room. whoever next to me got shot. blood is on me from it. neil: all right. it s happened again. this time in louisville, kentucky. the scene of another mass shooting, this one at a bank. police just identified the gunman as 23-year-old connor sturgeon. an employee at the bank. the shooting leaving four dead and nine injured including a police officer remains in critical condition. the shooter was also killed at the scene. we re learning the shooter was live streaming this and the investigation is on going. today s shooting come two weeks to the day after a mass shooting in tennessee that left six people dead. fast and furious developments. we re on top of it. welcome. i m neil cavuto. let s go to nate foy with the latest developments and what happened in louisville today. nate? the louisville mayor calls this a targeted attack. the 23-year-old gunman opened fire after 8:30 a.m. it happened in old national bank in downtown louisville. police say four people were killed. n
next thing you know crashes and bangs. it s devastating. it s going to take months to recover. steve: devastating footage shows the extent of the damage caused by the tornado that tore through the small community of glen allen in missouri. brian: severe weather threat moving east toward philadelphia and washington. janice dean will tell us when the worst of it will hit the mid-atlantic. it s relentless. unbelievable what s going on. talk about turbulence overseas and at home. a news alert a bipartisan group of lawmakers landing in taiwan overnight. house foreign affairs chairperson, chairman michael mccaul leading the u.s. delegation. ainsley: just hours after the speaker of the house, kevin mccarthy meets with the taiwanese president in california at the reagan library. the visit getting under the skin of china. steve: boy, did it. lucas tomlinson joins us live from washington. good morning. the chinese embassy there in washington sent out a four-page email the oth
this hour. the supreme court weighs in by kicking the can down the road, the high court temporarily extending access to an abortion drug until 11 59 pm friday night. women and girls and physicians across the us remain in limbo, unsure if the strict new restrictions will severely limit the use of mifid per stone moving forward. not just used for medication abortion also used for women who experience miscarriages or women who are going through menopause . cnn s justice correspondent jessica schneider joins us now live. so jessica what happens next? we re really now in a holding pattern yet again until the supreme court issues what will likely be a more definitive decision before late friday. that continues to mean uncertainty for women, doctors and even drug manufacturers. but the good news, i guess for them is that it does keep everything status quo when it comes to the availability of the abortion drug. preston so the abortion pill will in fact continue to be fully available.
the rate at which uk prices are rising has slowed for a second month, but the cost of living is still close to a ao year high. ambulance workers in the uk willjoin nurses in taking strike action next month, piling huge pressure on hospital bosses. let s start in ukraine, where a helicopter crash has killed the country s interior minister, denys monastyrsky. he s the highest profile ukrainian casualty since the war began. the crash happened east of the capital kyiv in the town of brovary. at least 1a people have died. first, let s hearfrom the ukrainian president. a tragedy happened near kyiv. a helicopter crash claimed the life of the minister of the internal affairs of ukraine, his colleagues and helicopter cruel or found near a can or garden. 1a ukrainian families lost their loved ones today and many more families are losing daily because of the war near a kindergarten. so let s take you through what we know. nine people were on board the plane three from the interio
it is evidence of tyranny, we re in a battle right now between liberty and tyranny. it what kind of a country do we want to live in? you have a department of justice headed by radical politicals. not just garland but names you problem never heard of before. deputy attorney general. lisa monaco. long time obama operative. vanita gupta. and u.s. attorney in washington, d.c., matthew graves. they make up the kabul. that is making decisions about the future of this country. and they are using the law in a way we were told would create tyranny. tyranny. he was one of favorites of ronald reagan, he wrote, the law perverted and police powers of state perverted with it the law i say, not only turned from proper purpose, but made to follow a contrary purpose, the law becomes the weapon of every kind of greed, instead of checking crime, the law itself is guilty of the evils it supposed to punish. that is what is taking place today. i want to read something to you. it is the soviet