panel for how hour. ari is back with us as is andrew weissman, former lead prosecutor in
prominent defense attorney who turned them down. none of the people we believe they ve been interviewing were in the courtroom today. it appears in they re attempting to add other florida-based lawyers, so far that hasn t happened. the lawyers we saw in there are ones that have been with him for some time. this is ari. we all thank you for trying to make soup of this water because you had limited access. you were also closer to this than most people in america so we appreciate that. from the overflow room you were in as well as before and after you re down there, this is a person in donald trump who has previously post and talked about summoning a type of resistance or revolution we covered earlier. what are you seeing having gone in, come out and being outside now in this area and that wider aspect of this and in any way
administration bigs talks about this is eye for an eye. 75 million nra card members. i worry some loner, some white supremacist or neo nazi somewhere will do something like the guy did in cincinnati where he shot up the building. i think president trump will have to say whatever he wants. he s got first amendment rights but i hope he will not continue with the incendiary comments that could inspire people to commit violence. understood. thank you so very much because it is the former president who has been making some of those comments from the very moment. thank you very much. sure. and with us still, ken dilanian. ari sitting comfortably on the
times on the case just in recent hours and that includes multiple attacks on the essential counsel, jack smith, calling him a thug and accusing him of planting evidence all while police are keeping a close eye on the crowds gathered outside the courthouse in miami for the arraignment. but so far, no problems there. seems to be relatively peaceful. let s bring in our panel for how hour. ari is back with us as is andrew weissman, former lead prosecutor in robert mueller s investigation into russian interference in the 2016 election. former u.s. attorney, joyce vance, and neil. former u.s. acting solicitor general and tim. he served as former president trump s lawyer on the special counsel investigations until his resignation almost a month ago. let s pick up on the conversation where he left off. i open the floor to you, an drew, because you still have
information from the new york times is reporting from inside the courtroom about whether or not donald trump can speak to witnesses, mr. nauta. we re going to wait and see if our reporter, garrett haake, is waiting for that to finish up. in the meantime, what typically are the kinds of parameters they would be looking at? oh. ari. in the booking like this, we would just expect the normal instructions you d get. like we discussed with ken. you waive the reading of the actual indictment. you get instructions about the court case. you would get a schedule. i don t believe we ve gotten that yet. that s standard. i don t think based on what we understand there would this moment extra provisions we d expect. it would be interesting if