new york city in the path tonight. rob marciano on this and the record heat. he s tracking it all. new reporting tonight on former president trump s handling of highly classified documents, abc news learning donald trump s lawyers were unable to find the sensitive document trump was allegedly recorded discussing about a potential u.s. attack on iran during the trump years. pierre thomas reporting. also a word coming into night that the cia director, william burns, has made a secret trip to china for the biden administration. martha raddatz standing by with late reporting. the senate passing the debt deal overnight, and president biden a short time ago addressing this from the oval office, on the bipartisan nature of the agreement, arguing neither side got everything they wanted. mary bruce in washington. also, major news on the economy tonight, the u.s. adding 339,000 new jobs last month, nearly doubling predictions. the stock market soaring today on the news. in california,
children and two teachers. today the first of many funeral services will begin. we ll have more on that and the president s visit ahead. people are on edge. in brooklyn an active shooter scare at a boxing match sent folks fleeing the stands and running for their lives. 18 people were injured at the barclays center. turns out, it was just a loud noise heard on the street. it sent crowds rushing to the exits. it s an indication of the anxiety out there. cnn has the latest. reporter: americans on edge once again. early sunday at the barclays center in new york city, people running for their lives. police say they mistook a loud noise for gunfire after a boxing match. one person writing on twitter, scary moment as crowds poured back into barclays center. my fear was a shooting, but those fears proved unfounded. another person adding, huge stampede near the exit. literally had to jump on the floor for cover. tennis star naomi osaka was there. she said on twitter she was also p
to do the searches before it hardens. all the victims are construction workers. and in parts of south florida, they could see rain and flooding this morning as tropical storm arlene weakens and moves south through the gulf of mexico with wind speeds of 40 miles per hour. arlene is the first named storm of the atlantic hurricane season which began thursday and runs until the end of november. prfter forecasters are predicting 40% chance of a normal season. and ford is warning owners of lincolns to park their vehicles outside and away from buildings because they could potentially catch fire. the problem stems from a battery monitoring sensor that could get damaged when parts around it are serviced causing a short circuit and overheating. model years 2015 through 2019 are affected. so that is a lot of vehicles. owners are also being advised to take their suvs to a dealer and have a fuse installed free of
top stories we re following now, at least eight people are injured, two of them critically in connecticut, after a seven-story residential building on construction in new haven partially collapsed friday. fire officials say part of the second floor crumbled while concrete was being poured. three people were trapped in the debris. those persons that were trapped had to be lifted out by the rescue company and the truck companies and engine companies because of the level they fell from and through. one of the problems you have with wet concrete is having to do searches before it hardens. all of the victims are construction workers. also the secret service placing tougher penalties on agents after an investigation found that some were distracted and on their personal cell
because of the level they fell from and through. one of the problems you have with wet concrete is doing the searches before it hardens. we communicated with the foreman to make sure they had accountability, and we re in communication with the hospital. we will bring you the latest on this story. it has been three weeks since the pandemic era policy expired. instead, something else has happened. the number of migrant encounters is actually dropping, and by a lot. rosa flores is looking at the new data. this is fascinating, it is not what was predicted. first, tell us how much these encounters have fallen at the border. you know, they have dropped significantly. let me take you through the numbers. according to the u.s. border