explaining no one is above the law, even a former president. our nation s commitment to the rule of law sets an example for the world. we have one set of laws in this country and they apply to everyone. and, jake, the special counsel also making the point today that violations of u.s. laws on classified documents put the country at risk. that s right, anderson. i want to bring in cnn s paula reid. walk us through the most damning allegations in the indictment in your view. this indictment tells a story of what investigators have learned over the past year and a half. they lay out how the former president allegedly willfully retained over 300 classified documents allegedly storing them around his mar-a-lago resort everywhere from a bathroom to a bedroom to a ballroom for over two months, that ballroom was activity hosting events touring this time. they also reveal how sensitive secrets meant over for a handful of our closest allies were splayed out in a storage room. t
and papal apology. pope francis visits canada on a mission to make amends. i m traveling with pope francis as he makes a historic trip to apologize to indigenous canadians. and later, the class of 2022. this year s inductees into the baseball hall of fame, representing 150 years of america s favote pastime. cooperstown! announcer: this the cbs weekend news from new york with jericka duncan. good evening and thanks for joining us on this sunday. we begin tonight with the nearly 80 million of you dealing with sweltering temperatures and extreme weather conditions today. thermometers reached triple digits across the northeast and washington, d.c., new york city, and philadelphia. the heat has been blamed for at least two deaths. newark, new jersey, hit 100 degrees today, the fifth day in a row, and the longest streak ever recorded for that city. cbs s elise preston has more tonight from new york city. and, elise, this weather is no laughing matter. reporter: definite
bill nye, the science guy blaming or pickup truck for extreme weather. these are not people who are speaking in good faith. they re not trying to solve problems. they re not even interested in what actually happened. they re lying. they re unscrupulous and they will say anything if they think it ll make them more powerful. so best to ignore them. on the other hand and this is also true over time it is possible to draw legitimate connections between decisions that politicians make and the catastrophes that follow the rising gas prices. for example, the price of gas in america now qualifies as a catastrophe. that s true . no matter how you feel about carbon emissions, you still probably assume to be able to afford to drive to work every day or take a vacation with your kids this summer or buy dinner in a restaurant once in a while. but you can t and gas prices are the reason you can t. nothing makes our country poorer, faster than rising energy prices. so how did this happen? w
at that point the secret service steps back because once he is arrested he s property of the fbi. this is where the logistical stuff gets kind of fuzzy because normally he would go to the fbi office in miami which is pretty far away from the federal courthouse and they would book him and fingerprint him and take his mug shots and then bring him to the courthouse. in this case what they re talking about today is is that going to be the way that they do it, the regular way, or are they going to find a way to do a booking process at the courthouse so that they can get him into a conference room and directly to the courtroom for the arraignment? all of this is the moving parts that have to go between secret service, fbi, the court, the united states marshals. once he s in the court and in front of the judge, the fbi steps back and either the court let s him go, which is likely, or he becomes the property of the u.s. marshal and under their control, highly unlikely since it s anticipated he
blazing temps could expand train tracks. the rail line is warning commuters to expect delays between philadelphia and new york. if it feels like extreme weather is getting worse every year, that s because it is jennifer francis with the woodwell climate research center says heat waves are occurring more often. the headlines are going to be filled with heat wave news every summer, and they are going to get worse, and it is going to get stickier. reporter: face the nation moderator margaret brennan asked mayor miami francis suarez about the effects of climate change on his city. can you afford what s coming? first of all, margaret, it s not theoretical for us in the city of miami. it s real. reporter: francis agrees. we re seeing the effects of the problem around us every day. there is no date in the future where we can say, okay, after that date it s hopeless. everything we can do starting right now is going to make these impacts of climate change less bad.