an absurd vote to censure adam schiff for something. well, now, donald trump is counting on my kevin and his oddball caucus to save him, because he has no legitimate defense in his criminal case for taking national security documents home and not giving them back. also tonight, no labels. the group that claims america needs a third party choice if biden and trump are the nominees. i ll ask national co-chair about the very real possibility that they could inadvertently put trump back in the white house. plus, breaking news on the missing titanic submersible. the coast guard has now confirmed debris has been found after a, quote, catastrophic implosion. killing all five onboard. but we begin tonight with what is becoming a clearer reality for the twice impeached, twice indicted former president. who up to now has been able to live a charmed life with little accountability. no matter what alleged crimes he s committed. and now, at 77 years of age, for the first time, donal
cnn newsroom. i m abby phillip in washington to very serious charges for that 21 year old air national guardsman accused of leaking a trove of sensitive classified documents online. you can see there jack to share as parents outside of the courthouse this morning in boston. there, son was in shackles facing a judge less than 24 hours after he peacefully surrendered to a swarm of heavily armed fbi agents. prosecutors revealed today that to share a had a top secret clearance since 2021 that he allegedly leaked the alleged leading began long afterward in a online discord group. the pentagon says that this was a deliberate criminal act, and the new court documents show that members of that chat group gave the fbi information that could be key to making that case. cnn s natasha bertrand is at the pentagon, natasha so lay out what the charges that he s facing our yeah, abby, so he did appear in court in massachusetts this morning, and he was officially charged with two separate cou
we ll keep a close eye on that. judge, thanks good to see you, judge michael luttig. that is all in on this thursday night. alex wagner tonight, nning, right now. good evening alex. thanks alex, great guest to have on at this juncture, at this critical moment for democracy. great show. thank you. thanks to you at home for joining us this hour. his name is alexander butterfield. he was the deputy assistant to president richard nixon, and as the surprise witness during the watergate hearings in 1973, he changed the course of history with this moment. mr. butterfield, are you aware of the installation of any listening devices in the oval office of the president? i was aware of listening devices, yes sir. it was alexander butterfield, who told watergate investigators, and the world, about the existence of secret white house tapes that would, ultimately, expose nixon s involvement in the watergate plot, leading to his resignation. if there is a modern equivalent to w
the grotesque and cynical politics behind the florida governor s migrant stunt. just like the racist reverse freedom rides of the 1960s, these migrants were lied to every step of the way, so desantis could own the libs. also tonight, new reporting from the washington post on how trump s team grossly mischaracterized the nature of the documents that he was keeping at mar-a-lago. when the national archives first asked for them back. and what a way to end the week. fresh from her triumphant victory at the emmy awards, sheryl lee ralph from abbott elementary joins me tonight. we begin with the freedom riders. the group of white and black civil rights activists who rode buses across the south in 1961 with the goal of integrating public transportation and bus terminals. one of the original 13 freedom riders was the late great congressman john lewis. it was a bold act of resistance to challenge the segregation laws and the riders encounters violence, beatings, and yale time.
malaysia. some of that debris may not burn up, and it would land somewhere near that spot that space command just predicted. only one person was that jackpot winner, and now we wait to see who that person actually is. i m hoping to hit the jackpot. i m pamela brown in washington. you re in the cnn newsroom. and we begin tonight with two developing stories this hour. the new york city health officials say they are declaring a public health emergency due to monkeypox. it makes new york the second major u.s. city to do so after san francisco. as of friday, there were more than 1,200 confirmed cases of monkeypox in new york city. but officials say it is likely there are many more cases that haven t been diagnosed yet. in a statement, new york officials explained, quote, new york city is currently theent center of the the encenter of the outbreak. we estimate that approximately 150,000 new yorkers may currently be at risk for monkeypox exposure. that s not the only publi