call, i think that could represent a real watershed. the atlantic s tim alberta, thank you very much for your analysis this morning. that does it for us this morning. jose diaz-balart picks up live coverage right now. 7:00 a.m. pacific, i m jose diaz-balart. we begin with the ongoing repercussions from the search of former president donald trump s mar-a-lago club, one week ago today. two senior law enforcement officials tell nbc news the fbi and the homeland security department are warning of a spike in threats against federal law enforcement officers and their families in the wake of that search. the fbi responded to the threats by putting ground control barriers and crowd control barriers in front of its washington headquarters. it s also bolstering security at offices across the country. this comes days after a federal judge unsealed the search warrant and property receipt from the search of trump s florida residence. they show the items federal agents seized include
help victims of a fire tragedy. he sees the event, turns around, speeds up this is what he tells investigators, and then decides to ram his car into the crowd of people, telling them he deliberately sped up. there s video that supports this, according to investigators. he then confesses to the crime telling investigators, quote, i didn t ram them, i just ran them over. again, didn t ram them, just ran them over. he wasn t done there. he crosses over the bridge where his mother was, telling investigators that he sees her, speeds up, and then strikes her. he s not done there. he apparently goes into his car, grabs a hammer, bludgeons here. this community is still reeling from this tragedy and more details that come out, even more harrowing. george salis, thank you so much. up next, how democrats plan to turn their recent legislative wins into midterm votes. it s a pleasure to see you.