came when the crime was committed in the first place which the biden administration is not planning to make public appearance because the wanting to self is not where to be where the meat is pure the meat is the affidavit that underlines the warrant. we are not trusting in the warrant as we are the affidavit. that is where we would find out what the court was told. what we want to know is why the search was ordered. carley: congresswoman claudia tenney up with us this morning to react to the breaking news but we began with brooke singman covering the story from the beginning, brooke, good morning. hey, good morning that is right. attorney merrick garland breaking a silence in a statement with personally signed off on the push with former president trumps mar-a-lago home. i approve the decision to seek a search warrant in this matter. the apartment does not take a decision lately. where possible is standard practice with less intrusive means as an alternative to a sear
decision lately. where possible is standard practice with less intrusive means as an alternative to a search. the attorney general also revealing his emotions to make the search warrant public. the department filed a motion to make public the warrant in the seat in light of the former president s public confirmation the search, their surrounding circumstances, and substantial public interest in this matter. and trump is on board writing not only will i not oppose the release of the documents related to unwarranted, unnecessary rate, but i expect biden by encouraging the immediate release of the documents. late last night the washington post reporting the fbi was searching for classified documents on nuclear weapons allegedly subpoenaed trump back in the spring but the former president s attorney thing the mainstream media is grasping at straws.
laura, the reason i bring up attorney thing is one of the key questions here is have these requirements been challenged? what does the case law say about various types of vaccine requirements? so there have been a bunch of lawsuits and they ve all been losers so far. mostly it s been students saying, hey, i don t want to have a mandatory vaccine at my school. judge looked at indiana university, public university, a bunch of students sued and the court said, no, it is constitutional to mandate a vaccine. the basic idea here is that states have an obligation to protect their citizens it s called police power. 1905 the supreme court said they could do this in the context of massachusetts doing it for smallpox. this has happened a lot. the courts repeatedly upheld it. typically employers make two exceptions, two carve outs. they re narrow, right for religious grounds, very few religions say that you can t get a vaccine. hardly ever comes up. then also certain medical conditions. what if
organization when they set off the bombs at the boston marathon. they also have not found a manifesto explaining their reason for that attack. the jury foreman in the jodi arias trial opens up about his experience calling it gut wrenching. the jury convicted arias of first degree murder in the killing of her boyfriend. but a mistrial was declared when they couldn t decide if she should get the death penalty or life in prison. looking back the foreman says her 18 days on the stand probably hurt her case. it was too long for her i don t think and, again, i don t know if that s an attorney thing but i don t think that she proved to be a very good witness. anna: the new jury could be brought in to decide her sentence but prosecutors may offer a plea deal instead: car mother s nightmare a reality for one california woman. leann gibson thought baby warn everywhere wouldn t make his debut for two
and bears . let s divide the scandals into three parts. part number one, scandal number one, did the bank manipulate energy markets in california and midwest thus driving up prices for consumers. next friday the 13th is the magical de the federal judge has said cough up the documents or else. the documents are interesting. they say no, we didn t do anything wrong with the bids. but the regulateders are looking at them to see if they artificially used higher prices at the wholesale level and then pass along to consumers. there is about $13 million involved here. they say it s an attorney thing. they want from the head of the global commodity trading group. that is very high up and could