as a call to action. they said the proud boys were thirsting for violence and were prepared to stop certification of president joe biden s win by, quote, any means necessary, including by force. until the aftermath of the riot on the capitol, the charge of seditious conspiracy was rarely used, but with today s decision, the department of justice has now secured ten trial convictions on the civil war era charge. the others were the oath keepers, including its leader, stewart rhodes. but today s conviction of enrique tarrio in particular could be the most consequential win yet for the justice department. we ll explain that in a moment. joining us now from outside the u.s. district court house in washington, d.c. is nbc news justice report ryan reilly. we got a little bit of breaking news, additional partial verdict. walk us through it. reporter: that s right. any moment now, i think we could be hearing from the jury on the additional charge. it also sounds like they are deadl
illegally. he was here in my county. five people died in my county, and that s where my heart is, in my heart is. we protect our people to the best of our ability. a texas sheriff reacting to the latest deadly mass shooting in america. this time it s five people shot in their home by their neighbor. we ll have the latest on the manhunt for the gunman. plus, former president donald trump is making headlines for hugging a woman who served time in prison for taking part in the capitol insurrection and who has also called for the execution of members of congress. and we ll have an update on the efforts to evacuate americans out of sudan, now more than two weeks since the deadly violence broke out in that country. good morning and welcome to way too early on this monday, may 1st. i m jonathan lemire. thanks for starting your day and week with us. we ll begin with breaking news. another american bank has failed. just this morning, financial regulators in california seize
manhunt. police say he became enraged and opened fire in a medical facility earlier today. one person was killed, four others critically injured. and in new york city a reportedly homeless man who was acting, quote, erratically on the subway was put into a chokehold by another rider. the homeless man lost consciousness and died. the passenger who restrained him was questioned, then released by police with tno charges. our panel has strong thoughts on what happened there. plus, the culture wars collide with the high school musical, school districts are pulling the plug on some well-known plays. we ll tell you why the adams family is getting canceled. and speaking of school, could you pass an eighth grade history test? it s harder than you d think. i tried it earlier. tonight we ll see how much you and i and our panelists know. okay, but let s begin with updates on two violent crime stories. the man who opened fire in an atlanta medical facility today killing one pers
still legal in her state i ll ask how far she ll willing to go to defend that an embarrassing breach for the defense department the investigation under way to figure out who posted details about u.s. spying on russia s military on an online video game message board. a lot of questions here. are they all authentic the big question, is there a mole in the pentagon a mad political scramble at the easter egg roll at the white house. president biden sending unexpected campaign shock waves, making this announcement to al roker live on today. i plan on running, al, but we re not prepared to announce it yet well, sounds like he just did. so how does the president s announcement impact the plans of his potential 2024 rivals. let s begin with the epic clash after conflicting court rulings yet again up ending abortion rights here in america starting us up correspondent laura jarrett, former senator claire mccaskill who is now an msnbc political analyst, and dr. jamila parrot,
a check. became chicago s first incumbent mayor in 40 years to lose reelection. congrats. [cheers and applause] she deserves it because she broke another glass ceiling. she was the first black mayor of chicago, but now she is the worst mirror ever. sadly needs no black mayors for a while and chicago way to ruin it for them. she got roughly 17% of the vote, even if her fan base in the cook county jail population, all 5700 of them, it still was not enough. losing the former head of cook county commissioner brandon johnson it took 34 heaven 20% of the vote respectively emma now had to run off onto determined the next mayor. it was or would we care those numbers. my fault. but now this is supposedly good news budweiser news at all it should be news when the worst mirror in the country loses this should be expected, but it wasn t why is that? it s news that you lost despite having more protection than a fort knox. [laughter] historical first, first female black chicago mayor. may