6-3, the new numbers reshaping american life. the lead starts right now. 40 million americans will not get the student loan forgiveness president biden promised them after the supreme court rejects his plan. and the president says it is unforgivable. then a key ruling on lgbtq rights and freedom of speech involving a wedding website designer and the state of colorado. what it means for anti-discrimination laws across the country. plus as millions of americans plan to take to the roads and skies this holiday weekend, a look at what cities are experiencing turmoil after days of delays. and welcome to the lead. i m abby philip in for jake tapper. today we begin with our law and justice lead. at moment now president joe biden will address the nation after the supreme court today issued two major rulings. one that blocks president biden s student loan forgiveness program rejecting a program that would have delivered debt relief to millions of americans. and the other ruling th
distinctive facial tattoos. bill: prosecutors charging him with seven counts of first-degree murder and according to the mets the tip of this iceberg. the loss of life these devastating injuries on the over whelming trauma would demand we take justice. we anticipate dozens more charges centering around each of the victims. psychological victims, physical victims, attempted murder charges, aggravated discharge charges, aggravated battery charges. there will be dozens of more charges against mr. crimo. bill: live in highland park, good morning. bail, good morning teal. prosecutors will be asking a judge to deny bail to crimo and a court hearing in a couple of hours by the 22-year-old is facing seven first-degree murder charges and if convicted of mandatory licensing and no chance of probate as you heard the states attorney dozens of additional charges are expected to be filed as well. investigators say the suspect planned the attack for weeks and dress like a woman to b
this is the most significant second amendment ruling in more than a decade. in a 6-3 decision, the court struck down new york s law that places restrictions on concealed handguns . that law was enacted more than a century ago. the majority of the court ruling, the constitution protects a person s right to carry a gun outside the home. jessica schneider is live in washington with these breaking details. jessica, what more was in this decision? erica, the supreme court here significantly expanding gun rights and expanding the scope of the second amendment for the first time since 2008. so this is a 6-3 decision written by the senior most justice, clarence thomas. what it has done is it has struck down a new york gun law that you restricted who could carry concealed handguns outside the home. it s a law that stood for more than a century. but the court has now said that that law cannot stand and that crucially here the constitution guarantees the right to carry a gun outside t
justice kavanaugh. he said he wanted to murder the justice. the man is angry over mass shootings and the leaked drafted opinion overturning roe v. wade. this comes after protests at the homes of supreme court justices including kavanaugh s house. the white house release as statement saying they have been forceful about condemning such behavior. yeah, right. take a look to how they previously lit the fuse. posted a map with the home addresses of the supreme court justices. is that the kind of thing this president wants to help your side make their point? i think the president s view is that there s a lot of passion, a lot of fear, a lot of sadness from many, many people across this country about what they saw in that leaked document. we obviously want people s privacy to be respected. we have not seen violence or vandalism against supreme court justices. we know there s an outrage about protests that have been peaceful to date. we encourage that and that s the judge s posi
you also heard that question at the end. did you give americans false hope by pursuing this action under an authority that the supreme court has now ruled that the president did not have. the president there very firmly saying i didn t give any false hope. and he said it was republicans who snatched away very real hope that he was trying to give the public. and the question there i couldn t hear exactly the reporter was but accurately pointed out that biden himself had doubted whether he had this authority as did people like house speaker nancy pelosi who is actually cited in the opinion by the court. so that s where that question comes from about false hope. jeremy, thank you very much for that. let s go now to cnn s jessica snider who s over at the supreme court. jessica, can you please break down for us the decisions that president biden just spoke about? reporter: you know, abby, the final day of the supreme court s term, two major decisions showcasing really a very divided cou