edition of alex witt reports. also you tomorrow at one pm eastern. yasmin of us again continues the coverage. giving you a quick look at the stormy scene of the pier on juneau beach, florida. yasmin is next. florida. yasmin is next hey everybody, good to see, yasmin vossoughian. we are live on capitol hill this afternoon where there was actual work going on. senate negotiators trying to hammer out a deal on the border and ukraine aid right now. the fallout from the stunning verdict, rudy giuliani ordered to pay 150 million to two georgia poll workers. he defamed with lies. the flame that giuliani lit with those lies and passed to so many others to keep that flame blazing changed every aspect of our lives. money will never solve all of my problems. i can never move back into the house that i called home. i will always have to be careful about where i go and who i choose to share my name with. i miss my home, i miss my neighbors, and i miss my name. reporter: but rudy has
trump. the jury did this at the urging of a man called alvin bragg, the district attorney who have been famous by making the city much more dangerous by refusing to enforce laws against crimes like robbery or rape. we don t know what the indictment says or what the charges are, but previous news reports suggest they ll imminent from an alleged payment seven years ago, alvin bragg apparently believes it is a crime. the net results is donald trump is the first former president trump of the united states ever to be indicted. so, no matter what happens next we can be certain there is no coming back from this moment. there could be retaliations from red states. desantis issued a statement saying he ll not participate in any extradition of donald trump to new york, that s apparently scheduled by next week. we are not certain of the full outlines of this story but we know this moment is a historic one. we want to set tonight in fact, those that we have so far, we ll do that as we al
extremely delay 2024 elijah fisher. but on day one he cannot let go of attacking extremes neither republicans. invest in americans and give them opportunity to invest in ourselves, it is working. but unfortunately, extreme republicans, not all that extreme republicans are threatening to undo all this progress. they re putting our comedy in jeopardy by threatening to refuse to pay america s bills. they want this see a clean energy for china to make us depended on oversea supplies and supply chains and export jobs overseas. but if that is for you, and from michael republicans in congress, it is not on my watch. we are not going to let them onto other part is that we have made. oh, boy. but it is an uphill battle for vita because voters are not buying with the old dog is selling. only a quarter of democrats actually wanted to run for reelection, and its slim pickings is biting decides to sit out on the sidelines. i mean, law is not sending any appeal to anyone s leg. and whi
all three major industries are down double digits for the years. the mounting losses will deal a blow to your retirement funds and your pension fund and we could go lower, dana. dana: a bitter pill to swallow as the cost of living is skyrocketing. the average price of gas now $4.58 a gallon up more than $1.50 from a year ago. bill: making matters worse the cost of rent hitting a record high in april. landlords asking for more than 1900 a month on average. dana: demand for mortgages is plummetings with average rates at a high. the new york post calling it joe s train wreck. bill: aishah hosni with a lot to cover from the white house on the north lawn. good morning. america is waking up and breaking all sorts of records in all the wrong ways. as of this morning the white house coming up with no new solutions outside of what it has already done and tried. take a look. let s start with gas prices here. shot up another 2 cents overnight to a new record high of $4.58
there s no way i believed that she would do it. narrator: she wasn t the only one. the jury in kaity s first trial couldn t reach a verdict. lisi: i just remember honestly going out, walking to my car, crying for about two minutes in the parking lot, and then saying, okay, that s it. that s enough. it s time to get back to work and see if we can put this case together again. narrator: and that s what happened. in a second trial, in november of 2017, kaity conley was found guilty of first-degree manslaughter and sentenced to 23 years in prison. she still maintains her innocence, but the dna, the evidence from the typewriter, the attempted frame-up, the web searches, and the purchase of the colchicine all pointed in one direction to a young woman with a bizarre motive for murder. vannamee: a lot of people have had a difficult or a tough time accepting the fact that kaitlyn conley is guilty for the death of mary yoder.