Daily shows roy wood jr. And before the speeches over the next couple of hours, were going to cover the biggest stories driving the week. Setting the stage for our coverage, and of course of this iconic d. C. Event. That also includes mike pence testifying before the special counsel reinjury, to e. Jean carroll trial, newly incriminating sound that could come up in the future lawsuits against fox, the firing of Tucker Carlson, the ethical lapses of Clarence Thomas, neil gorsuch, and the conservatives on the Supreme Court. But lets talk about some of the characters who are certain to play a prominent role at tonights event, perhaps in the remarks as well. This week President Biden officially kicked off his Reelection Campaign. In his First Campaign ad, biden cast himself as a warrior, fighting for the freedom of the American People. Part of the president strategy here is to frame the gop as a quote, extreme movements bent on overturning fair elections, restricting access to abortion, an
country, as the 11th hour gets underway on this monday night. good evening, once again, i m stephanie ruhle. the breaking news tonight, new video of trump ally roger stone that is likely to be on display during the january 6th committee s hearing on wednesday. the washington post reports that the panel plans to show video of stone from a danish made documentary. and one specific clip, stone speaks out about violence before the 2020 election. excellent bleep the violence, believe the voting, let s get right to the violence. shoot to kill. cnn teva, shoot to kill. the washington post reports, that stone went on to say that he was getting, and renounces violence completely. the 16 committee only obtained that video after the filmmakers complied with the subpoena, some responded to the video in a statement saying in part, this i challenged the authenticity and accuracy these videos and believe they have been manipulated and selectively edited. wednesdays hearing will be the
get access to stuff that we didn t get. they have a hammer of sorts to compel testimony that congress doesn t have. and in a criminal grand jury investigation, if there is a privilege assertion or rejection to a subpoena, that is immediately litigated by the chief judge of the district in which the grand jury sets. then it goes immediately on a motion to stay the district court order to the court of appeals. we didn t have the ability to move quickly through privilege assertions and adjudication s. we had to go through a civil process. which lawyers representing witnesses knew would take too long, because we were on a timeframe and we would expire. so jack smith, and his team, or wisely pushing back against merit-less privilege searches. judges are agreeing with them, and are forcing some witnesses that would not answer certain questions to go under oath. that ideally, for jack smith, gets him the extra five or 10% that we could not get. he will get. i think that likely makes the
god bless whoever wants to write a check. and what do you think the doj s gonna do next year? i think the doj, one thing the bother me about all this, is there wasn t data sharing between the congressional hearing on the doj well before, now i don t know how much has been shared, but i think the doj s all over this. they have authorities that congress doesn t have. for instance, we collect phone records, we only get to, from, and the type of eaten that you communicated. stephanie, when you re sending text messages, email messages, or we can see time and duration, how the phone rang almost, that kind of stuff. boy, doj gets a lot more, right? they get location, tower, data my guess is if they re collecting all these phone records, they have a lot more that the congressional committee can get. we have tens of millions of lines of data, so i m really interested to see how far they can go. but i think the doj s all over
between the congressional hearing on the doj well before, now i don t know how much has been shared, but i think the doj s all over this. they have authorities that congress doesn t have. for instance, we collect phone records, we only get to, from, and the type of eaten that you communicated. stephanie, when you re sending text messages, email messages, or we can see time and duration, how the phone rang almost, that kind of stuff. boy, doj gets a lot more, right? they get location, tower, data my guess is if they re collecting all these phone records, they have a lot more that the congressional committee can get. we have tens of millions of lines of data, so i m really interested to see how far they can go. but i think the doj s all over this, especially, i think, on seditious conspiracy. but also the commanding control elements that day. there was not realtime data sharing, the committee want to credit. well, they got the credit today, now it s time for the data. denver rigglema