hello, and welcome to inside politics. i m abby phillip in washington. nine pages, our first glimpse at the final report from the georgia grand jury investigating former president trump, has landed. two lines are guaranteed to send witnesses who went under oath into a legal panic. plus, the president gets his physical and it underlines an uncomfortable question for mr. biden and for the democratic party. is 80 too old to run again? and today, new details in the michigan state rampage. the students who were wounded, they are improving, but they re not out of the woods yet. and the gunman who took his life as officers closed in. and this the shooter had two handguns on his person when he was located. those handguns are both .9 millimeter and he also had additional magazines and ammunition on his person. our investigative team did work on our federal atf partners to trace those weapons and we have learned that they were purchased legally by the shooter but not register
good afternoon. i m casey hunt here in washington. we re going to begin with breaking news. just moments ago we learned that tesla is recalling hundreds of thousands of vehicles in order to remove the, quote, full self-driving feature. that is the beta software that lets the car drive with minimal human intervention. gabe cohen has our latest reporting on this. this is a lot of cars and a big deal. reporter: we re talking about poten potentially 363,000 tesla vehicles being recalled. we are just getting this recall report in that s coming from the national highway traffic safety administration. i want to walk you through what models we re talking about. so we re talking about the tesla model s, model x, model 3 and model y vehicles, spanning several years. 2016 all the way up until 2023. as you mentioned, all of these vehicles we re talking about are equipped with that self-driving beta software and now tesla is going to be giving a free software update. in the meantime, th
viewers joining us in the united states and all around the world. i m bianca a oig. . i m max foster. just ahead russian forces trying and so far failing to make real head way in the opening stages of a new offensive. we re not only up against ukraine, but also against nato and especially the united states. to control the narrative early on. what folks are really concerned about is what happens later, what happens down the road, what happens three years from now. several buildings have collapsed. several people have been confirmed killed. hundreds injured. some of them in critical condition. live from london, this is cnn newsroom with max foster and bianca nobilo. it is tuesday, february 21, 9:00 a.m. in london, 12 noon in moscow where vladimir putin is set to deliver a speech to the nation s top political and military leaders on the state of what he calls russia s special military operation in ukraine. mr. putin is expected to lay out his vision for wha
every woman that had an abortion, then they are a killer. can you imagine that? can you imagine that? bill: nate foye live in the newsroom following this out of p.a. good morning bill and dana. dr. oz is focused on crime lieutenant governor john fetterman is facing criticism about his stance on releasing second degree murderers from prison. something he advocated for in the past. his campaign now telling fox news digital he believes there are people who deserve to spend the rest of their life in prison but that decision should be left to judges and parole boards, not politicians in harrisburg. pennsylvania law requires life without parole for second degree murderers including anyone that s involved in a felony that results in death. getaway drivers, planners, active participants, including people who did not pull the trigger or kill somebody directly. dr. oz criticizes that stance in campaign ads. he held this round table discussion about crime in philadelphia yesterday a
welcome to the programme. iraq s president has said an early election could resolve the political unrest gripping the country. to those who have taken their eye off iraq, the violence that broke out in baghdad yesterday, might have looked like a sudden eruption of rage. in fact, the sectarian anger has been simmering for years. the country is riddled with corruption, it has not had a functioning government since the october elections and the spiralling cost of living is pushing iraq towards an existential crisis. the spark that ignited these protests yesterday was the sudden announcement by the shia cleric, muqtadr al sadr, that he was withdrawing from political life. sadr has been a major player in iraq since 2003, when his supporters known then as the mehdi army, began attacks on coalition troops. in october, the sadrists won the most seats in parliament but refused to form a coalition with the mostly shi ite iran backed parties. injune, sadr asked all of his mps to resign