vulnerability. was it just an effort to retrieve these documents for safe keeping because of the high level of security around it, maybe something to do with nuclear or national security issues or something else afoot here? peep would like to know more about it. charles: it keeps coming back to the affidavit and truly trying to understand why this all went down. what was the sense of urgency. again, is it a criminal investigation, now a security investigation or is it just a fishing expedition? bill, thanks very much. i appreciate it. thanks, charles. charles: let s keep this going with alex little, former prosecutor. good afternoon. as a former federal prosecutor, i m sure that when you put a case together or even an investigation together, you want to make sure that it s fool proof that nobody can come back
Last Thursday, this writer boarded a Breeze Airways plane to fly to a family wedding in Charleston, South Carolina. The trip had been planned since last summer with the flight and lodging at an Airbnb place close to the activities that were scheduled.
that s why these legal challenges present a problem because if they re not resolved by then, then the committee is out of luck. ryan nobles, thank you for the reporting. let s get more on all of this. senior legal analyst elie honig is with me. i am so fascinated by this and i ll be watching very closely. i think it s by january 14th, the supreme court committee has asked them to decide whether or not they ll take up the president s case. this is the president s last chance to try to get those documents blocked from the national archive, otherwise they ll go they ll go to the committee. do you think that the court is going to get involved here? i mean, there s an argument to get involved and to resolve what is an unresolved constitutional question, the reach of executive power. when a president is gone out of office. but there s also this unanimous appellate court decision that seemed fool-proof. the committee won this case in the district court, the
with her. only thing i do is meet adam once a month, pick my money up, and we go. and so she did. police let her go after the interview. like the other women, she had an alibi. which detectives would have to check out of course. but in the meantime, they had another way to get at the truth. one a bit more fool-proof. we had an unknown dna on a robe that came off the victim in the pool. reporter: samira s leopard print robe. if one of those women had thrown samira into the pool, she may have left a little of herself behind. newlin got dna samples from the women. we tried to eliminate all of them. reporter: no matches. not to the women. and not to the handyman. or his son. and not to adam s friend kendall. all of them were cleared. investigators couldn t figure out who the woman in the driveway was. now they were back to square one. and they figured adam frasch was
performers were practicing in a group after more than a year of training alone. i feel sketched out about being out here, but, yeah, i can t stay at home all the time. reporter: health experts worry about what happens when hot weather drives people indoors this summer, especially in some states where vaccination rates are lower. i d still wear a mask at work just because i work with the public. even though i m fully vaccinated, i don t know if they are or not. i feel like it s still good your whole store got hit. my whole work caught it back in december. that was great. it was a terrible experience having it. reporter: he s not able to ask customers if they ve been vaccinated. even with an honor system that s fool proof, there s a sense the country has turned a corner. it s like a hopeful moment and a year the past couple of years it s been a lot of really bad news. reporter: in other hopeful news, public health england show