analyst, norm eisen. he was special counsel for the house judiciary committee in trump s first impeachment trial. also cnn global affairs analyst susan glasser, and dave ehrenberg, an attorney for palm beach county, florida. susan, i almost butchered your name so i m gonna begin with you. on this very notion. i gotta ask you, the washington post report is fully frankly breathtaking. i have to ask you, what is your reaction to the reports that they were searching for not just classified documents, but those that may be related to nuclear weapons? not somewhere where it secured under the cover of the federal government, but mar-a-lago? what s your reaction to that? yeah, i mean look laura, this is a very, very serious allegation. this is the kind of thing that government does not screw around about. and obviously, the idea of nuclear secrets being held in an insecure way at mar-a-lago is just extraordinary. and certainly, really changes the conversation in a significant way
is just extraordinary. and certainly, really changes the conversation in a significant way. we ve heard three days of gaslighting from the former president and his supporters, right? about this, as if it was merely a matter of doodles on cocktail napkins. obviously, classified nuclear information is a whole different ball game. and it reminds me of the story of the four years of trump and the president sees himself being in some ways a national security threat. this is another illustration of that. susan, you mentioned the idea of nuclear secrets. that was the phrase you used. i want to be clear for the audience, what kind of documents could they be referring to? what would a former president have in terms of the possession of what they would ve seen? could there be documents, is there any such thing as sort of a benign related nuclear