amarillo, texas, where is judge will decide whether to expand a ban on a drug used as medication abortion more than half the women who terminate their pregnancies do itwith this drug it is extremely low risk fewer than half a percent of patients experience complications, which means almost no one. medication abortions are illegal in 13 states, and that does include texas, where the arguments in this landmark case just wrapped a group of doctors who do not support abortion brought this suit they want to go beyond the texas ban and take this off the market nationwide they claim the fda did not evaluate its safety before it was approved in 2000 and argue it should not have been made accessible to women via telehealth during the pandemic the public found out about today s hearing monday after the judge initially delayed releasing the details. we ll fill you in on why he says he delayed and why others argue his motivation was personal. the hearing was not broadcast, but we have re
captions by vitac www.vitac.com looking right now at buckingham palace. people, though fewer in number, are still showing up at this hour. the embodiment, as cnn s max foster put it earlier in the program, of a nation slightly loss after the passing of queen elizabeth ii earlier today in scotland. she was, as many have said, the only monarch most britons have known. and she may have been the first british monarch most britons have known in a familiar, more regal sense, the first to usher in the modern united kingdom. christian am pour said tonight from the grand britain of her early childhood to the great britain of today. it read, the queen died peacefully at balmoral this afternoon. the king and the queen consort will remain at balmoral this evening and will return tomorrow. we saw a demonstration of remarkable continuity of secession, people outside the palace singing the national anthem with god save the queen replaced from here to the end of charles iii s reign
anywhere if they didn t evaluate safety risks, it s not safe for anyone anywhere the supreme court has never spoken about whether nationwide injunctions are a good idea. a lot of judges who blocked donald trump s immigration attempts exactly we ve seen this on both sides. it s very controversial. if they rule in favor of the plaintiffs, i imagine it goes to another court. where does it go next? it goes swiftly to the fifth circuit of appeals the justice department would be asking them to stay the injunction, put a pause on the inju injunction if the fifth circuit says no, then the case goes to the supreme court. laura, thank you so much for helping us understand the legalities morgan chesky, thank you for joining us from texas.
tug-of-war over materials, including classified documents seized bit the fbi last month. our senior justice correspondent evan perez joins us. talk about this appeal. what does it entail? there are two parts of this. on one hand, the justice department is saying they are going to appeal the 11th circuit in atlanta the entire order she gave on monday. but at the same time, they are asking her to put on hold at least part of her order, which barred the justice department, barred the fbi from continuing to look at all these documents, specifically they are asking about the 100 classified documents that they say just by the fact that they are classified cannot possibly be personal items of the former president. they have to be government records. it says here, there is no justification for extending the inju injunction as special master review to the classified records. the classification markings established on the face of the documents that they are government records, not donald
system, it is that jeff. joining me is jeffrey toobin. jeff, this is partially good news in terms of at least people are able to go to the courts now. it s not a total system but it s only about appobortion provider with planned parenthood and who they sued against them. is this for more than just them at some point in time? we have to see. the judge said this temporary injunction lasts until two weeks until september 17th but the judge will hold a hearing on september 13th about deciding whether to make it a permanent inju injunction. so this is certainly a win for planned parenthood but, you know, it may be of short duration and it s not clear how many organizations it will ultimately apply to, but look, a win is a win. that means planned parenthood can continue to serve women for the next two weeks without the