what a tragedy this is for everyone. being as deep in this subject matter as you are and knowing the campus as well as you do, having gone there, is there anything that could have stopped what happened last night? i think we don t really have the answer to that yet, right, because the fbi and michigan state police will do the background on this individual who did the shooting to see maybe if there were tells and science, and there were people who saw something and did not say something, which is kind of my biggest fear, of course. but i think overall, i think we have to use when we push together what everybody wants, which is the answer to the motivation for why this guy did this, looking for the motivation is really helping us to find the next shooter, before the strike, and that s why we want to continue to look for the information about why this guy did what he did, not because we can make him not do it but because we can make the next kind not do it. we don t seem to
kennedy center presents the mark twain prize for american humor celebrating adam sandler. that s at eight p.m. eastern on cnn. cnn tonight with alison camerata is next. and don t forget over time with bill maher airs tonight at 11:30 p.m. eastern. right? good evening, everyone. i m alison camerata. welcome to cnn tonight. donald trump is sometimes called teflon. don is that changing? today the former president s attorney was forced to testify before the grand jury investigating those classified documents found at mara lago. meanwhile a laundry list of trump s advisers have now been ordered to testify before the grand jury that s investigating january 6th. that includes mark meadows, donald trump s chief of staff. we ve got much more on that. plus we paltrow taking the stand today she s being sued over a ski accident, which she described in graphic terms. i was skiing and two skis came between my skis, forcing my legs apart. and then there was a body pressing against me. and t
laura, what happens when a country s leader makes a bad, unpopular decision? apparently, that depends on the country. because, british minister resigning today after only six weeks in office. her economic plan plunged britain into turmoil, and her own conservative party, turned against her. you know, in this country, the voters decide, but the candidates are nominated by the two major parties as you all know, which limits the leadership choices. tonight, dueling panels are back. allison taking on this very topic of how do you solve a problem like unpopular leaders? we have to set the clock. 4:00, we will see which panel can come up with the spicier answers about this. this is not going to be like that show where there s a horrible ending at the end? there s no death coming? there s a huge bucket of slime that will fall on one of our heads if we don t deliver on the panel. that is true. which person do you think would be more upset if her hair gets messed up? all r
4:00 in new york. happy friday. it is a very busy day of news here with the disgraced twice impeached ex-president subpoenaed today, and donald trump s efforts to overturn the 2020 election that he lost. also in the news today, trump ally steve bannon has been sentenced to four months in prison behind bars for his refusal to comply with the subpoena from the january 6th select committee. a member of the committee, democratic congresswoman zoe lofgren will join us in a few moments. we begin with an incredible brand new piece of reporting from the washington post that makes it crystal clear that donald trump keeping government records including classified document at his private residence and members club was nothing short of a serious national security crisis for the united states. the post is reporting this quote some of the classified documents recovered by the fbi from trump s mar-a-lago home and private club included highly sensitive intelligence regarding iran and chi
that the district attorney likely errored in exercising its jurisdiction to enjoin the u.s. use of the classified records in its criminal investigation. we agree. and there s more. the three-judge panel tears to shreds the arguments that trump and his lawyers have been making in public and in the court of law, that the records belong to him, or that somehow, at some unknown and unstated point in time, that he declassified the documents. also, from the ruling, quote, plaintiff, meaning donald trump, has not even attempted to show that he has a need to know the information contained in the classified documents. the plaintiff suggests that he may have declassified these documents when he was president. but the record contains no evidence that any of these records were declassified. in any event, at least for these purposes, the declassification argument is a red herring, because declassifying an official document would not change its content or render it personal. so even if we