tonight on why he s been calling for all court papers to be made public but not doing so in the place that it matters most, the courtroom. clarissa ward is in afghanistan and her harrowing return to a place deeply affected by the war and what she found when she got there one year after american troops departed. we begin with the search at mar-a-lago and the fight against unce unsealing documents. jessica, walk us through what the judge ordered today. anderson, the judge telling doj to go back to the drawing board and find a way to release some of this information from the affidavit. the judge is telling prosecutors two things. propose redactions but also better explain why they need to keep large sections of this secret. so the judge has set a deadline. he wants their recommendations next thursday at noon. after that point the judge says he might have additional confidential discussions with doj before he makes that final decision about what to release. parts of it are li
and a very, very senior trump administration official, arouar anderson, called it, quote, bullshit. he was not the only one who said that to me today, anderson. gloria, what are your sources telling you about how declassification actually works compared to what happened in the trump white house? the source i spoke to familiar with this process in the trump white house said that, look, the president can say i want something declassified. that s fine. but what has to happen is it has to be memorialized. there has to be a record of it. it has to be run through the paces of various agencies, and this source said to me, so as a practical matter, you know, the president has to be able to prove if he s saying he asked for things to be declassified that he did ask for things to be declassified. otherwise, he says, it s like a tree falling in the forest with no one there to hear it. so he says it s ridiculous. jamie, as gloria was saying,
tonight on why he s been calling for all court papers to be made public but not doing so in the place that it matters most, the courtroom. clarissa ward is in afghanistan and her harrowing return to a place deeply affected by the war and what she found when she got there one year after american troops departed. we begin with the search at mar-a-lago and the fight against unce unsealing documents. jessica, walk us through what the judge ordered today. anderson, the judge telling doj to go back to the drawing board and find a way to release some of this information from the affidavit. the judge is telling prosecutors two things. propose redactions but also better explain why they need to keep large sections of this secret. so the judge has set a deadline. he wants their recommendations next thursday at noon. after that point the judge says he might have additional confidential discussions with doj before he makes that final decision about what to release. parts of it are likely to ge
even though consumer advocates say much more needs to be done, especially, erin, with telemarketing laws. pretty amazing because when you as i m watching your report, i was realizing i haven t gotten that auto warranty call in a while so maybe we can all notice that it really is working what they re doing. thanks for that report, gabe. and thanks to all of you. time for anderson. good evening. we are one step closer to knowing what the government s criminal case may be against the former president and we may be closer still because the former judge who signed off on the search warrant signalled his intention to make at least portions public in support of it. he unsealed a number of documents and we ll have details in just a moment. also ahead, what some of the former president s top white house officials make of his claim that he had a standing policy of declassifying documents by default. and there s also new reporting
that is not feeling the impact and the pinch of the economic crisis. and one thing i thought was also interesting is that a couple of the men that we talked to, even though in these rural areas, girls education has not really traditionally been a priority, they did say that they do want to see their girls get educated. obviously the taliban has issued that temporary what they call a temporary suspension on girls secondary education. so, i thought it was interesting to hear that they would like to see that lifted. sickening to hear him talking about celebrating the downing of the u.s. chinook with u.s. special forces on board. earlier this week you spoke to people in kabul and you spoke to women trying to get secondary education despite being banned. how striking is it to see different attitudes toward taliban rule in different places? they re less than 50 miles away from each other. reporter: it s a two-hour drive, anderson. so, it is a very stark contrast.