washington and the administration. this memo was cherry picked by a man who didn t read the underlying material, devin nunes, and suppressed a competing memo over the objections to of the department of justice and fbi. it s preposterous to say this has anything to do with transparency. this is a blatant partisan attack. fortunately, it fell flat yesterday. much, i think, to the chagrin of the president. the memo was a complete dud. but it was a strange hill to choose for democracy to die on. as they re twisting the national security apparatus to try to attack an investigation of a president, they did it for a memo that achieves nothing. and they caused a lot of harm because there is a relationship between congress and the department of justice and national security apparatus. and i ve seen members of congress bemoan the government s resistance to release sensitive material to them precisely for
ammunition to the shooter. according to the criminal complaint, the unfired rounds found in the gunman s room had doug haig s fingerprints on them. doug haig did not have a license to manufacture or sell the bullets. he insists he had no other dealings with the gunman and never saw anything suspicious in their interactions. he s due in court again in two weeks for a preliminary hearing. remember the false missile alert in hawaii last month where everyone was in panic mode? the guy who set it off is talking now and says he was 100% sure that that missile alert was real. according to the official account, the call that initiated the drill began with a person saying exercise, exercise. bu but the worker says he didn t hear that part. i was supposed to be on speaker phone. someone picked up the receiver, and the first part of the message exercise, exercise, exercise, was not heard.
pits in hell plus, the emergency worker that hit that missile alert button in hawaii and sent thousands into panic, we re hearing from him. he says that he thought the alert was real in those last few minutes leading up to the incident. that s ahead. i was so sure that it was real. [man] woah. ugh, i don t have my wallet, so - [girl 1] perfect! you can send a digital payment. [man] uhh, i don t have one of those payment apps. [girl 2] perfect! you have a us-based bank account, right? [man] i have wells fargo. [girl 3] perfect! then you should have zelle! [man] perfect. [girls] perfect! [vo] the number one mobile banking app just got better. [man] does your coach use zelle, too? [boy] of course! [vo] another way we re building better every day.
the man who abused his three daughters. what would you give me one minute? i m going to have to reporter: from this angle, you can see the bailiff get and a half nags bailiff get nassar out of the room. the victim statements have enraged and disgusted the country on. friday, randall margraves listened to two of his daughters publicly share details. he said he would need to put the needles on my virginaginava. my entire vagina was completely exposed to him. when i was 13, just a kid, laying on a table at msu, and you put your ungloved hands all over my rear and slipped your thumb into the most private area
us. the build-up s over, the memo s out. the question is, will the leaders of the fbi and department of justice, previously held in high esteem by both parties, lose any jobs over the document? the president refuses to say whether he still his confidence in the man heading the russia probe after the release of the controversial memo. abbey phillip is live in washington. is there a risk of now more people leaving the department of justice? reporter: good morning. there is always a risk in this trump white house that things like that could happen. and that s why there s been such heightened concern this week. now that the memo is out, we ve seen exactly what it says. what we are focused on is what the president is saying. he s been tweeting attacks on his own department of justice and fbi all week, and yesterday when asked about the fate of rod rosenstein as a result of what