absolutely catastrophic. russian gold. they re already having a dramatic effect. and capitol riot investigators building a blue print for the justice department no file trump. if you follow writ leads, you have a duty to prosecute. two members tell us what s next. i m pamela brown in washington. you are live in the cnn newsroom. . well, reversal and the ripple effect. we are seeing another day of demonstrations across the country after friday s supreme court decision to overturn abortion rights. [ screaming ] that was a grim place in south carolina, police tried to separate protesters with opposing points of view. meantime, the pushback, a coalition of 83 prosecutors nationwide representing 87 million people, publicly vowing not to prosecute people seeking or performing abortions. then there is a blunt memo from homeland security tonight. the department warning violent extremism is quote likely, smr i in states rushing to roll back abortion rights. cnn has r
school. we should look forward to a very different school year. we should look forward to a school year where every child is in school, in person, full-time, for the whole year. the changes the cdc hopes will keep kids in the classroom. dire warnings from scientists who say the arctic is warming at alarming speeds. we re joined by one researcher who is seeing the changes firsthand. and the disturbing new testimony in vanessa bryant s case against l.a. county, allegations that gruesome photographs were shared at a social gathering. newsroom starts right now. good morning and welcome to your weekend. it is saturday, august 13th. we re grateful to be a part of it. i m boris sanchez. grateful to be with you as well, boris. i m amara walker. you re in the cnn newsroom. this morning, growing t controversy about the fbi raid at former president donald trump s residence. some material was marked as top secret/sci which stands for sensitive compartmented information.
his lawyers mistakenly sent years, years of his texts to the oppose counsel. oops. we begin tonight with samuel alito. the supreme court justice who played partisan god or at least thought he could when he authored the majority opinion that overruled roe. now we imagine today was a hard day for justice alito, but, no, we don t feel especially badly for him. remember, he s the one who cited in his opinion a 17th century jurist who supported marital rape and witch burning so it shouldn t surprise us at all that alito in the first public appearance gloetd over making women suffer and mocked his foreign critics during a speech he delivered in rome. i had the honor this term of writing i think the only supreme court decision in the history of that institution that has been lambasted by a whole string of foreign leaders. one of these was former prime minister boris johnson, but he paid the price. what really wounded me was when the duke of sussex addressed the united nations and
but first, to highly this afternoon s highly anticipated fifth public hearing of the january 6 committee. we ll hear testimony from three high ranking justice department officials who led the department in the final days of the trump administration including the former acting attorney general jeffrey rosen. he will make clear the doj saw no evidence of widespread fraud sufficient to overturn the election. which unindicated that. and we ll detail how he and others resisted trump s pressure to back his babaseless claims. and also new subpoenaed issued to people from several states who acted as fake electors and other trump allies connected to the scheme to overturn the 2020 election. also new this morning, a preview of newly obtained footage from the documentary film crew that followed former president trump and his team for six months both before and after the insurrection. that preview was just released by discovery plus which is owned by cnn s parent company. watch. ok
reports this tuesday, the president is expected to talk, the nations faces inflation, supply chain problems and soaring gas prices, to mention a few. i m john roberts in washington. good to see you again. john: and good to be with you. sandra: raising interest rates since the fastest pace since the 1980s and soaring prices have americans paying more for just about everything. john: the pain at the pump, a big bite of american s wallets, as the cost of gas surged to another record, and the economic woes could worsen. an already backlogged global supply chain. sandra: gene sperling is a senior adviser to the president, he will join us in moments. john: but first, peter doocy live from the north lawn. who is the president blaming for inflation today? peter: somebody else, john, hearing from the president and top staffers they don t think the biden administration policies are to blame for rising prices, they think a lot of the responsibility lies still with vladimir