the law. in fact, he was charged with kidnapping more than 20 years ago. rosina coleman is live in a west coast impure with more on this, christina. hi molly. yes please identify the suspect is 38-year-old cleotha abston for the vehicle in this case is dark-colored suv, it was also located as for the victim 34-year-old eliza fletcher is still missing. she has not been found. the tennessee teacher was last seen early friday morning around 4:20 a.m. police believe she was jogging near the university of memphis campus when she was of ducted and forced into the suv. fletcher is reportedly a billionaire heiress for the suspect accused of kidnapping her was arrested a day after she was reported missing. what s the police have worked very quickly on this. probably getting the vehicle and looking at one comment dna that might ve been in the car they have that belongs to him. and secondly, the cell phones, look at cell phones now. there is a triangulation laws for you can see the la
with us, thank you for sticking around. and you january 6th public hearing is just around the corner. at the same time, the special master in the mar-a-lago case is asking the former president to backup his allegations that the fbi planted evidence. plus, justice department once again is reviewing and using those classified documents found at his private mar-a-lago club. maybe trump s finances, it might happen in the most trouble, and then in puerto rico, no power, no water, and for some, nowhere to live. we are live from the ground and talking about the challenges that residents are facing after fiona ripped through the island. plus a powerful message from ukraine s president, what president s volynsky is telling thousands of men who are being drafted into the russians army army. also this hour. you think about the situation because, her whole life influenced her. a family member speaking out about the death of his 22 year old cousin in iran. we have the latest on th
to this empire. early on, rupert develops a machiavellian approach to the newspaper business. it s about putting your rivals under. and mr maxwell certainly has lost. and, rupert discovered if you start turning the dial down market, ratings go up. sex and murder and blood, and mayhem. he bought up 40% of the circulation of newspapers in england. this is his moment to expand. post here! get your post here. new york post. murdoch put his stamp on the city of new york. here i am. you d better pay some attention. i m going to have one hell of an impact. as usual, we were drinking one night, the producers, the reporters and me. we always gathered. the first concrete block was removed by east german workers. and we hear the berlin wall is coming down. what? we ve got to go. what? a current affair s got to go to the wall? oh yeah. so we made a few calls. and we commandeered the gulfstream jet. and about eight or nine of us got on that jet at midnight and flew t
when former president trump had in his possessions, we have to start wondering is mar-a-lago just the beginning. late is the day, u.s. district judge aileen cannon moved to unseal inventory of all items recovered during the fbi search of trump s palm beach resort. we now know that federal agents found over ten dozen governments documents and photographs without classification markings. they were strewn across mar-a-lago, allegedly stashed and boxes alongside newspaper clippings, magazines, random articles of all kinds of things, including clothing, white house shot skis and who knows what else. fbi agents also recovered 45 empty folders that were marked classified, along with another 42 empty folders labeled return to staff secretary, military aid. all of that from mar-a-lago. who knows where the classified material is now? we don t know. perhaps, they are sitting under a pile of five irons in bedminster or lodged between couch cushions in a trump tower penthouse summer. th
i ve only been to milan a few times, and always in passing. i ve never stayed here long enough to really get a sense of it. the first thing that strikes you about milan is its dynamism. grazie. no wonder espresso was invented here. i think i might need a few of these, just to keep up with the rhythm of the city. but do the hardworking milanese bring as much to the italian table as they do to the country s economy? i m stanley tucci. i m italian on both sides and i m traveling across italy to discover how the food in each of this country s 20 regions is as unique as the people and their past. that s delicious! here in milan, the menu is nothing like you expect. up here in the north, forget about pasta and pizza. oh, my god. that s so beautiful. perfetto. this is the land of rice and polenta. polenta, in the ancient time, it was like the bread. people from south of italy call it polentoni. there isn t even a tomato in sight. this is amazing. and olive oil plays second fid