Monday morning that they were going to go bankrupt well you know in america when you go bankrupt in chapter 11 we declare chapter 11 what happens is your creditors line up to see who gets the debt whoever is this has the most senior debt the bond holders the bank loans anything like that they cant your money 1st your assets they liquidate everything and then if theres anything left over a which creditors make sure theres not and the lawyers get paid and everything that then maybe equity holders shareholders might get paid so they never get paid right but when the news broke that they were going to go bankrupt chesapeake. People on robinhood especially these free apps available and its mostly for millennia old and generations a very young traders new traitorous and they all just got new money free money stimulus checks 1200. 00 each from the government they poured into it stop prices up at 300 percent at one point it close at 170 something percent 180 percent but heres what you know the
Federal reserve hikes interest rates, yet again. And we diggintothe race r californi the person in charge of our states wallet. Good afternoon, i am reed cowan, welcome to the 3 00 broadcast. Capitol hill is on alert, days after the attack on the husband of House Speaker nancy pelosi, and just days before election day, kpix 5s anne makovec joins me with the preparations for voters and elected officials. Yeah, its a scary time to be in politics. Capitol police say they are monitoring, right now, thousands of cases , nationwide, as we take a live look at the u. S. Capitol. They are also coordinating with local and state agencies. Helicopters flew mac low over the u. S. Capitol, for a security exercise just six days ahead of midterm elections. Capitol police chief, tom manger, calling for more Security Resources to protect lawmakers, citing todays political climate. Demonizing rhetoric, false claims of election fraud, paired with calls for action against other parties individuals are comb
Have msnbc contributor, mike barnacicl barnicle, and frank figliuzzi, Senior Reporter at vanity fair hand msnbc contributor emily jane fox. She recently interviewed Michael Cohen and has new reporting on how the raid went down. New york times reporter matt apuzzo who first broke the news of the cohen raid. Columnist and associate editor for the Washington Post, David Ignatius and nbc news capitol hill correspondent and host of kasie d. C. Kasie hunt. On siree, we have two top senators from the Armed Services committee joining us, plus a preview of Mark Zuckerbergs appearance today on capitol hill. How tough is that hearing going to get . North korea takes another real step toward sitting down at the negotiating table. While Sarah Huckabee sanders twists herself into knots to deflect, defend and dodge questions about the president s lies. But first, joe, the raid of Michael Cohens office. Thats not good. Like from a trump perspective, thats bad. Well, as many people have said, it is a r
Reporting like ronans and some of the other reporting where people are trying to figure out how this banking information came into the public domain, we know from the reporting the way that data base of those reports works is that you can tell who looks at what. Theres a record when anybody looks at those things, let alone accesses them in the kind of way that presumably would have been necessary to give them to reporters and give them to Michael Avenatti last week for dissemination to the public. So this person clearly knew they were taking a big risk by doing it, now learning the rationale behind why they took the risk, they thought there was a danger that some important records related to the case were being disappeared potentially for nefarious purposes so the public had to know. Its incredibly human, dramatic and that person is at risk. There are hard workers in this story. Im going to talk to david maury, an extreasury official mentioned in ronans report, he gives a reaction to t
Tonight. Thats the deeply personal story of his source, who remains secret, but is a Government Official who knows that releasing that was a violation of law and he or she, whoever it is, lives in fear of what will now happen to that Government Official. And, you know, we know from reporting like ronans and some of the other reporting where people are trying to figure out how this banking information came into the public domain, we know from the reporting the way that data base of those reports works is that you can tell who looks at what. Theres a record when anybody looks at those things, let alone accesses them in the kind of way that presumably would have been necessary to give them to reporters and give them to Michael Avenatti last week for dissemination to the public. So this person clearly knew they were taking a big risk by doing it, now learning the rationale behind why they took the risk, they thought there was a danger that some important records related to the case were be