because a car in the home to go up in flames. she was driving a blue mini cooper when she first crashed into the garage of an apartment complex. one woman described the car passing by at a high rate of speed before hearing the impact. i just saw a flash of blue out of nowhere. it was loud. it did not make sense. moments later, anne heche crashed into a nearby home that caused the blaze that engulfed her car. a shocked neighbor described that the. the fire that was going on, it was 200 feet high so i knew it had to be pretty severe inside. another resident said anne heche sustained injuries but was conscious and breathing when she was russia the hospital. there were no other injuries at the scene. it took firefighters, 59 firefighters over an hour to fully put the fire out at the home which was heavily damaged when the car plowed inside of it she has spoken of her heartbreak over highly publicized split back into thousand. her acting career took off on another world an
himes, a member of the house intelligence committee, says that s not the only potential risk here. the affidavit contains all sorts of information, including testimony by informants, witnesses, and others that, now that we know that not just donald trump, but the republican party generally, will make threats, include threats on the lives of people, including fbi agents that are involved here, there s an awful lot of risk. so it would be unsealed or could be kept seal, but there is a third option for the judge. that would be releasing it with redactions. the doj says if they redact everything they need to, the documents will essentially be worthless. bottom line, that affidavit could answer the why behind this search. apparently investigators are figuring that out. two law enforcement officials tell nbc news, they re still going through material, just as they have been for the past week and a half, trying to figure out what is and what is not relevant to their investigatio
potential future case, plus put investigators in jeopardy or expose potential witnesses to pressure. there s also the long standing practice at the justice department to not say anything about pending cases, especially ones as politically sensitive as this. that said, as the judge in the case recognized, there s public interest involved here. cnn s jessica schneider starts us off. do we know why exactly the judge decided to release this? we don t know for sure, anderson, but it s possible that the doj may have given a little more than they originally thought they could. the judge moved really swiftly today. it was less than four hours after he received prosecutors proposed redactions that he ruled that what they proposed would in fact be sufficient and should be released to the public by noon tomorrow. the reason it s interesting that this judge came to such a quick conclusion is that when doj argued in court last week, they said that any redactions could be so extensive t
factors in play, demographic factors, the pandemic through a hammer in everything. i think if they say, look, here s what we know, here s what we don t know and we re doing the best we can, i think that s trust building. any one of the cross currents in the global economy now would be newsworthy and unsetting. and there are many. and coming out of this pandemic, we tried to measure the economy, is it recession, maybe not recession. we re just trying to get back to normal at this point. we re still reacting to a pandemic, and trying to figure out where we go from here. fair question about what would be normal in 2022 and going forward because i think another thing he has to address, and you talk about this, is possible we re just in a different era, that the u.s. economy and the world economy is moving to a new place where, you know, we can t expect 30 years of low, really low interest rates. i totally agree with that. i ve been writing that for some time. i have a new b
trump critic is booted in an overwhelming primary defeat, but congresswoman liz cheney says she will continue to challenge the former president s hold on republicans and may even face him in the next presidential election in 2024. and mike pence, is he a potential star witness? the former vice president says he would consider testifying in front of the january 6th committee if asked. take a listen. if there was an invitation to participate, i would consider it. any invitation that would be directed to me, i would have to reflect on the unique role that i was serving in as vice president. it would be unprecedented innist hadry for a vice president to be summoned to testify on. ka tol capitol hill. i don t want to prejudge. we begin with rudy giuliani s appearance before a grand jury in georgia. sara murray is outside that courthouse in atlanta. rudy giuliani is a target of this investigation. there has been speculation he could take the fifth amendment today. what do we