after the murder, christopher resumes that protective role, this time for his father who insisted that melissa should return to college in northern florida. the day after the shooting was her first day of college. i was then and i m still proud that she managed to stay in school. during the long and arduous recovery, and many surgeries are protectively are formed around john s demeanor. he learned, the hard way, to keep focusing and emotions at bay, it was easier that way. survival mode. he just focuses on putting one foot in front of the other, and i think i do the same thing. if you were to break down emotionally all the time, or dwell on what happened, you wouldn t get out of bed. the doctors let him go home finally, but since home wasn t
home wasn t searched until months later. david? eva pilgrim tonight. eva, thank you. we re going to turn next to this question, is the inf infrastructure money coming to your community? well, president biden now hitting the road with billions from that bipart an san inf infrastructure law. the president at the scene of a crumbling rail tunnel in baltimore today, built 150 years ago, saying fixing it will create more than 20,000 jobs in that region alone. here s our senior national correspondent terry moran tonight. reporter: for president biden in baltimore, it was a victory lap. this is a 150-year-old tunnel. you wonder how in the hell it s still standing. with the bipartisan infrastructure bill, we ll finally get it done. reporter: the decrepit baltimore and potomac tunnel, crucial to both passenger and freight rail transport on the east coast, is now being rebuilt, with up to $4.7 billion from the $1.2 trillion bipartisan infrastructure law. this project alone projected to
biden. same exact thing. the fbi was in mar a-lago. they had unfettered access. hillary clinton testified in front of a congressional panel for 17 hours. she also testified sean: her home wasn t raided. richard, keep up. her home wasn t raided. trump s was. she was in front of a u.s. attorney for a number of hours. i m waiting to get to donald trump. then we get to former president trump. over the summer, the national archives sent him a number of letters saying, mr. president, you have documents that we d like to get back. the president and his team ignored those letters. finally then his lawyers sent a letter saying we sent you although documents back. the national archives said, no, you have not. sean: let me refresh your memory. we don t have a lot of time. you recall before the raid the fbi was in the very room where
see if they can get some help. this is largely for people who did not have insurance or they are underinsured to see if the federal government can step in and help them with the repairs of their home or lodging or other needs. i want you to hear from one woman who came into this office and she found out some terrible news. take a listen. i have no idea and no car and i went in to apply for fema and just found out that somebody has already applied a fraudulent claim using all my information and my social security number. so i have to call the fraud hotline now to see what s going on and they told me that this is becoming a big problem. that people are filing using somebody else s information. reporter: despite learning that she says she s going to call that 1-800 number and try to get things straightened out. she s remaining optimistic because she survived the storm, her home wasn t damaged and she survived with her life, so many other people fared worse than her. that optimism and
mar-a-largo and the attorney general made the announcement that, you know, he s going to give a little bit of information but not too much. the judge is stuck with piecing this together and giving the government about a week to sort through this and find out what can be released. neil, what are the concerns? from the government s perspective, the concerns are sources and methods. we don t want anything to be leaked out now. we don t want anything with a chilling effect with cooperation down the road. this is not the conclusion. that s what the government is concerned about. this will be a heavily redacted report when it s released. neil: what if the justice department fears that the rationale for ransacking the president s home wasn t justified? they didn t find anything that would justify what originally gave them the affidavit to do