argument, don t worry about it. but the second he told me he had the baby, i knew something was wrong. you paged her how many times? i couldn t count how many times i paged her. and no answer? no answer. by now it was saturday, 10:20 a. m., marie had been missing for almost 18 hours. andre called the inglewood police. police? yes, i d like to file a missing persons report. okay. who is missing? my wife, her name is marie jackson. an officer came out to the house and met with andre. you know, i see him talking to the cops but i still don t see my mom anywhere. and i think that s when i found out that my mom still hadn t come home yet. had no idea where she was at. police started interviewing witnesses, searching the neighborhood, but the weekend passed with no sign of marie. that s when the phone rang on the desk of fbi agent rick hadel. we got the report i believe on a monday, maybe a tuesday, that she was missing, didn t report to work. of course, they were c
perspective, is there is no wiretaps, no undercover s, no undercover investigation, it s all there. they re just going in interviewing witnesses. some people cooperate, that s where the evidence is and that s where they traced to. the second part, this really speaks to what we might see going forward. there are worries about extremism keep kicking up again. probably not. when you look at, this was the way through but every lie that was spoken, this really ties into many trials that are occurring right now for all of these defendants that were taken to prison, essentially, for january 6th. some have pleaded, some have mixed results, but i think in the end, when you look at this, it does come down to the entire conspiracy was a falsehood. and everybody who showed up that they believe this falsehood because the president, who is being charged, was the only continue to speak it. it s gonna have a ripple effect through many convictions around the country. so i didn t think it was very
it is more of a sideshow and distraction. i could see trump hoping that that would delay his indictment even further, but i don t really put much stock in that. so i think that whole storyline, you know, it might turn out to be something, but we don t know enough to say that is happening here. katie, you covered the justice department. what are you hearing from your sources about these cases that smith is working on? you know, that the cases themselves have come up there, they have been a lot of debate about the cases themselves, what charges should be dropped, and the evidence. what there is so much evidence to go through, they are going to have to, as we have seen, they re already interviewing witnesses who come in before the grand jury before, they are interviewing witnesses who have testified before other bodies, including congress. trying to figure out what is trump cases. we have seen some people come up who are all involved, somehow, in giving advice to donald trump about
what charges should be brought and the evidence. also, there is just so much evidence to go through. they are going to have through, as we ve seen, they re already interviewing witnesses who have come in before the a grand jury. before interviewing witnesses, who have testified before other bodies including congress, they need to try to figure out what is causing these cases. what s interesting, we ve seen come some people come up, all involved in giving advice to donald trump about whether or not the election was corrupt, about whether or not the election had enough fraud to change the results, about whether or not investigations into election fraud had turned anything up. because jack smith is gonna have to sift through all the competing advice that donald trump was getting because, again, some people were telling him that there was fraud and he is going to have to figure out who the most credible voices were, and what donald trump may have said in response. because that election pie
that s that they had information from the laptop that they weren t providing to the investigators. can i add something on that? yes, sir, mr. zeigler. when it came to questions, as a part of the investigation, we interviewed a lot of people. as a part of that investigation, you want to feel free to ask questions. it should be an open opportunity. there was an environment when we were interviewing witnesses where you were afraid to ask questions. questions that could lead to the presidential campaign. this is after the campaign is over. so questions like that, it was restricted and so things like that were we were limited to talking about. and it appears to me that you learned about the 1023 form through public domain sources.